TIME  magazine
 
 
 
One Nation
Why Obama Is Losing the Political War
By _Mark Halperin_ (http://www.time.com/time/letters/email_letter.html)  
 
Oct 11,  2010




Barack Obama is being politically crushed in a vise. From above, by elite  
opinion about his competence. From below, by mass anger and anxiety over  
unemployment. And it is too late for him to do anything about this predicament 
 until after November's elections.  
With the exception of core Obama Administration  loyalists, most 
politically engaged elites have reached the same conclusions:  the White House 
is in 
over its head, isolated, insular, arrogant and clueless  about how to get 
along with or persuade members of Congress, the media, the  business community 
or working-class voters. This view is held by Fox News  pundits, executives 
and anchors at the major old-media outlets, reporters who  cover the White 
House, Democratic and Republican congressional leaders and  governors, many 
Democratic business people and lawyers who raised big money for  Obama in 
2008, and even some members of the Administration just beyond the inner  
circle. _(See Obama's troubled first year, issue by  issue.)_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1954998_1954999,00.html)
  
On Friday, after the release of the latest bleak unemployment data — the 
last  major jobs figures before the midterms — Obama said, "Putting the 
American  people back to work, expanding opportunity, rebuilding the economic 
security of  the middle class is the moral and national challenge of our time." 
But elites  feel the President has failed to meet that challenge and are 
convinced he will  be unable to do so in the remainder of his term. Moreover, 
there is a growing  perception that Obama's decisions are causing harm — that 
businesses are being  hurt by the Administration's legislation and that 
economic recovery is stalling  because of the uncertainty surrounding energy 
policy, health care, deficits,  housing, immigration and spending.  
And that sentiment is spreading. Many members of  the general public appear 
deeply skeptical of Obama's capacity to turn things  around, especially, 
but not exclusively, those inclined to dislike him — Tea  Partyers and John 
McCain voters, but also tens of millions of middle-class  Americans, including 
quite a few who turned out for Obama in 2008. _(See how some Americans are 
facing the  prospect of long-term unemployment.)_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1921504_1921522,00.html)
  
The misery afflicting the country has no political  affiliation. _Listen to 
the voices from this striking TV ad  for Rob Portman_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gu5fXlKRotU&feature=player_embedded#) , the 
Republican former 
Congressman and Bush budget  director who is running for Senate from Ohio. One 
woman at a Dayton career fair  says starkly, "There are no jobs." A man 
announces plaintively and with obvious  frustration, "I've been looking for a 
job now for 13 months." Events like this  job fair are becoming the grim 
iconic gatherings of our time, the breadlines for  the Obama years.  
Most of Obama's private (and sometimes public)  rebuttals to the voices 
slamming him on all sides are justified or spot on. He  did inherit a lot of 
problems from the Bush Administration. He did act quickly  in the initial 
weeks of his Administration to stave off a worldwide depression.  His efforts 
at 
job creation have been obstructed by Republicans (even the  proposals based 
on policies supported by the GOP in the past). His opponents  haven't put 
forth specifics of their own, nor offered genuine compromise, while  the 
media have allowed the right's activists and gabbers to run wild with  
criticism 
without furnishing legitimate alternative solutions. _(See Barack Obama's 
top 10 sound  bites.)_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1954949_1954934,00.html)
  
But Obama has exacerbated his political problems  not just by failing to 
enact policies that would have actually turned the  economy around, but also 
by authorizing a series of tactical moves intended to  demonize Republicans 
and distract from the problems at hand. He has wasted time  lambasting his 
foes when he should have been putting forth his agenda in a  clear, optimistic 
fashion, defending the benefits of his key decisions during  the past two 
years (health care and the Troubled Asset Relief Program, for  example) and 
explaining what he would do with a re-elected Democratic majority  to spur 
growth. _(Comment on this story.)_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,2024718,00.html#comments)  
Throughout the year, we have been treated to  Obama-led attacks on George 
W. Bush and Dick Cheney, Rush Limbaugh, Congressman  Joe Barton (for his odd 
apology to BP), John Boehner (for seeking the  speakership — or was it 
something about an ant?) and Fox News (for everything).  Suitable Democratic 
targets in some cases, perhaps, but not worth the time of a  busy Commander in 
Chief. In the past few days, we have witnessed the spectacle  of the 
President himself and his top advisers wading into allegations that  
Republicans are 
attempting to buy the election using foreign money laundered  through the 
Chamber of Commerce, combining with Karl Rove and his wealthy  backers to 
fund a flood of negative television commercials. Not only is this  issue 
convoluted and far-fetched, but it also distracts from the issues voters  care 
about, frustrating political insiders and alienating struggling citizens  (not 
that many are following such an offbeat story line). Feinting and gibing  
can't obscure those job numbers. _(See the best viral campaign ads of  2010.)_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/0,28757,2012290,00.html)  
The President and Democrats have passed many significant measures (the  
stimulus spending, the auto-company rescue, the health care law and the  
financial regulation effort) that someday may be seen as brave and bold, the  
foundation for a better economy. Obama and his closest aides certainly think  
that will happen. But the President was correct when he said Friday, "the only 
 piece of economic news that folks still looking for work want to hear is,  
'You're hired,'" and that's still not occurring for too many Americans.  
The politically good news for Obama is that no matter what the outcome of 
the  midterm elections, everything changes in January. Republicans will have 
a  greater obligation, politically and morally, to help govern, rather than 
thwart  and badger. The President will get a chance, in his State of the 
Union address  and in his budget proposal, to show he is turning the page on 
the political  horrors of 2010 for his party and the nation. But before then, 
Republicans are  almost certainly going to demonstrate that you can beat 
something with  nothing, especially when Americans seem to think that the Obama 
Administration  hasn't much to offer either, except more of the same that 
isn't working. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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