NY  Times
Eight Was Enough
The Obama years, which left us
divided and angry, paved the way
for the ascent of Donald J.  Trump.
 
_Peter  Wehner_ (http://www.nytimes.com/column/peter-wehner)  JAN.  14, 2017
 
 
 
 
 
IT wasn’t supposed to end  this way for Democrats. 
Eight years ago, Barack  Obama won the presidency promising to transform 
America. A supremely  self-confident politician, Mr. Obama was the object of 
extravagant hopes that he  nurtured and encouraged. 
After his Super Tuesday  primary victories in 2008, _Mr. Obama said _ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/06/AR2008020600199.h
tml) that the movement he began would “ring out across this  land as a hymn 
that will heal this nation, repair this world, make this time  different 
than all the rest.” He would slow the rise of the oceans, end wars  abroad and 
bridge political divisions at home. For his supporters, Mr. Obama was  
almost a figure of myth, comparable to Lincoln. When he won the presidency,  
nothing seemed beyond his reach. 
Yet after two terms of the  Obama presidency, the Democratic Party is 
weaker than it has been _since the 1920s_ 
(http://www.npr.org/2016/03/04/469052020/the-democratic-party-got-crushed-during-the-obama-presidency-heres-why)
 . 
Republicans now control the presidency, the Senate,  the House and a strong 
majority of governorships and state legislatures.  President Obama’s 
repeated personal appeals to his supporters to vote for  Hillary Clinton in 
order 
to preserve his legacy failed to put her over the top.  The man who seemed to 
hold such promise for his party ended up taking a scythe  to it. 
What happened? 
For some of the  president’s admirers, the answer is that America has 
become benighted and  bigoted. For others, the culprit is the Republican Party, 
which obstructed Mr.  Obama at every turn. And for still others, like Mr. 
Obama, the problem is that  his administration didn’t do enough to advertise 
its greatness._Continue reading the main story_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/14/opinion/sunday/eight-was-enough.html?ref=opinion&_r=1#story-continues-1
) 

 
 
 
Even if you believe there are elements of truth in  these explanations, 
they still amount to excuses. The same country that twice  elected Mr. Obama 
did not suddenly become a nation of deplorables. In his first  two years, with 
Democrats firmly in control of the House and Senate, Mr. Obama  won the 
passage of his sweeping legislative agenda, including the Affordable  Care Act, 
the stimulus package, financial regulations, the extension of jobless  
benefits and more. As for selling his policies, President Obama was constantly  
making his case. 
The decimation of the Democratic Party came because  Mr. Obama turned out 
to be great at poetry and bad at prose. 
Start with the economy.  It’s true that he inherited a wicked recession, 
that unemployment is much lower  than when he entered office and that the 
stock market has reached an all-time  high. On the flip side, the economic 
recovery has been unusually weak, with  annual growth never exceeding 3 
percent. 
(Until Mr. Obama, every president since  Herbert Hoover had at least one 
year of 3 percent growth.) The labor force  participation rate is at the lowest 
it has been since the 1970s. Since 2008,  real wages have remained the same 
or fallen for the bottom  four-fifths. 

To make matters worse, the  Obama presidency has been characterized by 
injurious incompetence, in particular  with regard to his signature 
achievement, 
Obamacare. The unveiling of the  website was a disaster, and the promises 
the president made — that Americans  could keep their doctors and plans if 
they chose to — were false. Mr. Obama  guaranteed lower insurance costs to 
families and lower health costs to the  taxpayer; instead, costs rose. Several 
of the state-run exchanges appear to be  headed for collapse. 
Overseas, the Obama years  have been defined by spreading disorder and 
chaos, particularly in the Middle  East and North Africa, with nations 
collapsing and borders dissolving. More  terrorist safe havens have been 
established 
than ever before. Russia and China  have become more aggressive and 
significantly increased their geopolitical  influence. America is now held in 
brazen 
contempt by our enemies and mistrusted  by many of our allies. 
Yet in some respects the  greatest failure of the Obama years is in the 
area where many people thought he  would excel. Mr. Obama made the centerpiece 
of his 2008 campaign a promise to  end a politics that “breeds division and 
conflict and cynicism.” In February of  that year, I _praised him_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/01/AR2008020102663.html)
 for “a message that, at its core, is about unity and  hope rather than 
division and resentment.” Yet he leaves office with America  more conflicted 
and cynical than when he took office. More than _70 percent of Americans_ 
(http://www.apnorc.org/PDFs/Obama%20Legacy/APNORC_Obama_Legacy_Topline_FINAL.pdf?
mid=82442&rid=13484270)  say the  country is either more divided or no 
more united than it was in 2009. Race  relations are the worst in decades, 
and our nation is as polarized as it has  been in the modern era. 
It would be silly to lay  all the blame for this at the feet of Mr. Obama. 
Republicans have been  rhetorically reckless at times, and President-elect 
Donald Trump has coarsened  public discourse and set Americans against one 
another in ways that were once  unimaginable. But Mr. Obama came first, and he 
played a role in where we  are. 
In his farewell address  last week, President Obama said that for the sake 
of our democracy we need to  heed the advice of the fictional character 
Atticus Finch, who said, “You never  really understand a person until you 
consider things from his point of  view.” 
Yet Mr. Obama never seemed  to consider things from a different point of 
view from his own. He has shown  withering disdain for his opponents, 
constantly impugning their motives even as  he testified to the purity of his 
own. 
It was his arrogance that proved to be  Mr. Obama’s undoing. (Even leaders of 
his own party felt Mr. Obama’s derision,  as if dealing with them was 
somehow beneath him.) Mr. Obama dismissed those who  disagreed with him like a 
professor forced to deal with simple-minded, wayward  students. He warned us 
against retreating into our bubbles, but he was never  able to escape his 
own. 
During the Obama presidency, many people felt unheard  and alienated. They 
are the kind of Americans Mr. Obama had in mind in 2008 when  he talked 
about “bitter” people clinging to their “guns or religion.” 
Barack Obama is among the  most talented campaigners we have ever seen. But 
as president, he failed in a  manner and on a scale that damaged his party, 
undermined faith in the  institutions of government and left the nation 
more riven than he found it. For  most Americans, the economy has been 
listless. All this helped create the  conditions that allowed a cynical 
demagogue to 
rise up and succeed him, one who  will undo the achievements he most 
prizes. 
In many  ways Barack Obama and Donald Trump could not be more different. 
Mr. Obama is  equable and graceful; Mr. Trump is erratic and graceless. Yet 
one cannot make  sense of the incoming presidency without understanding the 
failures of the  outgoing one.

-- 
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