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   Author  Topic: Obama Is A Victim Of Bush's Failed Promises & The VarietiesOf Liberal Enthusiasm  (Read 738 times)
Salamantis
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Obama Is A Victim Of Bush's Failed Promises & The VarietiesOf Liberal Enthusiasm
« on: 2010-05-16 15:38:42 »
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« Last Edit: 2010-05-17 00:58:31 by Salamantis » Report to moderator   Logged
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Re:Obama Is A Victim Of Bush's Failed Promises & The VarietiesOf Liberal Enthusi
« Reply #1 on: 2010-05-17 17:51:33 »
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It seems from afar that facts are not on the side of the Republican Critics. And again my Jon Stewart coloured glasses prevent me from seeing the right wing rhetoric as creditable. But I do acknowledge politicians are a beast with a self serving disposition and as such must be tolerated not believed.

I watch Great Britain with even greater interest now, to see how England and USA will align and proceed. North America's troubles my look like a 'Church Picnic' as Europe coughs and sputters.

As I mentioned elsewhere no one is talking about "Root Cause" and pulling together; just self interest and belief seems to be the the battle cry. I am unable to fathom how the management of finance and industry can keep their jobs after making such a mess of it on their watch; most organization would release workers that were incompetent.

Money and Power remains the carrot; and the media feeding frenzy to slam Obama is about that, not the truth.

But what do I know up here in the frozen great white north that is being taken over by the Christen Right Wing and French speaking Liberals; all at the same time if I believe the media ?

Cheers

Fritz



Source: USA Today
Author: Susan Page  and Mimi Hall
Date: May 11, 2010

WASHINGTON — Big problems. Big achievements. Big costs.

Historians say President Obama's legislative record during a crisis-ridden presidency already puts him in a league with such consequential presidents as Lyndon Johnson and Franklin Roosevelt. But polls show voters aren't totally on board with his achievements, at least not yet, and the White House acknowledges that his victories have carried huge financial and political costs.

"There are always costs in doing big things," Obama told USA TODAY.

Obama's ambitions are on display again this week as he prods the Senate toward passage of the most sweeping financial regulatory change since the aftermath of the Great Depression, a bill that aims to curtail the Wall Street risk-taking that fed the meltdown in 2008. The bill follows a string of laws and regulations that have reshaped the American landscape in fundamental ways: overhauling the health care system, rescuing U.S. automakers, imposing stricter rules on credit card companies, designating more than 2 million acres of public land as protected wilderness, expanding equal-pay protection for women and more.

"Even if he wasn't African-American, he'd have a considerable entry in the history books," says Princeton professor Fred Greenstein, author of The Presidential Difference: Leadership Style from FDR to Barack Obama.

White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel says Obama, whose campaign promised big changes after the eight-year tenure of Republican George W. Bush, came into office faced with a crippled economy and two wars. Obama put in place "a set of initiatives and accomplishments that are ... at the scale of the challenges that the country faced," Emanuel said in an interview.

All that action has prompted a powerful reaction from the administration's critics.

"What they've done over the last 15 months has taken my breath away," House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio says, calling it "a nightmare" that some Americans fear will "cripple the future" for their children and grandchildren with staggered deficits and a debt that will leave the country unable to compete internationally.

It's a refrain Obama and the Democrats can expect to hear leading up to this fall's congressional elections and beyond as Republicans cast them as irresponsible for trying to do too much, too fast.

Already, once-fractured Republicans are more united.

Resistance to an expanding government has fueled the conservative "Tea Party" movement, which uses this year's $1.5 trillion budget deficit as a rallying cry. Democratic control of Congress could be at risk in November — particularly in the House where the Republicans would need to pick up 40 seats to have a majority.

The White House contends that Obama's agenda is designed to grow the economy and eventually reduce health care costs — but that it will take time to dig out of the hole left by the Bush administration.

Obama says he understands why many Americans are restless, and why his administration doesn't get more credit.

"There is no doubt there is a mismatch between our accomplishments and the perception, but I think that makes perfect sense because we're going through a very tough time," Obama said in a brief interview. When people are jobless or worried about layoffs, they "aren't interested in abstract comparisons with other presidents."

In a new USA TODAY/Gallup Poll, the skepticism is evident. More than one-third of those surveyed, 38%, say Obama has done more than other presidents at the same stage in their tenure.

A nearly equal number, 37%, say his achievements are "about the same." One in five, 22%, say he has done less than his predecessors at this point in their presidencies.

Anxiety about the economy has fueled concern about making more expensive changes before the country seems to be on firmer footing.

HEALTH CARE'S NEXT STEP: Applying the law
ELECTION 2010: See USA TODAY's full coverage
THE OVAL: See the latest news from the White House

And the legislative battles in Washington, where key votes have fallen almost entirely along party lines, has spawned cries of "socialism" and racially tinged questions about Obama's background that hark back to the 2008 campaign.

Norman Ornstein, a congressional scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank, likens the public's view of Washington to a wedding at which the bride and groom's parents have fistfights and everyone gets food poisoning at the reception. "You're not going to come away from that thinking, 'Isn't it good that true love found its way?' " he says.

Expecting the unexpected

Every president enters office prepared to confront unexpected challenges. With the threat of an economic collapse at home and wars underway in Iraq and Afghanistan, however, Obama faced more immediate and far-reaching crises than any president since Franklin Roosevelt.

By the time Obama was sworn in, he had been working for weeks with the outgoing Bush administration on how to manage the financial crisis. In short order, he and congressional Democrats bailed out Detroit carmakers and passed an $862 billion economic stimulus bill that poured money into transportation systems, energy projects and education programs.

Obama also has set tougher fuel-efficiency standards for cars and launched a $4.3 billion education initiative challenging schools to improve their performance. He appointed the first Hispanic to the Supreme Court, Justice Sonya Sotomayor, and on Monday nominated another woman, Elena Kagan, to the bench. He also signed a deal with Russia to reduce stockpiles of strategic nuclear warheads.

Republicans, who have voted en masse against most of Obama's new domestic programs, warn the country will go bankrupt trying to pay for them.

"It's mind-boggling," says Orrin Hatch of Utah, one of the most senior Republicans in the Senate.

Historians call Obama's record incomparable.

With passage of the $940 billion, 10-year health care bill in March, Obama has pushed through more substantial domestic-policy initiatives in 15 months than most presidents do during their entire tenures, they say.

Greenstein, Ornstein and others compare him with two iconic Democratic presidents: Roosevelt, whose New Deal reformed the banking system and ameliorated the trauma of the Great Depression; and Johnson, whose Great Society legislation established the Medicare program for seniors and instituted far-reaching civil rights changes in a presidency also marked by the Vietnam War.

Ronald Reagan, an iconic Republican president, had his own dramatic opening after taking office during a recession in 1981.

Reagan slashed tax rates to try to boost the economy and dramatically increased defense spending while setting the country on a more conservative path.

But tax cuts are "much more transitory" than a new regime of government activism, says Lawrence Jacobs of the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at the University of Minnesota.

Obama says Americans aren't interested in comparing him with his predecessors, but White House aides are doing just that.

"From a pure sense of legislative and executive accomplishments, I think most historical records we've looked at would suggest that what this president accomplished ranks up there with Roosevelt," says Dan Pfeiffer, the White House communications director.

The Democratic National Committee is campaigning this fall as "the party of results," he says.

House Republican Whip Eric Cantor of Virginia predicts the DNC slogan will boomerang.

"My contention is these are results the American people don't want," he says. "They're spending money we don't have; they're adding to the debt in unprecedented ways and the American people are fearful of the direction we're headed."

Republicans are trying to build a political tidal wave that could give them the 40 additional House seats they need to regain control of that chamber.

Political scientist Charles Jones, author of The American Presidency, says the Democrats' determination to press ahead without Republican support on most of their initiatives will hurt them if voters don't perceive positive change by November.

"The votes have been so partisan, astonishingly partisan, historically partisan," Jones says. "What you get with pure partisanship is pure accountability."

'A lot of costs here'

The nation is divided on Obama. His job-approval rating has wavered just above or below the 50% mark in the daily Gallup Poll since last November. His standing among independents, at 60% in the first USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken after his inauguration, has fallen to 42%.

"There are a lot of costs here," Jacobs says. "Clearly, the Democrats are vulnerable to charges of overreaching, and this is not just from Tea Partiers. Americans think the deficit is out of control."

Despite the costs, Obama is not easing up.

With the health care battle behind him, he is pledging to tackle climate change and immigration, divisive issues in both parties — and he's not likely to enjoy such big majorities in Congress when he does so.

The president also will have to grapple with complex foreign-policy issues such as Iran's nuclear ambitions and with unmet promises, including his commitment to close the detention facility for terrorism suspects at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

Bridging the partisan divide, something he vowed to do when he took office, remains a challenge.

In the new USA TODAY poll, eight of 10 Democrats say Obama's performance so far has been "a good thing." Seven of 10 Republicans say it has been "a bad thing." The largest group of Democrats credit him with doing more than previous presidents; the largest group of Republicans say he has done less.

The survey of 1,032 adults May 4-5 has a margin of error of +/–4 percentage points.

Many Americans don't give Obama much credit because they haven't seen many improvements in their lives yet, especially with the jobless rate still near 10%, says Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center.

"His achievements are seen through the prism of, 'He hasn't fixed the economy.' "

White House officials point to statistics that show the economy growing again and spotlight immediate benefits from the health care bill, including tax credits for small-business owners and the ability for parents to keep children to age 26 on their insurance plans. Ultimately, they acknowledge, the president be judged by the success of the programs he has implemented.

"It's perfectly sensible that they are holding out an overall assessment until they see changes in their own lives," Obama told USA TODAY. "That is what keeps us on our toes."
« Last Edit: 2010-05-17 17:54:25 by Fritz » Report to moderator   Logged

Where there is the necessary technical skill to move mountains, there is no need for the faith that moves mountains -anon-
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