DID OBAMA HAVE A BAD YEAR
BECAUSE HE IS A COMMIE? A LYING
RACISTS? A BABY KILLER? HATES
AMERICA? HATES WHITE AMERICANS? IS A PLANT FOR THE MUSLIMS?
WANTS TO BRING AMERICA DOWN?
HAS COMMITTED TREASON? OVER TAXES AMERICANS AND GIVES-AWAY TOO MUCH
TO ILLEGALS AND BUMS?
SENT OVER $20 MILLION DOLLARS
TO HIS HOMELAND, KENYA?
KEEPS BUYING MUSLIMS OIL,
WHILE AMERICA HAS PLENTY OF OIL!
TRIED TO BREAK AMERICA BY PUTTING US
$800 BILLION DOLLARS IN DEBT?..***See "cut
the debt" at the bottom.
WANTS TO TAKE AWAY OUR
FREEDOM OF SPEECH? lIED ABOUT BEING
A CHRISTIAN? STOLE THE ELECTION ALONG WITH ACORN? MUST
BE IMPEACHED & IMPRISONED, IS AN IMPOSTER?
Obama's terrible, horrible, no good, very bad year
By NANCY BENAC and CALVIN WOODWARD, AP
Barack Obama's terrible, horrible, no good, very bad year got off to
a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad start.
There he was, on New Year's Day, on vacation with his family in
Hawaii, stuck on a secure phone with counterterrorism officials, trying
to figure out what screw-ups had allowed a would-be terrorist to board
a Christmas Day flight with explosives in his underwear.
Things only got worse for Obama when he returned to Washington in
between a pair of epic winter storms.
From the start, 2010 delivered a string of setbacks that built up to
an electoral shellacking come November, to use the president's own word.
No matter that the recession was officially over. That sweeping
health care changes at last had been enacted. That combat operations in
Iraq ended. That General Motors was making money and hiring again. That
banks paid back most of the billions they'd borrowed from the
government.
"This is what change looks like," Obama said proudly, after the
health care law passed.
But. The economic recovery was too slow. The oil gushed for too
long. The health care law was too complicated. The unemployment rate
too high. The political discourse too raw. The tea party too loud.
Americans were in a foul mood, and Democrats got the blame.
___
JANUARY
Unemployment rate: 9.7 percent. Presidential approval rating in
Associated Press-GfK poll: 56 percent. Congressional approval: 42
percent.
The Jan. 19 election to fill the Senate seat vacated by the death of
Obama's ally and friend, Ted Kennedy, delivered a jarring result.
Republican Scott Brown's victory, in liberal Massachusetts no less,
deprived Democrats of their 60th vote in the Senate, the number needed
to overcome GOP delaying tactics on legislation.
The consequences rippled through everything, recasting the already
bruising health care debate, dimming hopes for climate change
legislation and exposing animosity from voters over joblessness, Wall
Street bailouts, exploding federal budget deficits and the toxic ways
of Washington.
Obama Scores in Lame Duck Session
Obama recognized what was obvious, yet remarkable for a man who just
one year earlier had embodied the restless mood of voters who swept him
into office. He was losing touch.
"Do they really get us and what we're going through?" Obama wondered
aloud.
He meant that extraordinary circumstances had forced themselves on
the presidency and the country. "I hated it, you hated it," he said of
the bank bailouts, for example. "It was about as popular as a root
canal."
His State of the Union speech was in part a soliloquy about the
expectations he'd raised. "I campaigned on the promise of change —
change we can believe in, the slogan went," he said. "And right now, I
know there are many Americans who aren't sure if they still believe we
can change. Or, at least, that I can deliver it."
___
FEBRUARY
Unemployment rate: 9.7 percent.
Bipartisanship came briefly into fashion, as lip service. Early in
the month, Obama invited Republican leaders to the White House for the
first time in two months, even as the capital was all but shut down by
snow and ice. The meeting simply made clear Washington was polarized to
the point of paralysis — in government as well as on the streets.
"Bipartisan cannot mean simply that Democrats give up everything
that they believe in, find the handful of things that Republicans have
been advocating for, and we do those things, and then we have
bipartisanship," Obama sniped.
House Republican leaders John Boehner and Eric Cantor told Obama in
a letter: "'Bipartisanship' is not writing proposals of your own behind
closed doors, then unveiling them and demanding Republican support."
___
MARCH
Unemployment rate: 9.7 percent. Presidential approval rating: 53
percent. Congressional approval: 22 percent.
It was a month of passion and poison, a cry of "baby killer" from
the House floor, roiling tea party protests, ugly shouts at lawmakers
and sometimes by them. In the fierce maneuvering for a health care law,
Democrats rained favors in back rooms to placate deep-pocketed special
interests and wavering lawmakers. Spring arrived like streaks of mud on
the carpet.
It was a mess.
And it placed Obama squarely in the history books as the president
who achieved what Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman and
Bill Clinton could not — a path to nearly universal health care. Under
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, despised insurance
company practices would be forbidden and Americans would finally get
the help they need to afford health insurance as well as an
IRS-enforced mandate to obtain it.
"We proved that we are still a people capable of doing big things,"
Obama declared after the crucial House vote late the night of March 21.
Boehner steamed from the House floor in the final throes of debate.
"Can you say it was done openly, with transparency and accountability,
without back-room deals?" Boehner demanded. "Hell, no you can't!"
Obama summoned exhausted aides to the Truman Balcony in the midnight
hour for champagne.
"Fired up! Ready to go!" Democrats exulted at the signing two days
later. Vice President Joe Biden remarked to the president, a little too
close to the microphone, "This is a big f------ deal."
Obama took his victory on the road. In Iowa he dared Republicans to
try to repeal the law. You could say he taunted them.
"Go for it," he said. "Be my guest."
"If they want to have that fight, we can have it. Because I don't
believe the American people are going to put the insurance industry
back in the driver's seat."
___
APRIL:
Unemployment rate: 9.9 percent. Presidential approval rating: 49
percent. Congressional approval: 28 percent.
At first, it was just another tragic accident. On April 20, an
explosion ripped through the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, killing 11
crewmen and injuring 17 as the massive structure sank into the Gulf of
Mexico.
Four days later, oil was found leaking nearly a mile below the
surface.
Another circumstance had forced itself upon the presidency and the
nation.
___
MAY
Unemployment rate: 9.7 percent. Presidential approval rating: 49
percent. Congressional approval: 28 percent.
The oil slick was massive and growing. Americans were becoming
conversant with terms like blowout preventer, static kill and top kill.
A live video feed from the ocean floor constantly reminded Americans
that the government and the industry could not staunch a disaster
unfolding before everyone's eyes.
"This man is working hard," Michelle Obama told a meeting of
Democratic women early in the month.
"Did you plug the hole yet, Daddy?" Malia Obama asked her father
late in the month.
In Utah, the tea party movement unseated Republican Sen. Bob Bennett
at a state convention, signaling to both parties that a new political
force was in play. The conservative grass-roots activists scored a
succession of upsets in Republican primaries from Alaska to Florida.
But could those people win widely in a general election? That was the
burning question for the fall.
GM, rescued by government, reported its first quarterly profit since
2007.
Overseas, just before Memorial Day weekend at home, a roadside bomb
pushed the U.S. military death toll to 1,000 in Afghanistan, the war
that Obama decided to fight with escalating force while withdrawing
combat boots from Iraq.
___
JUNE
Unemployment rate: 9.5 percent. Presidential approval rating: 50
percent. Congressional approval: 24 percent.
Where's the outrage? If coolness in a crisis is a virtue in the Oval
Office, people also want to see leaders channel their anger and
frustration.
Obama absorbed that lesson as the oil still gushed. He told
Americans his talks with Gulf fishermen and oil and environmental
experts were "so I know whose ass to kick."
An Associated Press-GfK poll during the crisis found that Americans
had become just as dissatisfied with Obama's work on the Gulf oil spill
as they had been with President George W. Bush's handling of Hurricane
Katrina.
"He's certainly moved from seeming to walk on water to really
slogging in the mud, the oil-filled mud if you will," Fred Greenstein,
a Princeton University presidential scholar, told AP. "He is hitting a
lot of existential obstacles — things that are out there and that are
intractable."
In an extraordinary loose-lips episode, Obama's Afghanistan war
commander and his aides unloaded on senior administration officials in
a Rolling Stone magazine profile. Obama swiftly fired Gen. Stanley
McChrystal and summoned his Central Command leader, Gen. David
Petraeus, to step back from that plum post and run the war effort. The
episode revealed continuing frustration over what some front-line
officers see as micromanaging by Washington.
___
JULY
Unemployment rate: 9.5 percent.
The administration called it "Recovery Summer" but people didn't
seem to be buying it.
Yes, economic growth was coming back from the year before. But the
$814 billion stimulus package was supposed to wrestle down
unemployment, and that was still perilously close to 10 percent.
Democrats who had gone to the wall for the health care overhaul were
hearing voters tell them to fix the economy.
The vastly complicated health law may be as far-reaching as Social
Security in the 1930s or Medicare in the 1960s. But it is different.
Most people aren't suddenly getting a check from the government in the
mail. The promised gains unfold in many stages spread out over years.
Joblessness is now.
___
AUGUST
Unemployment rate: 9.6 percent. Presidential approval rating: 49
percent. Congressional approval: 24 percent.
Vacations are rarely just vacations for a president and his family.
This year was no exception.
Michelle Obama's five-day trip to the south of Spain with daughter
Sasha touched off a mini-firestorm stoked by questions about the wisdom
of such a glamorous trip and over-the-top speculation about who was
footing the bill. Suddenly the popular first lady was being labeled a
"material girl" sponging off taxpayers.
Later in the month, the oil spill finally choked off in advance of
the final kill of the well, the Obamas symbolically vacationed in the
Gulf to show the world that beaches were safe, clean and open for
business again. Playing in the Florida Panhandle, the president and
Sasha swam out of public view in Saint Andrew Bay off of Alligator
Point, technically not the Gulf.
August produced "a good day" for Obama, the confirmation of Elena
Kagan to the Supreme Court, and a milestone in Iraq as the last combat
troops came out, leaving 50,000 to try to help Iraqi forces maintain
security. "It's time to turn the page," he said.
GM, recipient of a nearly $50 billion bailout, reported another
quarterly profit, $1.3 billion, and began the process of shedding
government ownership. The automaker stayed profitable in the fall and
raised $13 billion for taxpayers in its initial stock sale to the
public. Like Chrysler, also out of bankruptcy protection, GM has been
hiring thousands more workers.
___
SEPTEMBER
Unemployment rate: 9.6 percent. Presidential approval rating: 49
percent. Congressional approval: 26 percent.
Restive voters were not waiting for November to have their say.
Republican nomination races gave them their bullhorn and they were
using it with dramatic effect.
In one of the year's biggest upsets, Joe Miller, backed by Sarah
Palin and the Tea Party Express, defeated GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski in
Alaska, adding her to a column of incumbents pushed aside. Murkowski
conceded a week after the Aug. 24 primary as the ballot count went
against her. She later set about a long-shot campaign to win as a
write-in candidate in November.
___
OCTOBER
Unemployment rate: 9.6 percent. Presidential approval rating: 49
percent. Congressional approval: 23 percent.
Obama campaigned largely in urban areas in liberal states, his
unpopularity such that many Democrats wanted to keep their distance
from him in the home stretch. Former President Bill Clinton and Vice
President Joe Biden stepped in to fight for the cause in places where
the president could not.
If Democrats used the health care law in their campaigns, it was to
dissociate themselves from it. Some labored equally hard not to be tied
to Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker demonized by Democrats' foes.
"Republicans are on offense and Democrats are running for cover,"
Boehner said. Democrats used every opportunity to remind voters of the
bitter fruits of Republican governance. "They're offering more of the
past," Biden said, "but on steroids."
Democrats had little doubt they were in for a drubbing Nov. 2.
___
NOVEMBER
Unemployment rate: 9.8 percent. Presidential approval rating: 47
percent. Congressional approval: 26 percent.
Obama was reflective the day after. He was not looking for asses to
kick. Republicans won the House from the Democrats, shaved the
Democratic majority in the Senate, picked up governorships and surged
in state legislatures.
"You know," Obama said, "this is something that I think every
president needs to go through."
"Now," he went on, "I'm not recommending for every future president
that they take a shellacking like I did last night. You know, I'm sure
there are easier ways to learn these lessons."
Said Pelosi: ""Nine and a half percent unemployment is a very
eclipsing event."
The tea party demonstrated both its potency and its limits.
Republican House candidates backed by the activists are coming to
Washington by the dozens. Yet some Republicans are quietly convinced
they would have won the Senate, too, if not for a collection of flawed
candidates chosen with tea party support.
Tea party favorites won Senate seats in Florida, Kentucky and Utah,
but lost in Nevada, Delaware and Colorado. In Alaska, Murkowski's
improbable write-in campaign succeeded.
Obama blew off some steam at a pickup basketball game, coming away
with a gashed lower lip needing 12 stitches.
___
DECEMBER
The year drew to a close with the government in a defensive crouch
against the drip-drip-drip of WikiLeaks disclosures. The first hundreds
to be released, in a cache of more than 250,000 State Department cables
coming out, proved a huge embarrassment for Washington in its dealings
with other nations, and followed the leak of nearly half a million
documents from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
A burst of bipartisanship came back, this time with teeth. It has
left liberal Democrats feeling bitten.
Although Obama has probably called the Republicans' bluff on their
vow to repeal "Obamacare" — they don't have the votes — he has to deal
with them on a broad front now. He compromised on tax cuts in the
lame-duck session, agreeing to extend lower rates for the rich as well
as the middle class before their expiration at year's end. The
agreement is expected to add $900 billion to the deficit.
Has harmony come to the capital? Hardly. Obama likened the
Republicans to hostage-takers.
But it's a new world now. He dealt.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.|
2011