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Go Home The Unnecessary Fall

POLITICS AUGUST 12, 2010

The Unnecessary Fall

On April 14, 2009, as Barack Obama’s standing in the polls was beginning to slip, and as Tea Party demonstrators were amassing in Washington for tax day protests, the president gave a lengthy address at Georgetown University explaining the “five pillars” of his economic policies. The speech was intended to promote a memorable slogan for Obama’s program that would evoke comparisons with Theodore Roosevelt’s Square Deal, Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society.

Obama’s contribution was to be the New Foundation. “We must lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity–a foundation that will move us from an era of borrow and spend to one where we save and invest,” he declared. Obama would repeat the phrase seven times that day and on many more occasions over the next months. At Obama’s private White House dinner with presidential historians that June, the historians were no more impressed than the public with the New Foundation as a slogan. “I don’t think it’s going to work,” Robert Dallek warned. Doris Kearns Goodwin said it sounded “like a woman’s girdle.”

One of these historians might have been able to forewarn Obama that the slogan had been unsuccessfully deployed by a Democratic president once before. In his 1979 State of the Union address, Jimmy Carter began, “Tonight, I want to examine in a broad sense the state of our American Union–how we are building a new foundation for a peaceful and a prosperous world.” Carter would use the phrase five times in the speech, including in its conclusion, where he asked members of Congress to join him “in building that new foundation.” Like Obama’s effort, the phrase inspired, at most, a few underwear jokes and was then forgotten. (Click here to subscribe to TNR.)

Obama’s evocation of Carter was obviously unintended–but the Man from Plains is indeed the specter now hanging over his presidency. Of course, Obama has already accomplished more in his first 20 months than Jimmy Carter did during his entire presidency. But there is a disturbing political resemblance between the two presidencies. Both men ran inspired campaigns in which they positioned themselves above the scandals and partisan quarrels of their predecessors and initially stirred hopes of a “transformational” presidency. But, as presidents, both men somehow failed to connect with large parts of the electorate.

To be sure, there are a number of very specific reasons why Carter and Obama landed in political trouble. Both men contended with rising unemployment–Carter with rampant inflation as well–and voters’ approval of a president and his party tend to track closely with changes in the economy. Carter faced friction in his own party and the rise of a powerful business lobby, and Obama has dealt with a Republican Party that has frustrated his dreams of a post-partisan presidency. Yet the most important reason for their difficulties–evident in their inept attempts to brand their programs–has been an inability to develop a politics that resonates with the public. 

In the United States, politics pivots around the allegiance of the middle class, even as its identity has changed from yeoman farmers and mechanics to store clerks, office workers, x-ray technicians, and small business owners. They are, in Bill Clinton’s words, “those who work hard and play by the rules.” They are the central characters in a populist rhetoric that goes back to the early republic. It depicts the middle class as embattled and threatened either from forces below (impoverished immigrants, welfare cheaters, ghetto rioters) or above (Wall Street speculators, state bureaucrats, K Street lobbyists). Populism can be embraced by Glenn Beck or Tom Harkin. It is intrinsically neither left-wing nor right-wing.

Politicians, such as Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan, who found a way of using populism’s appeal during downturns have enjoyed success, while those who have spurned it have suffered accordingly. If, in circumstances like the present one, you don’t develop a populist politics, your adversaries will use populism to define you as an enemy of the people. That’s what Carter discovered during the stagflation of the late ’70s. And that’s what has happened in the last 20 months of the Great Recession to Barack Obama and to the Democratic Party he leads.

Obama took office with widespread popular support, even among Republicans, and some of his first efforts, including the $800 billion stimulus, initially enjoyed strong public favor. But that wide appeal began to dissipate by the late spring of 2009. Disillusion with Obama fueled the November defeat of Democratic gubernatorial candidates in New Jersey and Virginia. By January 2010, it was a crucial factor in Republican Scott Brown’s astonishing victory over Martha Coakley in Massachusetts.

In the postmortem debate over these defeats, some Democrats have blamed Obama’s dogged pursuit of health care reform while the economy was hemorrhaging jobs. That may have been a factor, but the real damage was done earlier. What doomed Obama politically was the way he dealt with the financial crisis in the first six months of his presidency. In an atmosphere primed for a populist backlash, he allowed the right wing to define the terms.

As Obama was delivering his inaugural address, the financial crisis was already in full swing; and it was already apparent that financial speculation, outright fraud, and irresponsible and sometimes illegal housing-loan practices had played a very large role in precipitating the crisis. The public was up in arms. But, instead of rallying the public against the “money changers,” as Roosevelt had done in his first inaugural, Obama, taking a leaf from Jimmy Carter’s infamous “malaise” speech, put the blame on the public as a whole. “Our economy is badly weakened, a consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some, but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age,” he declared.

Over the next month, Obama would periodically criticize bankers after embarrassing revelations–at various times calling the bonuses they gave themselves “shameful” and an “outrage”–but, after hearing complaints about his rhetoric from the bankers, he would back off. At a private meeting on March 28 with 13 Wall Street CEOs, the president, his spokesman Robert Gibbs said, “emphasized that Wall Street needs Main Street and Main Street needs Wall Street.” And, in his Georgetown speech, Obama returned to his theme of collective responsibility. The recession, Obama said, “was caused by a perfect storm of irresponsibility and poor decision-making that stretched from Wall Street to Washington to Main Street.”

Obama’s policy followed the same swerving course as his rhetoric. One week, he would favor harsh restrictions on bank and insurance-company bonuses, but, the next week, he would waver; one week, he would support legislation allowing bankruptcy judges to reduce the amount that homeowners threatened with foreclosure owed the banks; the next week, he would fail to protest when bank lobbyists pressured the Senate to kill these provisions. But, more importantly, Obama–in sharp contrast to Roosevelt in his first months–failed to push Congress to immediately enact new financial regulations or even to set up a commission to investigate fraud. (When Congress finally appointed a commission in July 2009, Obama and his party put a milquetoast Democratic politician, former California State Treasurer Philip Angelides, in charge of it.)

Obama’s appointments also conveyed an impression that he wanted to let Wall Street off the hook. He appointed Timothy Geithner to be treasury secretary. Geithner claimed that he was not part of Wall Street, but, in his capacity as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, he had served under a board of directors headed by JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. As New York Fed president, Geithner had been partly responsible for the decision to let Lehman Brothers go under, for the unpopular tarp program, and for American International Group (AIG) paying back its Wall Street creditors with government money. Geithner chose as his chief of staff a former lobbyist for Goldman Sachs. Retiring Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan told me, “Most Americans were reading about the massive compensations and bailouts, and the administration largely hired people from the culture of Wall Street.”

By the spring, Obama’s apparent tilt to Wall Street had sparked a right-wing populist revolt in the country. The newly formed Tea Party movement, Beck and Fox News, and a host of right-wing bloggers were leading the charge; but, in a less extreme form, the general public shared their anger. In an early April New York Times/CBS News poll, the public disapproved of Obama’s aiding the banks by 58 percent to 33 percent. In this same poll, public approval of Obama’s handling of the economy began to fall. Pollsters who did focus groups also traced disillusionment with Obama’s economic policies to his handling of the financial crisis.

Congressman Barney Frank, who defends Obama’s policies, acknowledges that the president’s political difficulties began with the revelation that AIG, which had received $170 billion from the government, had paid out $165 million in bonuses to the division that had brought the company down. Geithner had known about the bonuses but insisted there were no legal grounds to block them. (It then came out that Geithner had pressured Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd to insert a provision in the stimulus bill that protected the bonuses.) “The pitchforks were out. It added injury to injury,” Frank says. That’s when public opinion of Geithner plummeted. According to a Rasmussen poll, 24 percent had a favorable view of Geithner and 44 percent an unfavorable one.

The public’s view of the bank bailout and the AIG bonuses colored its view of the auto bailout, the stimulus, and health care reform. One of the rallying cries for the populist opposition to Obama was “where’s my bailout?” (Obama himself acknowledged that it was “one of the most frequent questions” he was asked in letters.) The auto program became a bailout for the GM and Chrysler CEOs; the stimulus became a bailout of government itself; and health care reform was a bailout for the uninsured–or “reparations,” as Rush Limbaugh put it. Wrote right-wing blogger Michelle Malkin, “hardworking citizens were getting sick of being played for chumps” by “moochers, big and small, corporate and individual, trampling over themselves with their hands out demanding endless bailouts.” Obama and the Democrats were successfully portrayed as aiding “the moochers,” but not the “hardworking citizens.” In American politics, that’s a recipe for political disaster.

Some in the White House political operation recognized in the late spring that the administration’s economic efforts were being defined by right-wing populism and tried to push Obama to take a more populist tack. A group within the White House began calling themselves the “pitchfork gang,” but they would find their attempts to convince Obama to get tough on Wall Street or on insurance companies undermined by Geithner and by National Economic Council head Larry Summers, who were worried about upsetting business confidence. “There was a continual tension in the White House,” says a person who was privy to the discussions. “One week, we would be very hot, and then, the next week, we would dial it back.”

By early January of this year, Obama was clearly losing the battle for the middle class. According to a CNN poll, 60 percent of Americans thought Obama “had paid more attention to the problems faced by banks and other financial institutions” than to the “problems faced by middle class Americans.” Only 28 percent, barely more than a quarter, thought he had paid more attention to the middle class. As Brown surged ahead of Coakley in the polls, the White House temporarily embraced a populist approach. On January 14, Obama called the bank bonuses “obscene” and said, “we want our money back.” In a January 22 speech at Lorain County Community College in Elyria, Ohio (a far cry from Georgetown), Obama used the word “fighting” 13 times and “fight” nine times. “I will not stop fighting for you,” he declared.

But, faced with a falling stock market and anger from Wall Street, Obama once again turned conciliatory. On February 10, he said that he didn’t “begrudge” the $17 million bonus awarded to Dimon and the $9 million to Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein. “I know both guys. They are very savvy businessmen.”

Obama’s reluctance to rail against Wall Street might have led to a watered-down financial reform bill, or even no bill at all, but, on April 16, the Securities and Exchange Commission accused Goldman Sachs for fraud. The next week, an emboldened Obama went to New York to criticize the bankers directly for their “failure of responsibility.” As a result of the accusation and Obama’s rediscovery of his anger, Republicans became somewhat less obstructionist, moderate Republicans broke with the party’s leadership, and moderate Democrats fell into line. Congress produced a much stronger bill than the Democrats had ever expected.

But Obama’s embrace of populism has remained fitful and sporadic. After the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Verizon’s Ivan Seidenberg, the head of the Business Roundtable, criticized Obama for being anti-business in June, the president dispatched Geithner, White House aide Valerie Jarrett, and Bill Clinton to appease the business community. Obama has said enough to anger the CEOs, but he has failed to convey to the greater public that he is fighting for them.

Obama’s unwillingness to buck Wall Street and the Business Roundtable, along with his delayed and muddled response to the BP disaster in the Gulf, has eroded the public’s confidence in his leadership. In Pew’s midyear report card on Obama’s image, the greatest drop from February 2009 to this June was in the perception of Obama as a “strong leader.” Voters will sometimes tolerate policies they question from presidents like John Kennedy or Reagan, whom they regard as “strong,” but not from politicians like Jimmy Carter, whom they regard as weak.

What of the other factors behind Obama’s political difficulties? There is no doubt that, if the economy were growing faster, and if unemployment were dropping below 9 percent, Obama and the Democrats would be more popular and not fearing a November rout. But, unfortunately, the economy’s sluggish recovery cannot be completely disentangled from the White House’s weak political performance.

In January, when the White House debated how large a stimulus to propose, Christina Romer, the head of the Council of Economic Advisors, proposed a $1.2 trillion Keynesian jolt. David Obey, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, told The Fiscal Times that Obama’s Treasury Department asked initially for a $1.4 trillion bill. But the administration finally proposed a stimulus between $700 and $800 billion that included large tax cuts that were more likely to stimulate saving than consumption–and spending that would be unlikely to produce many jobs until the end of Obama’s first term. In the stimulus’s first year, the administration spent only $17 billion of the $139 billion allocated for infrastructure spending.

Prominent economists, including Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz, made the case that a much larger stimulus was necessary to reverse (rather than merely reduce) the rise in unemployment, and that, if a modest stimulus failed to reduce unemployment, Republicans would convince the public that the stimulus was toxic medication and would block additional Keynesian measures. That argument has been proven sadly correct. Some White House advisers appear to have underestimated the depth of the Great Recession. Others seem to have doubted the administration had the political clout to get more from Congress.

But the White House might have gotten more if Obama had proclaimed a national economic emergency (which it was); framed the issue in terms of rescuing the middle class from damage done by Wall Street speculators, short-sighted CEOs, and Chinese mercantilism; and directly attacked Republicans as heartless obstructionists. When Obama belatedly made this sort of case on the eve of the financial reform vote this year, he got a much stronger bill than anyone had anticipated. So it’s not clear that the failure to get a larger stimulus–which has ended up hurting the administration politically–wasn’t itself a result of political timidity.

The president has also suffered from an inability to explain to the public why he sought such a large stimulus and what he thought it could accomplish. Obama’s New Foundation speech at Georgetown was soon forgotten. Afterward, Obama, to the dismay of Democrats in Congress and some of his White House aides, pretty much dropped the jobs issue. From then to Labor Day, he devoted a July visit to Buffalo and an August stopover in southern Indiana to the issue–at a time when the right wing was mobilizing against him. Obama didn’t just fail to develop a consistent narrative about the economy; he didn’t really try.

Contrast Obama’s attempt to develop a politics to justify his economic program with what Reagan did in 1982. Faced with steadily rising unemployment, which went from 8.6 percent in January to 10.4 percent in November, Reagan and his political staff, which included James Baker, Mike Deaver, and Ed Rollins, forged a strategy early that year calling for voters to “stay the course” and blaming the current economic troubles on Democratic profligacy. “We are clearing away the economic wreckage that was dumped in our laps,” Reagan declared. Democrats accused them of playing “the blame game,” but the strategy, followed to the letter by the White House for ten months, worked. The Republicans were predicted to lose as many as 50 House seats, but they lost only 26 and broke even in the Senate.

Some commentators have noted Reagan’s popularity was even lower than Obama’s. But, on key economic questions, he did much better than Obama and the Democrats are currently performing–and voters expressed far greater patience with Reagan’s program. According to polls, even as the unemployment rate climbed, a narrow plurality still expressed confidence that Reagan’s program would help the economy. On the eve of the election, with the unemployment rate at a postwar high, a New York Times/CBS News poll found that 60 percent of likely voters thought Reagan’s economic program would eventually help the country. That’s a sign of a successful political operation. If Obama could command those numbers, Democrats could seriously limit their losses in November. But Obama has not been able to develop a narrative that could convince people to trust him and the Democrats.

Why has the White House failed to convince the public that it is fighting effectively on its behalf? The principal culprit is clearly Barack Obama. He has a strange aversion to confrontational politics. His aversion is strange because he was schooled in it, working as a community organizer in the 1980s, under the tutelage of activists who subscribed to teachings of the radical Saul Alinsky. But, when Obama departed for Harvard Law School in 1988, he left Alinsky and adversarial tactics behind.

The young lawyer who returned to Chicago and won a seat in the Illinois state Senate in 1996 practiced a very different style of politics. Obama’s principal accomplishments in Springfield were bills restricting lobbying and requiring videotaping of confessions in potential death penalty cases. He was not a typical blue-collar, bread-and-butter Chicago Democrat, but the kind of good government liberal that represents the upscale districts of the city, seeing in politics a higher calling and ill at ease with (although not in open opposition to) the city’s Democratic machine. He was also a post-racial politician who eschewed the hard-edged, angry rhetoric of Jesse Jackson. (That, too, is oddly reminiscent of Carter, who partly campaigned in 1976 as the white Southern antidote to George Wallace’s angry racial populism.)

Obama carried this outlook into the U.S. Senate, into his campaign for the presidency, and then, into the presidency itself. He is a cerebral, dispassionate, post-partisan; he wants to “end the political strategy that has been based on division,” to “turn the page” on the culture wars of the 1960s and the partisan battles of the 1990s. During the campaign, his aides jokingly referred to him as the “black Jesus.” While he can tolerate and even brush aside conflict, he is reluctant to actively foment it. “In a time of crisis, we can’t afford to govern out of anger,” he declared in February 2009. During his campaign and his first year in office, he held to a blind faith in bipartisanship, even as the Republicans voted as a bloc against his legislation. He is, perhaps, ill-suited in these respects for an era of bruising political warfare.

His advisers have clearly reinforced these inclinations. In the campaign, they fashioned him as the outsider candidate of “hope” and “change” and have extended this strategy into the presidency itself. They see him as standing above party. In a meeting with congressional leaders last April, senior adviser David Axelrod rejected the complaint that Obama accorded equal blame to Democrats and Republicans with his descriptions of the “cynical politics in Washington.” Within the White House, top aides still speak of promoting the Obama “brand.” Organizing for America, the administration’s campaign organization, which is supposed to be focusing on the 2010 elections, recently devoted its resources to organizing parties across the country to celebrate Obama’s forty-ninth birthday.

These efforts to elevate Obama above the hurly-burly of Washington politics have been disastrous. Obama’s image as an iconic outsider has become the screen on which Fox News, the Tea Party, radicalright bloggers, and assorted politicians have projected the image of him as a foreigner, an Islamic radical, and a socialist. He has remained “the other” that he aspired to be during the campaign, but he and his advisers no longer control how that otherness is defined.

The White House and cabinet officials he appointed have reinforced his aversion to populism. As Jonathan Alter recounts in The Promise: President Obama, Year One, Geithner and Summers repeatedly blocked attempts to get tough on Wall Street on the grounds that doing so would threaten the recovery itself by upsetting the bankers. For most of his first year, Alter writes, “Obama bought the Geithner-Summers argument that the banks were fragile and couldn’t be confronted while they remained in peril.” Its reluctance to come down on the bankers crippled the administration politically, making it far more difficult for it to get its way with Congress on a second stimulus program that would have boosted the recovery and Democrats’ political prospects. Bad politics can trump good policy.

Populism has profound shortcomings as a worldview. It tends toward demagoguery. In its relentless focus on the middle class, it can ignore or stigmatize those below it. It can prove hostile to a long-range scientific outlook. A more populist Obama, for instance, might have postponed the battle for climate change legislation or national health insurance and probably would have taken a weaker stand on immigration. But populism has been an indelible part of the American political psyche, and those who are uncomfortable making populist appeals, like Hoover or Carter–or, more recently, presidential candidate John Kerry–suffer the consequences at the polls.

If Obama’s politics leads to a Republican takeover of one or both houses of Congress, and even to a Republican president in 2012, then much of what Obama has accomplished could be undone. It’s unlikely that a new Republican president and Congress would actually repeal the health care or the financial reform bill. But the former could be starved of public funds and deprived of regulatory oversight; and the latter could be neutered by a hostile treasury secretary and by weak or hostile presidential appointees to the Securities and Exchange Commission or the new Consumer Financial Protection Agency. Reform legislation needs administrations and congresses committed to reform. That is where politics has to come in; and that’s where the Obama administration, with its aversion to populism, has fallen short. 

John B. Judis is a senior editor of The New Republic and a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 

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35 comments

I will put aside my usual snark about commentators like Judis and Galston writing the same article in 100 different ways and pretend that Judis has never previously written anything that urges Democrats to become more populist and anti-Wall Street. On those terms, this is a fine article and a great dissection of the ways in which Obama has lost popularity with much of the middle and working class in this country. However, Judis feels the need to go into counter-factuals in order to justify his central thesis that populism was the way for Obama to maintain his political standing and his accomplisments during his first two years in office. So, here is another counter-factual -- let's say that Obama ignored Geithner and Summers, made no excuses to bankers or the Business Round Table and laid his political capital on the line to pass a $1.5 billion stimulus bill and temporarily nationalized the assets of Citigroup, Bank of America and AIG in the spring of 2009. That would certainly have solved the populism problem -- middle Americans would have seen him as fighting on their side, bailouts of the auto industry would have probably been more acceptable to the public, maybe financial reform could have been accomplished earlier. But what if these moves -- especially the nationalizations -- set off another stock market panic, as financial institutions now began to worry that TARP funds were in effect a license for the Feds to seize their assets and operations? The credit markets, that were oh-so-slowly stirring back to life in the spring of 2009 would have seized up again. Unemployment would have probably spiked as companies would have started to lay people off more quickly in an uncertain credit environment, and stimulus funds could not possibly be spent quickly enough to offset private sector unemployment. Wall Street would naturally howl, but so would all the middle class taxpayers whose stock-based retirement funds continued to whither away. Republicans would start to howl about mass-scale wealth destruction, the way they did briefly in the spring of 2009 in reality until the post-stress test stock market rally shut them up. Republicans and Tea Partiers would still howl about socialism, but now they would actually have a pretty good example of it -- the Federal government taking over financial institutions and changing their management, an then being pressured by lawmakers to get those same institutions to lend more quickly to favored businesses to reduce unemployment! In light of all this, what would have been the odds of health care reform, financial reform, climate change or any of those other things that Democrats wanted from a Democratic President and Congress? What would this have done to the global economy? I shudder to think. So, thank you Barack Obama, Tim Geithner and Larry Summers for doing the right thing in early 2009 and stabilizing the American economy as it was coming off its biggest heart attack since 1929 -- populism be damned. If that's the price we pay for a Republican takeover of Congress in 2010 or a Republican President in 2012, it was worth paying.

- wildboy

August 13, 2010 at 2:48pm

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I'd add that Obama's fear of confrontational politics is closely connected to his fear of confrontational racial politics. Obama's trepidation in that respect is fairly well-founded. He believes that if he turns confrontational it would be perceived not as a white president's rhetoric or style would be -- as a populist channeling of ordinary people's feeliings -- but as a specifically black posture, barely disguising a dislike of white Americans. I know that that may seem only very obliquely associated with a narrow focus on Wall St misbehavior -- it seems illogical to imagine that anyone could read an "angry black" statement into a president's reading the riot act to bankers -- but I'm not sure that Obama isn't quite right about this. Obama could have taken the risk here, and I wish he had, but I understand why his reading of American culture today prevents him.

- ironyroad

August 13, 2010 at 4:57pm

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You can say what you like about Hillary Clinton, but the reason I supported her over Barack Obama during the long Democratic primaries in 2008 is that she was not averse to leading the Democratic Party from the front. So I am far from unsympathetic to the complaints raised in this article. That said, Obama has compensated for his diffidence about fighting in the trenches of day-to-day politics through use of a "long game" which has generally paid dividends in policy terms: what he's bought through sacrificing much of the political capital he carried into 2009 have been generational achievements on the legislative side. As our Veep has noted, this is a big fucking deal. Sure, I believe Clinton would probably have produced pretty much the same accomplishments and would almost certainly have been quicker to exploit Democrats' position of strength after Inauguration Day, rather than playing footsie with a recalcitrant GOP through a long, delirious summer of Tea Parties and death panels. But we all knew that the earthquake of our economy tumbling to earth was going to produce aftershocks that caused the party in power to stumble and fall, and I am highly dubious that a different (more Clintonian?) strategy would have affected the trajectory of our political fortunes as they stand today. Pretty much the best thing that can be said about the morose outlook of Democrats and liberals heading into election season is that, already expecting the worst, our surprises can only be good ones. And there's still time for surprises: before Labor Day, polls are fairly useless in predicting the outcome of November elections, and a lot of voters make up their minds in the last seven days or even right there in the voting booth. Come October, maybe there will be some definitive news that all this Democratic legislation is turning the economy around. Maybe the Tea Parties will overplay their hand and hold their own version of a 1972 Democratic convention that delegitimizes them and their GOP allies for a generation. And maybe the horse will sing.

- austinexpat

August 14, 2010 at 9:59am

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Judis' analysis is generally correct. It has been obvious for some time that Obama and the Senate Democrats have made/ continue to make serious a serious strategic political error and a serious tactical political error that may already be fatal. The strategic error is in not strongly and consistently trying to change public opinion on Republican bonkers, ideologicaly-based policies on economics and American Exceptionalism. The tactical error is in not ending the Senate filibuster. Ironically, if they win -- and the day they need to do so-- the Republicans will break the filibuster. Saving the filibuster "for good use by Dems later on" is fatally naive. To correct these two fundamental errors, leaders must change-- or new leaders elected. We've seen enough of Obama, Nelson, Lincoln, Baucus, Landrieu, and several others to know that at best they're confused (whether or not they have IQ's of 180). In most cases (Snowe, Collins may be exceptions), it's MUCH easier to elect better Dems than change a Rep to a Dem. In fact, probably the only hope for Obama is to give him a strong Progressive figure with a following with whom to exercise his primordial instinct to compromise. [Huey Long did wonders for FDR who was much more Progressive and daring than BHO, and FDR had much less instinct or need to compromise.] Without quickly passing real stimulus for jobs, real health care reform, etc., etc., the Dems are like slowly cooking frogs in a pan. Most Progressives will eventually jump out. Best to jump out sooner than later. As one example of the current stupidity and wussiness of Obama and his Dem Senate supporters: They think spending is unpopular--but unemployment and an economy moving in the wrong direction are yet-more unpopular. Republicans have these Dems so rattled, they're afraid of the disease AND the cure--- and so frightened Obama and Senate Dems do next-to-nothing. Which is yet more unpopular. Listen to Digby:"The party in power is expected to do what's necessary to pass its agenda. If it can't, it is held responsible for the failure, not those who stopped them from doing it. This is particularly true in the present circumstance. The president blaming a "do nothing congress" only works when the congressional majority is of the opposition party. When it's your own party [AND you have a near-supermajority], you just look like a weak leader [with dumb or pusillanimous congressional supporters] and people think the underdog Republicans are simply "playing the game" better and so deserve to "win." If I'm an average Joe low info voter, I see confused and frightened Dems with at best mixed messages timidly delivered versus Repubs who aggressively take flack in opposition. I sure see how Joe low info wants the latter negotiating on his behalf with a Korean "Dear Leader" and other bad guys out there -- probably transferring the sentiments domestically to Wall Street and HMOs.

- drofnats1

August 14, 2010 at 10:38am

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Like the other commenters, I think Judis has done a nice job here, although on policy matters I have to lean towards "wildboy's" position (he doesn't sound so wild). I would, shockingly, put a fair amount of blame on the Republican Party. The Republican base felt massive betrayal over the meltdown of the Bush Administration. They had been promised a Rose Garden and instead got TARP. Bush should have initiated his own stimulus package, but of course lacked the political courage to do so. The Republican decision to oppose everything Obama proposed (with regard to the stiumulus alone) was a shameful exercise in putting party above country. Judis doesn't acknowledge the favoritism that Obama showed to the UAW in the auto bailout, which did hurt him. Health reform alienated key Democratic groups--Medicare recipients and unions with extensive health care packages, in particular--without making anyone really happy. Judis also ignores Obama's biggest failure of all--his complete capitulation to the Pentagon and the CIA on security matters. I hope we can change that. Obama has faced more challenges than any president since Truman. I would give him a B- at best. But that sure beats Bush's D-.

- AlanVann

August 16, 2010 at 7:00am

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Rahm Emanuel.

- rayward

August 16, 2010 at 7:07am

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Man, how annoying...hours ago I left a long comment here and it's lost in the aether. Probably the fault of my job's antediluvian IT system, not TNR. Oh well. The gist of my post was that while I reckon Judis is more or right, I'm wary of underestimating Obama, having observed several times before how he hangs back taking punch after punch only to step aside at the last minute to let the opposition fall under its own weight. For all that, though, in the present climate bipartisanship is a joke. The Republican leadership is not just wrong, but viciously wrong. They must be vigorously opposed. I've had a gutful of Democratic cowardice. And I'm losing patience with the president's uncommunicativeness. It is unforgivable that Obama's first Oval Office address took place a full year and a half after he took office and that it had to do with the freaking oil spill. As big a disaster as the oil spill was, it is dwarfed by the economic/jobs crisis. Obama should have been going on television a couple times a week for the past year saying, "Here's my plan for further stimulus directed at job creation. The only people opposing it are the motherfucking Republicans. I'm trying to tax the rich to create jobs and buoy regular folks who are suffering the most through this time of economic travail. The Republicans and their corporate sponsors just want to line their pockets and never pay one red cent in taxes."0

- AaronW

August 16, 2010 at 8:32am

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The problem with this analysis is that if Obama had tried a populist assault on Wall Street, it might have spooked the markets and driven us into a deeper recession. The reason he did not do so is that Geithner and his other advisers were pursuasive, not so much because they were Wall Street epigones, but because they may well have been right. The reason Obama is in so much trouble is not because of his failure to appeal to the middle class, but because the economy is so rotten. If it had been made significantly worse, all the Wall Street bashing in the world would have done him no good.

- JohnEMack

August 16, 2010 at 9:42am

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What tosh. Agree with JonhE. Someone should go back and read Judis' articles on candidate Obama. The same sort of useless advice and hackneyed analysis.

- icarusr

August 16, 2010 at 10:28am

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Also agree with JohnE. Wehner fallacy = Judis fallacy? While I was a proponent of nationalisation at the time, with hindsight I now have serious reservations about how it would have ended up. The problem is that these damned institutions are just too big (not that this was addressed in the recent reforms). I mean, who are you going to sell Citigroup to? Where Obama has not been up to task is in selling the success of the things that he did do, i.e. keeping some people in jobs that they already had. Most even non-Keynesian economists that I had read agree that keep existing jobs is effective stimulus. It might not be great politics to point out that these jobs are mostly public sector ones, but you can always rhetorically ask how much better off you'd be off if all of these additional people ALSO lost their jobs and had their houses foreclosed etc.

- Nari224

August 16, 2010 at 11:20am

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Irony "I'd add that Obama's fear of confrontational politics is closely connected to his fear of confrontational racial politics. Obama's trepidation in that respect is fairly well-founded. He believes that if he turns confrontational it would be perceived not as a white president's rhetoric or style would be -- as a populist channeling of ordinary people's feeliings -- but as a specifically black posture, barely disguising a dislike of white Americans." I suspect as much also

- NR027810

August 16, 2010 at 11:47am

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I cannot tell if Judis is talking about what politically sells, or that he really thinks those are good policies. Following the populist path probably would have sunk the economy even further. Perhaps that would be good for re-election possibilities. Bush followed disastrous policies and was a two-term President. Is that what Judis suggests? If you talk to people they all mention health care as the thing they hate, even though they may not understand any of the issues. Death panels killed Obama. Populist anger at the banks would just have killed the economy.

- bwickes

August 16, 2010 at 12:55pm

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All Obama is concerned with is what Michelle brought him back as a souvenir of her trip to Spain!

- RamseyReid

August 16, 2010 at 1:19pm

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austinexpat, Good post, and I agree with much of it. This line says it all: "Obama has compensated for his diffidence about fighting in the trenches of day-to-day politics through use of a 'long game' which has generally paid dividends in policy terms: what he's bought through sacrificing much of the political capital he carried into 2009 have been generational achievements on the legislative side." Bingo! You run for office because you believe your ideas will improve the nation for the better. The entire point of holding elective office is to enact your agenda. That's where the Judis/Washington Pundit fallacy lies. Where I find your analysis wanting is that you assume that a candidate Hillary Clinton could have delivered the kinds of Congressional majorities -- particularly in the Senate -- that Barack Obama did. I doubt that Kay Hagan, Al Franken, and Jeff Merkley would be in the Senate without Barack Obama carrying North Carolina and Minnesota and Oregon by overwhelming margins. Mark Udall would have had a much more difficult time winning in Colorado had Barack Obama not also seriously contested it, and won by an overwhelming margin. Mark Begich would not have won (remember how thin his margin of victory was) without Barack Obama doing some remote contesting of the last Frontier State. That's a lot fewer Senators to work with, and it's hard to see how health care reform's guaranteed issue underwriting/adjusted community rating/no pre-existing clauses/guaranteed renewability, the minimum benefits package, and the Exchange -- three of the most essential pieces of the law, and which don't affect the budget -- would have become law without 60 Senate Democrats. That said, I like Hillary Clinton very, very much. In fact, I admire the hell out of her. She's taken a lot of slings and arrows thrown at her on the party's behalf. I was for her throughout 2007. I ended up casting my reluctantly at the time for Barack Obama as I saw him as having the potential to be the transformational figure. I'm now incredibly glad I cast my vote in the Massachusetts primary for Barack Obama 2.5 years ago. I certainly got a good return for my investment.

- jimbomoron

August 16, 2010 at 1:23pm

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judis hits the nail on the head with his observation that "[v]oters will sometimes tolerate policies they question from presidents like John Kennedy or Reagan, whom they regard as 'strong,' but not from politicians like Jimmy Carter, whom they regard as weak." here's a relevant passage from robert greene's "the art of seduction" (pg. 451). we can learn a thing or two: Reagan's Democratic challenger, Walter Mondale, thought Americans had had enough of the Reagan soft touch. They were ready for honesty, and that would be Mondale's appeal. Before a nationwide television audience, Mondale declared, "Let's tell the truth. Mr. Reagan will raise taxes, and so will I. He won't tell you. I just did." He repeated this straightforward approach on numerous occasions. By October his poll numbers had plunged to all-time lows. The CBS reporter Leslie Stahl had been covering the campaign, and as Election Day neared, she had an uneasy feeling. It wasn't so much that Reagan had focused on emotions and moods rather than hard issues. It was more that the media was giving him a free ride; he and his election team, she felt, were playing the press like a fiddle. They always managed to get him photographed in the perfect setting, looking strong and presidential. They fed the press snappy headlines along with dramatic footage of Reagan in action. They were putting on a great show. Stahl decided to assemble a news piece that would show the public how Reagan used television to cover up the negative effects of his policies. The piece began with a montage of images that his team had orchestrated over the years: Regan relaxing on his ranch in jeans; standing tall at the Normandy invasion tribute in France; throwing a football with his Secret Service bodyguards; sitting in an inner-city classroom. . . . Over these images Stahl asked, "How does Ronald Reagan use television? Brilliantly. He's been criticized as the rich man's president, but the TV pictures say it ain't so. At seventy-three, Mr. Reagan could have an age problem. But the TV pictures say it ain't so. Americans want to feel proud of their country again, and of their president. And the TV pictures say you can. The orchestration of television coverage absorbs the White House. Their goal? To emphasize the president's greatest asset, which, his aides say, is his personality. They provide pictures of him looking like a leader. Confident, with his Marlboro man walk." Over images of Reagan, shaking hands with handicapped athletes in wheelchairs and cutting the ribbon at a new facility for seniors. Stahl continued, "They also aim to erase negatives. Mr. Reagan tried to counter the memory of an unpopular issue with a carefully chosen backdrop that actually contradicts the president's policy. Look at the handicapped Olympics, or the opening ceremony of an old-age home. No hint that he tried to cut the budgets for the disabled and for federally subsidized housing for the elderly." On and on went the piece, showing the gap between the feel-good images that played on the screen and the reality of Reagan's actions. "President Reagan, " Stahl concluded, "is accused of running a campaign in which he highlights the images and hides from the issues." But there's no evidence that the charges will hurt him because when people see the president on television, he makes them feel good, about America, about themselves, and about him." Stahl depended on the good will of the Reagan people in covering the White House, but here piece is strongly negative, so she braced herself for trouble. Yet a senior White House official telephoned her that evening: "Great piece," he said. "What?" asked a stunned Stahl. "Great piece," he repeated. "Did you listen to what I said? she asked. "Lesley, when your're showing four-and-a-half minutes of great pictures of Ronald Reagan, no one listens to what you say. Don't you know that the pictures are overriding your message because they conflict with your message? The public sees those pictures and they block your message. They didn't even hear what you said. So, in our minds, it was a four-and-a-half minute free ad for the Ronald Reagan campaign for reelection." Interpretation: Most of the men who worked on communications for Reagan had a background in marketing. They knew the importance of telling a story crisply, sharply, and with good visuals. Each morning they went over what the headline of the day should be, and how they could shape this into a short visual piece, getting the president into a video opportunity. They paid detailed attention to the backdrop behind the President in the Oval Office, to the way the camera framed him when he was with other world leaders, and to having him filmed in motion, with his confident walk. The visuals carries the message better than any words could do. As on Reagan official said, "What are you going to believe, the facts or your eyes?"

- apollo

August 16, 2010 at 2:17pm

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Jimbo: your post underlines the two greatest truisms of modern American politics: 1. All politics are local. 2. Anyone who has Mark Penn as a key advisor does not deserve to win. Those who carp about Obama's alleged diffidence and the superiority of Clintonian scrappiness would do well to recall who would be in the White House, advising Clinton, if she had been elected. Penn cannot count. What is more, he is amoral and cynical, and probably unethical. Penn is Morris Redux. That alone suggests to me that any Hillary counterfactual would have been disastrous for the US.

- icarusr

August 16, 2010 at 2:21pm

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Apollo: awesome story. I remember that Mondale moment. I thought: what courage. And then I thought: you're sunk.

- icarusr

August 16, 2010 at 2:24pm

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Also read Todd Perdum's longer piece in VF on the same subject. Todd's piece is better only in that it captures better the lack of any over-riding theme or message from the administration, as they bounce from crisis to crisis, issue to issue. They clearly were not prepared for the financial and economic crisis and had no theme or message to convey to the nation to gain the public's confidence. Of course the crisis wasn't of their making, but their inability to create a narrative is what has brought the administration to this point. And for that I blame Emanuel, the man Obama brought in to lead the administarion in what they thought would be their biggest challenge, namely dealing with large Democratic majorities in the Congress, only to discover that was way down on the list of challenges. Obama failed to adjust to the very different challege by replacing Emanueal with someone with better skills at developing a narrative, and for that he may well be a one-term president.

- rayward

August 16, 2010 at 3:06pm

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The bottom lione is that Judis is generally correct--- and that Progressives better start looking for, and supporting, more Progressive candidates to challenge and if possible replace Blue Dog Dems [ a general term referring to political tendencies of some members of the House, Senate--- and President].

- drofnats1

August 16, 2010 at 3:28pm

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Great story Apollo. I didn't know the Reagan's communications people had backgrounds in marketing. That speaks volumes about what makes a successful presidency and how Americans perceive the office. What I take away from Judis' article and the comments here is Obama is great on the policy side but his communications staff stinks in building a narrative. His people lost a lot of the game last summer with the town hall meetings and their response to them. The Congressional leadership, in particular in the Senate, deserves blame here too. If the Dems do lose a lot of seats, please do not blame it all on the economy. Lousy optics and communications play a big part. Something is amiss when Dems run away from what was accomplished in the last 18 months.

- tnmats

August 16, 2010 at 5:49pm

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Unfortunately, you have hit the nail on the head. I fear that he will be a one term president, and the result will be catastrophic. He really needs to step up to the plate and show Americans that he is a strong advocate for the middle class. He needs to get rid of the perceived eggheads like Gaither and Sumners and find some people with passion and leadership for the cabinet. His administration comes off as cold and intellectual with no soul. Maybe it is.

- bevo1md

August 16, 2010 at 6:28pm

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How about if we had a better electoral participation rate in the U.S., too? Ever think that Democratic-inclined folks who stay away from the polls because the mid-terms aren't sexy enough are part of the problem?

- ironyroad

August 16, 2010 at 7:15pm

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It is WAY too early to start talking about one term presidencies. At this stage of Reagan's first term with the economy in the shitter, HE looked like a sure loser. And conversely, take a look at Bush pere; even later into his first term, riding high after his Gulf War triumph, GHWB looked unbeatable. Marketing and communications play a role, but mostly it's the economy, stupid. I think what Judis is saying is that BHO should have made a populist case for bigger stimulus. More than a year ago Paul Krugman was predicting stagnant job growth with the undersized primary stimulus and just the ugly political consequences we're now seeing.

- AaronW

August 16, 2010 at 7:27pm

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Can we at least wait until 2012 to write Obama's obituary?

- lyansaine

August 16, 2010 at 8:26pm

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From the point of view of the Democratic Party's base, what's left of the Left, that is, is a deep sense that BHO has sacrificed too much political capital for too little gain. Yes, the legislative record is impressive, but without a public option in the healthcare bill or a concrete reform in the financial bill that middle-class investors can understand, without immigration reform to galvanize the next generation's demographic, without progress in Afghanistan, and without dismantling the Patriot Act or delivering on closing Guantanamo, it's all way, way, less than what was implicitly and explicitly promised. Arguably, he would have lost the political capital one way or the other; he would be no worse off today than he already is, and as elections hinge on a few percentage points of turnout one way or the other, greater achievements would translate into greater success at the ballot box by enthusing the base. The model shouldn't be Reagan or FDR, it should be LBJ. His specter haunts American liberals to this day, and it is high time that the positive aspects of his legacy are embraced anew. That was a president who used profanity effusively and aggressively as he dressed down segregationist senators and governors, whose famous "treatment" left even his closest allies and friends shaken, who sat on the toilet while conducting government business. And was in New Orleans the very night of Hurricane Betsy, with a bullhorn, telling people, "This is your President, we are here to help." BHO needs to not only be more brutal and aggressive in his politics and style, he needs to set a moral example. Only then might fire return to the progressive side of the aisle in our national discourse.

- AlanSChin

August 16, 2010 at 9:39pm

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I think Judis mistakes the beginning of the Tea Party movement - it wasn't anger over the bank / AIG bailouts. Specifically, it arose out of a rant from Rick Santelli of CNBC over Obama's mortgage modification program. Santelli, who had been quiet when the big banks were getting their bail outs and their execs were collecting their bonuses, freaked out when there was the possibility that some members of the aggrieved middle class Judis mentions, might get a bail-out for their underwater mortgages. Since then the Tea Party has railed against a relatively moderate Financial reform bill - so it would seem there is not as much rage in the Tea Party against Wall Street as Judis seems to suggest. As far as 'getting tough with banks' - I don't think it would have made sense to do brain surgery on the financial industry at the same time it was suffering a heart attack. I think undoubtedly the stimulus should have been bigger, in retrospect, or at least should have been tilted more toward spending than tax custs. However, at the time, Obama was still attempting bi-partisanship, as promised during his campaign, as well as fulfilling a campaign pledge for tax cuts. However, he could have started the bidding at $1.4 trillion, as recommended by Treasury and negotiated down from there with the GOP - then both sides might have been happy. I think Obama has largely taken a practical, logical, long-term approach to solving these problems, which is what should be done (Bush was suppose to be the CEO president, but I think Obama acts more like a CEO), rather than a more ideological approach. This is frustrating to many progressives (including myself sometimes), especially when the pay-off for these initiatives is so far down the line and the opposition is losing its collective mind and getting electoral boosts from its short-term, divisive, hateful rhetoric to excite an angry electorate.

- RobertW

August 16, 2010 at 11:49pm

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Judis: "These efforts to elevate Obama above the hurly-burly of Washington politics have been disastrous. Obama’s image as an iconic outsider has become the screen on which Fox News, the Tea Party, radicalright bloggers, and assorted politicians have projected the image of him as a foreigner, an Islamic radical, and a socialist." As an early post pointed out, it's hard to run the counterfactual. But would't Obama have been portrayed by his opponents just the same even if he had followed Judis's advice? He was being portrayed this way even before the election, before he had actually done anything. Then, when he pursues a relatively modest health care reform plan--similar to what Republicans proposed as an alternative to Clintoncare in the 90s--and suggest polices such as cap-and-trade, which McCain supported during his presidential campaign, he still gets branded as an extremist. No amount of populism would get these folks to brand him as they want to see him, regardless of his actual policies. "A more populist Obama, for instance, might have postponed the battle for climate change legislation or national health insurance and probably would have taken a weaker stand on immigration." Perhaps Judis is right on the politics, but wrong on policy. It was hard enough getting this partial health reform package through as it was. There was no way anything would pass going into this election. And given traditional midterm losses, there was no way it would pass in the next Congress. The only window for health care reform was when Obama and Congress took it. If it costs Democrats a few more seats, that may be a necessary sacrifice when the alternative was probably never getting it done at all.

- dsimon

August 17, 2010 at 12:14am

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Kudos to Judis. He completely captures my endless frustration with this hapless administration. You'd think with so many pricey Ivy League diplomas cluttering the walls, this Administration would be fast to learn from history and their own mistakes. Their campaign certainly suggested that result. Their governing has been entirely different, a strange mix of over-educated cluelessness. It brings to mind Sam Rayburn's comment when LBJ was marveling at the qualifications and educations of the 'Best & the Brightest' in the Kennedy Administration. "I just wish some of these fellas had run for county sheriff."

- rjosborne

August 17, 2010 at 11:20am

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For some of those longing for the days of LBJ - remember the 1966 midterms saw record gains by the GOP in a backlash to the historic social legislation (not Vietnam) passed in the first 3 years of his term - Civil Rights, Medicare, Medicaid and other Great Society programs. The Tea Party is partly a similar backlash against similarly necessary legislation required to address long-standing national problems, such as health care, financial re-regulation, education reform.

- RobertW

August 17, 2010 at 2:00pm

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WOW! What great set of comments! I completely agree with Wildboy. Financial markets would have responded in a worse manner to nationalizations and the crisis would have been much worse. Obama is a deft political calculator: accusations of socialism (=nationalization in the name of those less well off) are 100% bogus today (even if pundits keep repeating them as mantra; everyone knows that they are not true). And, Obama did keep financial markets from pure and absolute irrationality as well. I do agree with Judis in that Obama should have been able to pass a larger stimulus given what his economic advisors were telling him, and that he should have planned how to spend that stimulus in a much more effective and efficient way. I think that that last criticism, however, is more of a criticism we need to do to our institutions, which were unable to plan ahead to allocate resources in a timely and effective manner.

- candela

August 17, 2010 at 6:22pm

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How simplistic can you get? If only Obama had become a populist and bashed the bankers instead of saving the banking system, everything would have been much better. Not to mention that he would have alienated a very powerful and wealthy interest group that would have become even more politically activated and effective, as opposed to the tea-party morons who have no money for political campaigns and are simply a loose confereration of lunatics, many or most of whom have probably never voted and probably won't this time either. Whom would you rather oppose--an animated banker/Wall Street lobby or a bunch of mouth-breaters shouting "Go back to Kenya"? I would like to elaborate, and may some time, on the dozens if not hundreds of missteps from Day One that have put Obama in the pickle that he is in. Letting the bankers preserve a semblance of the global economy isn't even on the list.

- mlottman

August 19, 2010 at 10:57pm

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The milquetoast financial reforms are the most disappointing aspect of this sad administration. Their slavish kowtowing to the desires of Wall Street, including continuing with the same band (Gaithner, Summers, Bernake) who had enabled the economic catastrophe, is astounding. It's as though FDR had retained Andrew Mellon as Secretary of Treasury. Fear of the short term reactions of the Lords of Wall Street and the financial markets have dominated their thoughts. We needed restructuring and re-regulation. We got PR and band-aids- and not many band-aids. Don't take anything I say as excusing the irresponsible behavior of the Republicans, but I had no expectations of them. I had real hopes that Obama would usher in a progressive era.

- rjosborne

August 20, 2010 at 12:33am

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I can't believe you let this pass without a comment: "the “five pillars” of his economic policies." Hello! I know that Obama is a Christian since he was a parishioner of Rev. Wright, the anti-Semite for 20 years cheering him and calling him his "Spiritual mentor." Nevertheless this is straight out from "The five pillars of Islam," Not Carter, not anybody else but exactly what I mention above. Obama's fondness for Arabs and Islam is troubling wouldn't you say too?

- Poupic

August 21, 2010 at 5:47am

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It's pointless enough that the author criticizes Obama for simple honesty about causes of the financial crisis, but what gives with the unsupported statement that "Obama has already accomplished more than Jimmy Carter did during his entire presidency"? Carter saved the US economy (at the cost of his own re-election) by appointing Paul Volcker to head the Federal Reserve, brokered the Camp David Accords and deregulated the airline industry. As much as I admire President Obama, what's his sum to date?

- dgcrane53

August 25, 2010 at 1:28am

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Again i am amazed at how everybody dances around the issues, talks about how Obama has not created a narrative and acknowledges that marketing and selling a message is important; but miss the "big elephant in the room"; the right wing hate machine of Fox, Talk radio and the radical billionaires (Koch Brothers). Mr. Judis what Reagan and FDR never faced was the unprecedented organized super ideological and disciplined machine that I label the Hate Democrats Machine that emerged in the 70's but really flowered under Clinton (remember Richard Mellon Scaife). It is unprecedented in American political life. When was the last time a Congregational minority party voted almost monolithically against proposed policies. That kind of discipline was once associated with European parties. What keeps the minority so well organized is the fear of the likes of Limbaugh and Fox. In Fox we have for the first time in American politics an entire network dedicated to a political party. Obama demise if it comes will be seen to have been rooted in failing to recognize and confront the hate machine when his popularity was high. Selling the theme of bringing Red State America and Blue State America together and ignoring the corrosive power of those who work diligently to maintain the divisiveness was one major blunder. That’s why he shied away from confronting the Dick Cheney’s and other war criminals. But the campaign theme was at the root of his bipartisanship strategy which was so costly. Now of course one can always mock a fool who gets hit by the proverbial two by four. But can you blame that same fool for not seeing the two by four coming when everybody ignores it to this day. As for the policy implications of Mr. Judis’s populism other readers have argued it quite effectively what good is it to win an election if you accomplish little or nothing (no health reform, no immigration policy ). You have an empty shell which is what populism has always been. FDR may have used some populist appeals but he focused and delivered on policy. Populism has been the tool for bamboozling the masses.

- rigos4

August 27, 2010 at 10:34am

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