With the passage of his $800B stimulus package, the president won a pyrrhic victory in that he succeeded in getting most of what he wanted, but failed to change the petty and childish political scramble in Washington. Lawmakers disgraced themselves and their country by playing politics while people suffered and the economy collapsed. The problem is, the president should have seen that coming. He either did not, or preferred to believe Congress would rise above politics in the face of a national crisis. The good news is, Obama is a fast learner. People who underestimate him usually find themselves watching his parade on TV.
The quick answer is no. Ultimately, it probably wouldn’t matter
who won the 2008 presidential race. Whomever would be sworn in
on January 20th would inherit an unprecedented mess. Their
presidency would be set up to fail before it even started, and
the opposition party would be seizing every opportunity to blame
the new president for either continuing the failed policies that
created this economic catastrophe or for trying radical new
ideas that made things worse. That, ladies and gentlemen, is
Washington, D.C. and that’s how things work. In his first month
in office, the new president has made some embarrassing rookie
errors. His message of the day has been routinely co-opted by
his own Barackness, the president doing small things like
working in the Oval Office without a coat—making his “lack of
respect” for the “shrine of the presidency” the story of the
day. His explanation for not wearing a coat was even worse—it
was warm in there, which gave conservationists an opening to
criticize him for not setting a good example for fighting
greenhouse gases. There is a dress marine posted at the steps to
Marine One, the president’s helicopter. As the commander in
chief approaches, this dress marine snaps into a salute. From
the very establishment of the presidential helicopter, U.S.
presidents have walked past this marine, as they walk past
virtually every other ceremonially uniformed guard, as if he
wasn’t there. But President Obama stopped and extended his hand
for a shake, forcing the marine to go against his training and
stop saluting long enough to shake the president’s hand, “Hi,
Barack Obama,” the president is known to say. Message of the
day: the president has no respect for military protocol.
This is the kind of childish atmosphere Barack Obama campaigned
to change. His first weeks in office, he’s discovered just how
difficult that task might be. His first priority was, as it
should be, getting right to work combating the impending
financial disaster spreading across America and, therefore,
across the globe. The president may have assumed both Democrats
and Republicans would be anxious to place politics well on the
back burner and get this important work done. Instead, what’s
been occurring is immaturity on an epic and unprecedented scale
as Democrats use their majority clout to overeat at the buffet,
running that pork table on the Republicans whom, the Dems should
have realized, have nothing to lose. The Democrats all but dared
the Republicans to be obstructionists, and Republicans called
the Dems’ bluff by being, yep, obstructionists. All of which
seemed to deeply irritate the president, who seemed to publicly
chastise only Republicans when, from my chair, the Democrats
have been behaving nearly as badly. Instead of a sober coming
together to save us, the past weeks have been Romper Room in
Washington. And, while it’s easy and fun to fit the Republicans
with the black hat, a mature look at the goings-on these past
weeks finds immaturity on both sides of the aisle.
All of which made the president look naïve and perhaps weak. He
expected, invited, and ultimately demanded that Congress act
like grown-ups. It was like the new president just fell off the
turnip truck. Congress will only behave like grown-ups when a
pistol is pressed against their head. I’m assuming the president
assumed Congress realized a gun is, in fact, pressed against
their head—the literal dissolution of the American economy. But
these folks, on both sides of the aisle, are far pettier than
the president likely imagined, These folk, on both sides of the
aisle, are looking to position themselves for future elections,
and are far more invested in that maneuvering than they are in
actually preserving the nation they intend to govern.
There is a way to approach bipartisanism: carry a big stick. Use
it on your own, first. The Democratic free-for-all with the
president’s stimulus package was bound to provoke Republicans. A
more disciplined bill would have given the GOP less to complain
about, and would have given the president a bigger stick to
whack Republican foot-draggers with. Inviting the Republicans to
the table would have seemed to be a generous move, but the
Republicans routinely bite the bipartisan hand that pets them.
Then they go on Bob Schieffer and whine that the president's
efforts—which included hat-in-hand visits to people he could
crush with a single phone call—don't meet their definition of
"bipartisan" or aren't bipartisan enough. While recognizing the
imperative for getting this bill done quickly, I believe the
president went about it in a politically naïve fashion, if only
in that he gave far too much credit to politicians on both sides
for being adults who would not make political hay out of the
brink of disaster.
Which suggests the president knows nothing of history.
Republicans staunchly opposed Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal,
designed to help end the Great Depression, an economic disaster
ended only by the outbreak of the second world war. There is
never a time too inappropriate, a situation too dire, an
emergency too great for a politician to use it to his political
advantage. They know voters have short memories, and, with
nearly two years to go before the next major election cycle,
they've little to lose by acting a fool now, as, come 2010, most
voters won’t remember what these folks did in 2009. Obama’s
seeming lack of guile, his unwillingness or inability to
understand that, has left him exposed to a lot of political
bushwhacking. The only good news is, Obama is a fast learner.
And, people who’ve underestimated him usually find themselves
watching his parade on TV.
He’s still using George Bush’s rug. A sunburst pattern designed
by former First Lady Laura Bush, even I have to admit it’s a
really great-looking rug. But, given the hell and high water the
first African American U.S. President has gone through his first
three weeks in office, I can’t help but wonder if the rug isn’t
some kind of omen. Pre-inauguration, the country held its
collective breath as we saw the U.S. economy collapse before our
eyes. Two and one-half million—that’s with an “M”—jobs were lost
during George W. Bush’s final days in office as the cashier
totaled out the tab for eight years of incredulous, ridiculous
and irresponsible economic policies, policies the conservative
right is now fighting the new president tooth and nail to
continue. A comedian last week described Bush’s exit as, “George
Bush walking away from a flaming car wreck, tossing Obama the
keys, ‘Here ya go, champ.’” And that’s about right. While it
shouldn’t amaze me that the Republicans are trying—and
succeeding—to blame Barack Obama, of all people, for the mess
the country is in, it does amaze me that Obama, in his obvious
zeal to change the dynamics of Washington, has allowed them to
do it.
In recent days, the president has reluctantly fired back,
underlining his refusal to allow his policy to be shaped by the
same bankrupt ideas that got us into this mess in the first
place, but those words were a very, very long time coming. In
Washington, a month is an eternity, and President Obama waited
an eternity to find his voice on the subject, extending instead
a fistful of fig leaves to people with no conscious and,
apparently, no soul. Soulless people who, as I’ve stated many
times, intrinsically understand the basic nature of the American
public: uninformed, lazy, and thus easily frightened. The
Republicans have known, for decades, that Americans vote more
out of fear than of hope. They also know that no plan, theirs,
Obama’s, anybody’s, will get us out of this mess overnight. Our
economic misery will take years, not months, to repair. Barack
Obama’s entire term in office will be about un-doing the many
messes George Bush, and, by extension, lazy, uninformed America,
has created. It is doubtful Obama’s hopeful vision will find
much expression as he runs up unprecedented deficits while tying
to draw down forces in two unproductive wars. Obama’s vision,
Obama’s voice, will have to wait. And the Republicans are
already playing games with a nation on the brink of a second
Great Depression as they dig in their shoulders for what will
certainly be a 2010 and 2012 blame game. Obama promised this,
Obama promised that, and he’s not made good on any of those
promises! Which misses the point that the new president arrives
in office in shackles, the likes of which almost no other
president in history has known. George Bush had eight months to
screw around and go on vacation before those planes hit the
World Trade Center. Obama’s 911 attack occurred on Bush's watch,
the former president failing to alert the American public that
we'd been in a recession for nearly a year before economists
made it official. Obama's is a thankless presidency, a scorched
earth left behind by Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and others.
Obama has also been beset by rookie mistakes, mistakes that have
cost him dearly. In his enthusiasm to assemble an all-star
cabinet, many holes appeared in the vetting process leading to
embarrassing confirmation processes. Obama should have known the
Republicans would not thank him for his attempts at
bipartisanism but would, instead, return hate for love,
exploiting every opportunity to harass and embarrass a president
who so publicly and graciously and repeatedly reached out to
them—when he had no reason to do so. With majorities in both
houses of Congress, Obama has fairly little reason to even
answer the phone when a Republican is on the other end, yet he
has made a spectacle of himself grinning and gripping with
soulless liars who immediately attacked and criticized and
blamed and dragged their feet and pouted and whined like
children. In a very Christ-like fashion, the new president
remains doggedly committed to breaking the sad legacy of
gridlock in Washington, continuing his efforts to thaw ice
between the two major political parties, but his efforts come
across as naïve, most especially in the face of national crisis.
Obama wasted a great deal of time, money and personal prestige
reaching out to Republicans who crowed, last week, that, by
denying the president even a single Republican vote in the House
of Representatives, they’d left a huge “goose egg” on the
president’s desk, which newly-appointed GOP chairman Michael
Steele, the first black man to hold that post, grinned and
called, “beautiful.”
There’s absolutely nothing beautiful going on in this economic
crisis. The staggering offense of this black man
grinning—grinning—about being a hindrance to the speedy aid of
suffering people is what makes people hate Washington, which
seems to be filled with people woefully out of touch with
reality. People whose bellies are full, who are driven around in
luxury cars, and whose big worry is the immigration status of
their nannies. This is all a game to these people, this
brink-of-a-second-Great Depression business. It’s a means to
score cheap political points off the naïve new rookie. The GOP
are rallying their under-informed, redneck faithful, and Obama
is letting them get away with it. Obama’s soft-shoe wooing of
the GOP, coupled with serious missteps in his cabinet vetting,
have allowed the Republicans to shape the message of the day:
this is a rookie president out of his depth. And, much as I’d
like to blame the GOP for that, truthfully, the blame belongs
inside the West Wing, perhaps with that rug. As important as it
is to get control of the economy, the president must first get
control of his message.
Before the largest recorded crowd in Washington, DC history,
Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. badly flubbed
the presidential oath of office, an oath many of us—including
many children—know virtually by heart. The president-elect, who
is a Constitutional scholar, waited patiently before flashing
his trademark smile and moving forward with Roberts' reworked
oath, figuring, I suppose, that as long as the words were in
there, that was all that mattered. The press is spinning the
flub as a bad case of nerves on the Chief Justice's part, but
given the historic nature of this inauguration, I am quite sure
the flub offended millions who'd waited entire lifetimes for
that day to come. The least the Chief Justice could have done
was practice a little.
I watched the inauguration ceremony, with Aretha’s voice
cracking and failing her. Hey, she’s sixty years old and it was
ten degrees outside. It either did not occur to her to
pre-record her performance, as the classical ensemble did, or
she refused, as many old-school artists likely would, insisting
on doing the real thing, but it was cold out there. Really cold.
Bone-chilling cold. It’s interesting to look closely at
photographs of the president’s speech. The black people—with the
notable exception of eccentric, Blagojevich-appointed,
I-Am-The-Junior-Senator-From-Illinois Roland Burris—sat
enraptured, virtually on the edge of their seats, leaning
forward, intensely listening to the new president’s first words.
The white folk, for the most part, just looked cold. The old
Washington politicos seemed disengaged and bored, and former
(thank you, Jesus) Vice President Dick Cheney had the
inexplicable taste to show up in a Dick Dastardly fedora and
X-Men earmuffs. Democratic turncoat Joe Lieberman, whom House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi actually saved from political oblivion,
actually wore some tasteless, cheap ball cap—something I doubt
he’d have done were that John McCain being sworn in.
All things considered, the event was pretty dull. Poet Elizabeth
Alexander rattled off a completely incomprehensible bit of
business that left me scratching my head wondering what I was
listening to. I missed Pastor Rick Warren's invocation but,
given the brouhaha surrounding his inclusion, I'm confident most
of us were left wondering what the big deal was. Warren
apparently left his politics out of the prayer, while The
Reverend Joseph Lowery notably did not. Perhaps balancing out
the Chief Justice's seeming indifference to the moment, Lowery
certainly offended millions with his thinly-veiled gloating,
dressed in sheep's wool of homespun aw shucks. It was terribly
inappropriate, as Lowery tends to be, and in poor taste. Warren
was at least gracious enough to perform the task he'd been asked
to perform. Lowery went duck hunting.
The now-former president George W. Bush did not attempt to hide
his discomfort with the proceedings, at which his policies and
his judgment were the Cinco de Mayo piñata. Most every sentiment
expressed from the Capitol steps contained an at least indirect
shot at Bush, who sat in coat and scarf, choosing not to pretend
it wasn't below freezing outside. The newly sworn-in president,
however, delivered his speech without a hat. I'm sure the new
president's thermal underwear and body armor helped somewhat,
but it sure looked cold out there.
Obama's inaugural address was no "Ask Not What Your Country Can
Do For you," but no speech has been since President John F.
Kenny uttered those magnificent words in 1961. Instead, Obama's
speech was workmanlike, lacking ready applause lines and
pretested sound bites. It wasn't a homily but a shift commander
addressing factory workers: this is going to be a tough year.
Maybe a tough four years. America is a mess, and we all know who
messed it up. George W. Bush took the oath of office in January
of 2001 with a prosperous nation at peace. Obama assumes the
helm of a bankrupt country at war. With the worst yet to come. I
imagine the new president chose, in that light, to forego poetry
in favor of stoicism: roll up our sleeves, get to work. We can
get through it, but only if we get off the sofa, stop blaming
Bush and start solving our problems.
“Our nation is at war against a far-reaching network of violence
and hatred,” he said. “Our economy is badly weakened, a
consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some,
but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare
the nation for a new age. Homes have been lost, jobs shed,
businesses shuttered. Our health care is too costly, our schools
fail too many, and each day brings further evidence that the
ways we use energy strengthen our adversaries and threaten our
planet.” Recalling a verse from the 1st Book of Corinthians,
Obama said, “The time has come to set aside childish things,”
and he declared: “Today, I say to you that the challenges we
face are real. They are serious and they are many. They will not
be met easily or in a short span of time. But know this, America
— they will be met.”
I remain amused that the Christian right, whom I hold largely
responsible for Bush and therefore the mess this country is in,
appears to be in mourning, perhaps feeling betrayed by their
quasi-standard bearer Warren. I like Warren because he
approaches his conservatism in a more pragmatic and inclusive
way, which I find more attractive than the harsh rhetoric of
Falwell, Dobson and others.
The president lost the media war over his $800 billion stimulus
package. The Republicans successfully scared America about it,
scaring people being all the GOP is particularly good at, and
sold the bald-faced lie that they’d been frozen out of the
stimulus negotiations. Frozen out, despite the very public
efforts the new president made, over and over, to engage the
Republicans and make them part of the process. If the package
succeeds—which it can’t help but do; any help coming our way is
bound to move the needle at least a little—the Republicans are
toast. Rightfully blamed for massive deregulation and other
policies which led to this economic collapse, the Republicans
are deservedly voiceless and powerless. This has left them with
only one option—lying; the tried and true GOP tactic of telling
the biggest, most transparently obvious lie that can think of
and repeating it over and over and over until it becomes fact by
default. Reactionary back-woods lost-in-the-50’s South Carolina
Senator Lindsey Graham even accused the president—who’s done
little else but lobby for his stimulus package since being sworn
in—of being “uninvolved” with the stimulus bill. It’s the kind
of outrageous nonsense the GOP historically spreads around,
lying right to our faces in foolish and childish ways.
Any half-wit with YouTube access can easily disprove the GOP
claims. But the Republicans know we aren’t looking. Their main
appeal is to low-information voters and disgruntled
conservatives still pining away for Gidget and Grampa. No one
with functioning brain cells believes President Obama has been
asleep at the switch on the stimulus package, it’s just
laughably untrue. But that’s the GOP message of the day as
millions—with an “M”—of people lose their jobs. As distraught
fathers, hitting rock bottom, turn to murder and suicide. As the
nation faces the greatest economic crisis since the Great
Depression, these GOP clowns choose to play hardball politics.
For his part, the president seemed amazed that the Republicans
would be so transparently political in the face of a national
crisis, which revealed a perhaps unsettling naïveté about Obama.
His own party actually enabled the Republican showboating by
stuffing their many, many pet projects into this stimulus
package. To the extent that the Democrats behaved like children,
Graham was right: Obama needed to police up his own back yard a
lot better. By allowing Speaker of The House Nancy Pelosi—whom I
suspect is secretly insane—to pork up the stimulus, Obama pretty
much wrote off any real chance at bipartisanship while giving
the Republicans an opening to create mischief. A slimmer, more
disciplined bill would have made it much harder for House
Minority Leader John Boehner and friends to play games with this
crisis..
The problem is, the nation doesn’t need a skinny bill. She needs
a fat bill. Japan spent $7 trillion repairing its economy when
it collapsed in 1990. As big a bill as this is, the president’s
stimulus package is probably not even half the size it really
needs to be. I believe the Republicans know this as well. They
are counting on you not knowing it, so they can dance on a head
of a pin and argue about how big the bill is, claiming they can
jump-start the economy with a bill roughly half the size. Which
misses the point it was these geniuses and their slide rules
that got us into this mess in the first place. Obama taking
advice from these people is a lot like asking the fox to arrange
security for the hen house. Still, the president made very
public and very prolonged overtures to his political rivals, who
then conspired to, as GOP Chairman Steele put it, lay a “goose
egg” on the president’s desk.
It was a gutsy political move on the part of the Republicans,
who will either break even or lose big. There is no win in this
for them and they know it. They have behaved like barbarians,
sucking up to the president and then jamming him, jamming us,
for transparently political reasons. Any stimulus package, of
any size, will take years, not months, to work. By which time
the misery will be widespread while memories fade as to who is
to blame for it. This is, essentially, the Republican strategy
for regaining power. They have nothing to lose.
The president should have known that, and not invited them to
the party in the first place. Alternatively, seeing the results
of his costly and time-consuming overtures, the president should
visit the wrath of his office upon the Republicans: look, I
wanted to be friends. I invited you to partner with me. You’re
obviously too stupid to live, so I will now crush you like bugs.
Although, to some extent, that’s possibly what the Republicans
want. They want the president to own this economic recovery
package, counting on public impatience and misery in 2010 to be
at a zenith. So much so that the public will vote the
Republicans back in just as the stimulus plan finally begins to
work. It’s an interesting gamble, but is likely the only viable
political path the GOP has.
And, the president should have known that. He should have shot
low-budget YouTube commercials with actors and music and humor,
explaining both the math and the politics. He should have
brought the same fearsome communication tools used in his
campaign to bear on behalf of his stimulus plan. Instead, he
tried to be a grown up and got handed his hat. Oh, sure, he
“won” in the end, but he lost the bigger challenge: changing the
tone of debate in Washington. In that struggle, the GOP are
running circles around him. And that’s the biggest change the
president needs to effect if he plans on getting anything at all
done.
Can he save us? Ultimately, saving us is not, in fact, Barack
Obama’s job. His job is to lead. To inspire. It is up to us, to
each one of us, to do the heavy lifting. To follow through.
Surely God can save us, and that faith in God is about to be
tested in severe ways. Our president, on the other hand, can
only do his best to be a good steward and an honest broker.
While it has cost him politically, Barack Obama has certainly
passed the honest broker test with flying colors. The rest is up
to us..
Christopher J. Priest
15 February 2009
editor@praisenet.org
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