The Incredible Shrinking President
By _William Murchison_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/william_murchison/)  - November 18,  
2014
_realclearpolitics.com_ (http://realclearpolitics.com) 

 
 
For two more years, two very long and, I’m afraid, discombobulating years,  
the United States is to be served by a president with the emotional 
maturity of  — shall we guess? A 12-year-old determined to be noticed by 
everyone 
in the  room? Maybe. 
Barack Obama doesn’t care that his political party lost the election. He  
doesn’t care that his signature achievement — Obamacare — earns a 
disapproval  rating of 56 percent in the latest Gallup Poll. He’s going to 
overhaul  
immigration policy by presidential decree while pushing his own ideas on 
climate  change, in conjunction with the Chinese. He won’t commit to the 
Keystone  pipeline.




 
What are we going to do? Impeach him? Send him to bed without his supper? 
One  can’t think of an approach likely to influence the conduct of the most  
self-fixated chief executive, I imagine, in American history. Obama hears  
nothing he chooses not to hear, believes nothing corrosive to his self-image 
of  brainy dexterity. 
The best we can do, maybe, is ignore him. Don’t laugh — it may happen. 
The “most powerful man in the world,” as journalists like to call America’
s  maximum leader — whether he actually leads — is a figure hard to ignore: 
all the  harder when he sets out to govern by edict and sheer cussedness. 
Note this,  nonetheless: The political system already is looking past him, 
wondering who  will take over the job in 2017. Hillary? Jeb Bush? Do I hear 
Mitt Romney? 
Nearly all the air has leaked from the Obama enterprise — the calculation  
that an unknown Illinois senator would bury the partisan hostilities of the  
previous two decades and do wondrous, formerly unimaginable things for  
America. 
Ain’t gonna happen. Wasn’t ever likely to, for all the tall tales the  
candidate told about himself and his aspirations. The Obama presidency, with 
two  years still to run, has the look of a spent force. No one can dare to say 
it’s  over, but it surely looks that way. 
Picking up the pieces from varied international bunglings and from scorn 
for  sound, job-creating economics won’t make 2017-21 a walk in the park; but, 
then,  that merely strengthens the case for ignoring the policies and ideas 
that were  Obama’s calling cards. 
See any likelihood that government-controlled health care will be a 
rallying  point for Democratic presidential candidates? The larger reality is 
that 
these  same Democrats, seeking to avoid extinction, will have to promise at 
least  minimal attention to the job of fixing Obamacare’s failings. 
Obama’s pleas to keep his political baby out of the hands of Child 
Protective  Services won’t wash in most settings. Democratic senatorial 
candidates 
during  the last political cycle scampered away from a president the public 
had come to  distrust — as the polls regularly indicated. Lacking a 
Democratic majority in  either house of Congress, what can Obama do for 
political 
redemption? Wave his  scepter like Nero and bid the nation listen to him? It 
appears he means to try,  as with immigration reform. Trying nevertheless isn’
t the same as succeeding.  Our president, for all his power, looks more like 
an irrelevance than ever  before. 
Such condition can’t be healthy for a country menaced by foreign enemies 
and  punching below its weight, economically speaking. Great dangers arise in 
the  kind of political vacuum over which our president presides; that is, if 
you call  it presiding. 
There is opportunity in the moment, even so — opportunity that comes with 
the  overdue chance to quit putting one Barack H. Obama and his rhetoric at 
the  center of American plans and dreams and calculations, and to start 
figuring out  what policies can be made actually to work. 
The opportunity holds more promise yet — that of figuring out which  
presidential candidates, Democratic or Republican, seem likeliest to make the  
tiller of state stop spinning. 
Onward to January. That’s when the process really gets going. That’s when 
the  tiny if powerful — just ask him — figure of an immature and petulant 
president,  occupying temporarily the chair of Washington, Lincoln, and 
Reagan, begins  shrinking to its proper  size. 


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