Obama’s Need to Reboot: Frank Rich in the New York Times
Here’s hoping that the State of the Union address constitutes the necessary rebooting. (I wish the omens about this looked better.)
This piece was called to my attention by Richard Randall.
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After the Massachusetts Massacre
By FRANK RICH
New York Times, January 23, 2010
It was not a referendum on Barack Obama, who in every poll remains one of the most popular politicians in America. It was not a rejection of universal health care, which Massachusetts mandated (with Scott Brown’s State Senate vote) in 2006. It was not a harbinger of a resurgent G.O.P., whose numbers remain in the toilet. Brown had the good sense not to identify himself as a Republican in either his campaign advertising or his victory speech.
And yet Tuesday’s special election was a dire omen for this White House. If the administration sticks to this trajectory, all bets are off for the political future of a president who rode into office blessed with more high hopes, good will and serious promise than any in modern memory. It’s time for him to stop deluding himself. Yes, last week’s political obituaries were ludicrously premature. Obama’s 50-ish percent first-anniversary approval rating matches not just Carter’s but Reagan’s. (Bushes 41 and 43 both skyrocketed in Year One.) Still, minor adjustments can’t right what’s wrong.
Obama’s plight has been unchanged for months. Neither in action nor in message is he in front of the anger roiling a country where high unemployment remains unchecked and spiraling foreclosures are demolishing the bedrock American dream of home ownership. The president is no longer seen as a savior but as a captive of the interests who ginned up the mess and still profit, hugely, from it.
That’s no place for any politician of any party or ideology to be. There’s a reason why the otherwise antithetical Leno and Conan camps are united in their derision of NBC’s titans. A TV network has become a handy proxy for every mismanaged, greedy, disloyal and unaccountable corporation in our dysfunctional economy. It’s a business culture where the rich and well-connected get richer while the employees, shareholders and customers get the shaft. And the conviction that the game is fixed is nonpartisan. If the tea party right and populist left agree on anything, it’s that big bailed-out banks have and will get away with murder while we pay the bill on credit cards — with ever-rising fees.
Politically, no other issue counts. In last weekend’s Washington Post/ABC News poll, 42 percent of Americans chose the economy as the country’s most pressing concern. Only 5 percent picked terrorism, and 2 percent Afghanistan. Obama’s highest approval ratings are now on foreign policy and national security issues — despite the relentless hammering from the Cheney right — but voters don’t care.
Does health care matter? Not as much as you’d think after this yearlong crusade. In the Post/ABC poll, the issue was second-tier — at 24 percent. Obama has blundered, not by positioning himself too far to the left but by landing nowhere — frittering away his political capital by being too vague, too slow and too deferential to Congress. The smartest thing said as the Massachusetts returns came in Tuesday night was by Howard Fineman on MSNBC: “Obama took all his winnings and turned them over to Max Baucus.”
Worse, the master communicator in the White House has still not delivered a coherent message on his signature policy. He not only refused to signal his health care imperatives early on but even now he, like Congressional Democrats, has failed to explain clearly why and how reform relates to economic recovery — or, for that matter, what he wants the final bill to contain. Sure, a president needs political wiggle room as legislative sausage is made, but Scott Brown could and did drive his truck through the wide, wobbly parameters set by Obama.
Ask yourself this: All these months later, do you yet know what the health care plan means for your family’s bottom line, your taxes, your insurance? It’s this nebulousness, magnified by endless Senate versus House squabbling, that has allowed reform to be caricatured by its foes as an impenetrable Rube Goldberg monstrosity, a parody of deficit-ridden big government. Since most voters are understandably confused about what the bills contain, the opponents have been able to attribute any evil they want to Obamacare, from death panels to the death of Medicare, without fear of contradiction.
It’s too late to rewrite that history, but it may not be too late for White House decisiveness. Whatever happens now — good, bad or ugly — must happen fast. Each day Washington spends dickering over health care is another day lost while the election-year economy, stupid, remains intractable for Americans who are suffering.
On the economic front, Obama needs both stylistic and substantive makeovers. He has stepped up the populist rhetoric lately — and markedly after political disaster struck last week — but few find this serene Harvard-trained lawyer credible when slinging populist rhetoric at “fat-cat” bankers. His two principal economic policy makers are useless, if not counterproductive, surrogates. Timothy Geithner, the Treasury secretary, was probably fatally compromised from the moment his tax lapses surfaced; now he is stalked by the pileup of unanswered questions about the still-not-transparent machinations at the New York Fed when he was knee-deep in the A.I.G. bailout. Lawrence Summers, the top administration economic guru, is a symbol of the Clinton-era deregulatory orgy that helped fuel the bubble.
The White House clearly knows this duo is a political albatross. After the news broke that 85,000 more jobs had been lost in December despite some economists’ more optimistic predictions, Christina Romer, a more user-friendly (though still academic) economic hand, was dispatched to the Sunday shows. This is at best a makeshift solution.
Obama needs more independent economists like Paul Volcker, who was hastily retrieved from exile last week after the Massachusetts massacre prompted the White House to tardily embrace his strictures on big banks. Obama also needs economic spokesmen who are not economists and who can authentically speak to life on the ground. Obama must also reconnect. The former community organizer whose credit card was denied at the Hertz counter during the 2000 Democratic convention now spends too much time at the White House presiding over boardroom-table meetings and stiff initiative rollouts instead of engaging with Americans not dressed in business suits.
When it comes to economic substance, small symbolic gestures (the proposed new bank “fee”) won’t cut it. Nor will ineffectual presidential sound bites railing against Wall Street bonuses beyond the federal government’s purview. There’s no chance of a second stimulus. The White House will have to jawbone banks on foreclosures, credit card racketeering and the loosening of credit to small businesses. This means taking on bankers who were among the Obama campaign’s biggest backers and whose lobbyists have castrated regulatory reform by buying off congressmen of both parties. It means pressing for all constitutional remedies that might counter last week’s 5-to-4 Supreme Court decision allowing corporate campaign contributions to buy off even more.
It’s become so easy to pin financial elitism on Democrats that the morning after Brown’s victory the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee had the gall to accuse them of being the “one party who bailed out the automakers and insurance companies.” Never mind that the Bush White House gave us the bank (and A.I.G.) bailouts, or that the G.O.P. is even more in hock than Democrats to corporate patrons. The Obama administration is so overstocked with Goldman Sachs-Robert Rubin alumni and so tainted by its back-room health care deals with pharmaceutical and insurance companies that conservative politicians, Brown included, can masquerade shamelessly as the populist alternative.
Last year the president pointedly studied J.F.K.’s decision-making process on Vietnam while seeking the way forward in Afghanistan. In the end, he didn’t emulate his predecessor and escalated the war. We’ll see how that turns out. Meanwhile, Obama might look at another pivotal moment in the Kennedy presidency — and this time heed the example.
The incident unfolded in April 1962 — some 15 months into the new president’s term — when J.F.K. was infuriated by the U.S. Steel chairman’s decision to break a White House-brokered labor-management contract agreement and raise the price of steel (but not wages). Kennedy was no radical. He hailed from the American elite — like Obama, a product of Harvard, but, unlike Obama, the patrician scion of a wealthy family. And yet he, like that other Harvard patrician, F.D.R., had no hang-ups about battling his own class.
Kennedy didn’t settle for the generic populist rhetoric of Obama’s latest threats to “fight” unspecified bankers some indeterminate day. He instead took the strong action of dressing down U.S. Steel by name. As Richard Reeves writes in his book “President Kennedy,” reporters were left “literally gasping.” The young president called out big steel for threatening “economic recovery and stability” while Americans risked their lives in Southeast Asia. J.F.K. threatened to sic his brother’s Justice Department on corporate records and then held firm as his opponents likened his flex of muscle to the power grabs of Hitler and Mussolini. (Sound familiar?) U.S. Steel capitulated in two days. The Times soon reported on its front page that Kennedy was at “a high point in popular support.”
Can anyone picture Obama exerting such take-no-prisoners leadership to challenge those who threaten our own economic recovery and stability at a time of deep recession and war? That we can’t is a powerful indicator of why what happened in Massachusetts will not stay in Massachusetts if this White House fails to reboot.



January 27th, 2010 at 10:31 am
Well, maybe tonight’s speech will mark a turning point, and maybe it won’t.
But I’m curious, Andy – we’re spiraling the drain, and the hour is late. If Obama just can’t pull it together, what is Plan B?
January 27th, 2010 at 11:43 am
Good question, mczilla, about the Plan B.
On a recent thread, a comment was posted that denigrated the focus –here on NSB, and presumably elsewhere– on Obama. I recall there being some remark about “the great man theory of history” (or something like that), as if it were some childish notions or emotional needs that drive the concern about Obama and the kind of leadership he is providing and will provide the forces that brought him into office.
That critique I reject. It does not take some general “great man theory of history” to recognize that in SOME circumstances, much depends on single individuals. This seems like one of those circumstances.
If these were normal political circumstances in America, one could imagine a variety of means by which necessary poilitical goals could be reached. But with the darkness that possesses today’s Republican Party –and has done so for at least this past decade– there is a need to do battle and to prevail over those forces.
Given the nature of the battle –conducted through the framing of issues, the process of informing or misinforming the public, the constant attacks from the right and the counterpunching (or lack of it) from the object of the attacks– I can not see any effective way that the forces that SHOULD prevail CAN prevail in the absence of Obama’s leading and coordinating an effective battle plan.
I’d like our critic with the “great man theory of history” jibe to present us with some plausible alternative scenario about how THIS Democratic Party can conduct the present political battle with THIS Republican Party and can prevail. The minority party can have its powerful spokesmen, but everyone –the media, the people, the members of the party– looks to the White House to be the voice of the party, and to call the troops to battle.
THere are other ways –besides with Obama’s leadership, and within the next several years– in which the battle can ultimately be won. But for the next several years, the advance of truth over the Culture of the Lie, of decency over ruthlessness, of constructiveness over sheer power-grabbing depends on this president adopting and properly executing a suitable strategy for battle.
January 28th, 2010 at 1:02 am
The fact remains that all presidents who have taken on the big FIRE sector have all met with unnecessary accidents in our history. They have enough clout to take him out if he follows through on his stated goals for the rest of his term. The soul of America is at stake.
January 28th, 2010 at 2:41 am
“The advance of truth over the Culture of the Lie, of decency over ruthlessness, of constructiveness over sheer power-grabbing depends on this president adopting and properly executing a suitable strategy for battle.”
Unfortunately, this president is a ruthless, power-grabbing liar. His waffling and indecisiveness are an attempt to continue the deceit that he is decent and genuinely wants a proper deal for the American people.
Darkness has not only overtaken the Republican party, it is a general feature of the American political establishment.
You are living in a de facto dictatorship, a de facto one-party state. You won’t get out of this mess by voting for either of the big parties, and the small ones don’t count. Your only hope of freedom is to take up arms, which once upon a time was a very American thing to do.
I am worried that Americans have lost their will to freedom, no longer have the guts to fight their oppressors, and will go along with whatever they are ordered to do.
I am equally worried that that applies to the rest of us too.
January 28th, 2010 at 8:15 am
Lee Ferrell, what is this “FIRE sector”?
January 28th, 2010 at 8:27 am
It’s been a few years since I’ve felt a need to state this, but with this new David calling, from South Africa evidently, for us Americans to overthrow our government by violent means, I feel compelled to observe:
The history of violent revolutions is ugly and depressing. I’ve been reading lately about the French Revolution. Still worse was the Russian. THe American Revolution was more of a colonial revolt, with the rulers being an ocean away, rather than a ruling class that had grown up organically from within the society; indeed, the main revolutionaries were that domestic ruling class.
Your own country, South Africa, performed a wonderful transformation, pretty much bloodlessly: when I was working in American foreign policy circles in 1980-82, the best experts on your country could not see how the white supremacist regime could “get off the tiger” without being eaten. Thanks to Mandela and Leclerc, and others, there was a peaceful transition from the white-dominated to a majority rule society.
The other great miracle of essentially non-violent transformation occurred in the Soviet Union. THat was largely due to Mikhail Gorbachev, in my view: not only in the USSR but across the Soviet empire in Eastern Europe, the “revolutions” were “velvet.”
I can hardly imagine any revolution in the United States, of a violent sort, that would a) be successful and b) not be a disaster even if successful. Almost always, a) violence breaks more than it builds, and b) in the chaos of the violence, the worst sort –the natural-born killers and warlords– take over.
The American political system, however broken, offers an infinitely better opportunity to make genuine promise. All it would really take, actually, given that there’s still free speech and people can still vote –things missing from many societies through history– is IF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE CAN UNDERSTAND WHAT’S RIGHT BEFORE THEIR EYES.
Besides which, this past year of the Obama administration –as far short as it has fallen of what I think COULD and thus SHOULD have been achieved– has done a great deal to move things in a better direction. And I see no reason to give up hope that the coming years will bring more progress, on various fronts.
January 28th, 2010 at 9:49 pm
The Secret Service has openly stated that assassination threats against Barack and his family have gone up consistently in 1 year to a now 400% increase likely event while the SS is consistently downgraded. It has happened often before. It is likely to happen again.
The FIRE sector – Finance/Insurance/Real Estate. All that money they have at their disposal means they can get an assassin in to “private” functions like that one White House party where an unscreened couple walked in without an impediment. The hatred in the Beltway is palpable. I have expected this for a long time. His speech on the State of the Union means an unexpected event is already being hatched by some group, likely in the FIRE sector.
It is still thought “lunatic fringe” to look honestly into the real sources of this kind of killing. The Banking Sector in 1963 had a very close relationship with the French “mob.” Though not mentioned in the US – a French gunman admitted during a trial for something unrelated that he had fired the shot that killed JFK from the parking lot behind the “grassy knoll,” using a silencer. Call it nonsense if you will – but the evidence exists.
“The great lesson of history is to prepare for the unexpected.” (Lewis Mumford)