Washington  Examiner
 
 
Obama was no  political master, 
after all
By _Timothy P. Carney_ 
(http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/author/timothy-p.-carney)  
(https://plus.google.com/+TimCarneyDisclosure?rel=author)  |  
November 4, 2014 
 

 
President Obama, it turns out, is good at basically one thing: getting  
elected.
 
Nearly all of the other skills of politicians and statesmen, such as  
persuading the public, crafting compromise, helping his political allies, are  
absent in Obama. Tuesday’s results — destruction of his party’s Senate 
majority,  and losses in the House — reinforce that Obama’s political prowess 
is 
limited to  his ability to make people pull the lever for him or cut him a 
check. 
In other words, he can make people like him on Election Day, which is the  
most important skill for a politician. But it’s a small fraction of what a  
political leader needs. 
Obama isn’t very good at helping other Democrats elected when he is not on  
the ballot. The only Democrats Obama has helped are those who benefited 
from a  surge in liberal enthusiasm in 2008 and 2012. Obama’s inability to 
rally voters  for other politicians first became clear weeks after he won the 
White House in  2008.
 
Democratic Senate candidate Jim Martin was in a runoff after finishing 3  
points behind Georgia Republican Saxby Chambliss. Obama cut ads for Martin,  
hoping to make him the 60th Democratic senator. Chambliss walloped Martin by 
15  points in the runoff. 
Obama and Biden both went to Massachusetts a year later to try to help 
Martha  Coakley carry Massachusetts. Coakley lost. 
In the 2010 election, Democrats lost 63 House seats and six Senate seats.  
This year, Democrats lost seats in the House and lost at least five Senate 
seats  and counting. Again, in 2008 and 2012, Obama helped down-ballot 
Democrats  because his presence on the ballot boosted turnout. But most of the 
Senate  Democrats he carried to tough wins in 2008 — including Mark Udall and 
Mark Pryor  — were walloped on Tuesday. 
Obama also has largely failed to persuade Congress or the public on his  
favored policies. Lyndon B. Johnson and Ronald Reagan worked Congress to win  
important votes. Presidents throughout history have used the bully pulpit to 
 rally the public, thus exerting pressure on Congress. 
Obama tried to use the bully pulpit on gun control. Instead of the White  
House pushing Republicans to join Democrats, Ted Cruz — a freshman senator — 
 used his mini-pulpit to whip senators away from gun control. It was a 
total  failure for Obama. 
Obama couldn’t win over Congress to support his war in Syria. He couldn’t  
pass climate legislation through a Democratic Congress. Obama’s biggest  
legislative victory — Obamacare — was a matter largely of Obama handing the  
reins over to Nancy Pelosi, Harry Waxman, Max Baucus and Harry Reid. 
The only legislative compromise Obama ever cut was the sequester, which 
Obama  hated, and which turned out — after the supercommittee fizzled — to be 
a failure  for the White House. 
Obama was famously cold to lawmakers, even those in his own party. Elected  
Democrats regularly complained (usually anonymously) about never being 
invited  to the White House — or being treated poorly when they were. 
Obama earned every one of the more than 200 rounds of golf he has played as 
 president, sure, but he chose to play them mostly with the same handful  
of friends — almost never with lawmakers, rarely with congressional  leaders.
 
What did Obama do well? Get people to vote for him, mostly. How did he do  
this? Through gimmicks and posturing. His data-heads found that bringing 
Beyonce  and Jay Z to rallies sparked the interest of exactly the sort of young 
voters  who might stay home but will certainly vote Democrat if they show. 
He found that  talk of battling the special interests was a winning message. 
In other words, Obama is the best product marketer in America, but he only  
learned how to sell one product: Obama. 
In this light it makes sense that Obama ran for president after only a 
couple  of years in the Senate. You want an accomplishment? He got elected to 
the  Senate. 
When Obama was asked in 2008 about executive experience, he answered that 
he  had led a giant presidential campaign. 
This, it seems, was the entirety of politics for Obama: getting people to  
vote for him. Successful politics begins there. Obama’s politics end  there.

-- 
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