A
presidency that began with such hope and optimism, and such
astronomical approval and support, may well end in the utter collapse of
the modern liberal program.
I’m sure that sounds like an
overstatement, and perhaps it is. 2012 will be no cakewalk for
Republicans, and they’re fully capable of bungling the opportunity
history has given them.
But if Obama is defeated, then it will be one
of the most stunning turnarounds in the history of modern politics.
Consider: George W. Bush entered his first term with a roughly 55%
approval rating (averaging the various polls) and left it with about a
47.5% approval rating — a drop of 7.5% over the course of four years
full of dissension, accusation and mockery.
Obama began his first term
with 65% approval ratings and has stood below 45% for the majority of
the past four months — a drop of 20%, nearly three times the Bush
figure.
Yet Bush, whatever his virtues, was not an effective
spokesperson for modern conservatism.
If a handsome, eloquent, highly
intelligent and charismatic African-American Democrat with a charming
family, who came to office with both houses of Congress and a historic
groundswell of public support and abundant permission to blame his early
struggles on the financial crisis and the Bush administration, cannot
achieve more than this, then modern American liberalism will need
resuscitation. It should be sobering to progressives that the
consummate representation of modern American liberalism is neither
effective nor loved. More Americans (7 out of 10) believe America is on
the wrong track now than they did at the time of his inauguration.
Ironically,
the roots of Obama’s failure do lay in the Bush administration — but
not in the way progressives think. It was not so much the Bush
administration, as it was liberal hatred of the Bush administration, that set Obama up for failure.
Throughout
the eight years of the Bush administration, it was almost an article of
faith on the Hard Left that anything the dreaded “King George” decreed
was not only unwise and unnecessary, but immoral, irrational, and
probably illegal, motivated not by cold facts and prudence but by
cowboy-ish jingoism, the profits of the military-industrial complex and
an enduring theocratic impulse. With foreign policy, military actions,
homeland security, and the economy, there was precious little need for
careful examination of the rationale for Bush administration decisions.
If Bush did it, it was foolish and probably criminal, because Bush was
not motivated by reason and love for country but by greed and war-lust
and a crude evangelical superstitions.
So what do you do when your liberal savior extends and even expands the great majority of those policies?
Consider
all the ways in which the Obama administration has continued the
policies of the Bush administration, even policies that liberals,
including Obama himself, excoriated when Bush was President. Obama
sought to repeat the success of the Iraq Surge with an Afghanistan
Surge, and ramped up the kind of drone strikes (not only in Afghanistan
and Pakistan, but even in places like Yemen)
that liberals once lamented. Where the Left once mocked Bush’s Freedom
Agenda in the Middle East, the Arab Spring has indeed blossomed, and
the Obama administration has been no less interventionist that their
predecessors, though they’ve been able to stand behind national rebels
in a manner similar to the initial Bush incursion into Afghanistan (with
similarly ambiguous results so far). And for all the talk of a “reset”
in diplomatic relations, the early Obama overtures to our enemies
produced no significant results — the kumbaya strategy got us nowhere —
and the same tensions and disputes have reasserted themselves with
Russia, China, North Korea, Syria and many other nations. Thus writers
at The Nation claim “the Bush-Obama presidency has sufficient self-coherence to be considered a historical entity with a life of its own.”
On homeland defense and civil freedoms, the Obama administration has defended warrantless wiretapping and continued extraordinary renditions.
In spite of the campaign promises, Guantanamo is still open. The most
severe of the Enhanced Interrogation techniques had already been
discontinued, and as one CIA official says,
“the incoming Obama administration changed virtually nothing with
respect to existing CIA programs and operations.” The same programs
that the Obama campaign had once attacked where “all picked up, reviewed
and endorsed by the Obama administration.” The Obama administration
not only endorsed the once-reviled Patriot Act, but they’ve extended the
national surveillance apparatus and increased government power to detain American citizens indefinitely without trial. So progressives complain that “Obama has maintained or expanded all civil rights violations Bush started.”
Even
on the economy, Bush cut taxes in the midst of an economic slowdown,
and Obama has essentially done the same — ont only extending the Bush
tax cuts but adding other, non-income-tax cuts (payroll tax cuts, Making
Work Pay tax cuts, etc.). Obamacare will bring tax increases in 2018,
but thus far Obama speaks of raising taxes on the rich while in fact
he’s not yet done so. All rhetoric aside, even Obama recognizes that
raising taxes in the midst of a recession, at least in most tax
brackets, is a bad idea. And there are other examples. Much though
Obama likes to take credit for pulling the economy back from the
precipice, the economy had already drawn back from the precipice by the
time he came to office, and Obama not only continued many of the
policies from the Bush economic team, he kept much of the team in place.
The corporate, capital gains and dividend rates have all remained the
same. And the same banks and trading houses that were discovered to be
dangerously large in the 2008 financial meltdown are now larger than
ever and turning massive profits again.
There are exceptions, of
course, with Obamacare being the biggest. Yet even Obamacare is not the
single-payer, nationalized plan that liberals (including Obama himself)
had publicly pined for — and Obamacare or large portions of it may very
well be dismantled or ruled un-Constitutional. Obama’s stimulus
directed massive amounts of funds to the Democrat’s favored
constituencies, but it proved so contentious and ineffective that the
word “stimulus” is now radioactive. Obama’s treatment of GM was
shameful, the Democrat’s mis-regulation of the financial sector has
slowed the recovery, and the Obama Justice Department has been negligent
on matters of religious freedoms. More exceptions come on issues like
abortion, gay rights, unemployment benefits (it’s unlikely the Bush
administration would have favored two years of unemployment payments),
and of course Supreme Court appointments. It does matter
whether there is a Democrat or a Republican in the White House. But
there’s no question that the Obama administration has been far less
different from the Bush administration than was promised during the
campaign.
What’s so astonishing, though, is not that Obama has
extended so many controversial Bush administration policies but the way
in which his erstwhile supporters have responded. They face (at least)
two options:
- Barack Obama is a sellout, “just Bush with a tan,” subservient to the same malevolent political and economic forces that Bush was.
- OR the Bush administration was actually pretty reasonable to adopt these policies in the first place, and the Obama administration has been reasonable enough to recognize the fact.
Both options
require the liberal to admit a mistake: either he was wrong about Obama,
or he was wrong about Bush. But the first option requires the liberal
to sacrifice his love for Obama, while the second option requires him to
sacrifice his hatred of Bush. Either Obama was dishonest in the
campaign or overwhelmed by baleful influences once he came to the Oval
Office — or Obama, once he came to the White House and had the same
information and responsibility that Bush had, came to more or less the
same conclusions as Bush had.
Unsurprisingly,
Option #1 comes out the huge winner here. So powerful is the partisan
mindset that I haven’t seen a single prominent liberal writer take
Option #2. They puzzle
through the “mystery” of “George W. Obama” and conclude that the
contradictions between Obama’s ideals and actions compose “a subtle
disaster for all those whose hopes once rested with him.” They would
rather abandon their love of Obama than their hatred of Bush. To put it
more sharply: they are so deeply committed to the nefariousness and
malfeasance of the Bush administration that they would rather believe
Barack Obama a failure, a liar or a dupe than believe that George W.
Bush took reasonable actions in light of the circumstances.
For
instance, when the Bush administration signaled its intention to try
Khalid Sheikh Mohammad (KSM) in a military tribunal instead of a
criminal court, the liberal commentariat cried havoc and accused Bush of
destroying the American Constitution.
Senator Obama voted against the
Military Commissions Act of 2006 and frequently spoke against military
commissions and in favor of federal courts of a military courts-martial.
Yet the Obama team quickly abandoned its flirtation with the criminal
courts idea and eventually resumed
the very same military commissions he had once decried. Rather than
reexamine her view that the military commissions approach was idiotic,
immoral and unnecessary, Dahlia Lithwick insisted that the
administration had “revers[ed] one of its last principled positions” and
“surrendered to the bullying, fear-mongering, and demagoguery of those
seeking to create two separate kinds of American law.”
The same
story could be told with dozens of other examples. Progressives could
have concluded that their earlier opposition to Bush administration
policies was misguided. Instead they’ve consistently concluded that “Obama and the Democrats have completely sold out by any measure.”
What
the consistencies between the Bush and Obama administrations mean, of
course, is that there are broad swaths of consensus in the foreign
policy establishment and in the economic policy establishment regarding
what best serves the interests of the United States internationally and
economically. There is a hyper-partisan paralysis on some
matters, but on many matters, in spite of claims to the contrary, there
is a general consensus (which is not to say that it’s right) on the
course to take. And while it’s easy to inveigh against a President from
the opposite party when you’re trying to get elected, when you are
the decider, when you face the same intelligence and the same
responsibilities as your predecessor, you may find that your former
criticisms fade away and your predecessor’s course of action begins to
look mighty reasonable.
The legacy of the Left’s extreme Bush
hatred, which led them to caricature Bush and scorn and misrepresent the
great majority of his policies, policies they otherwise might have
found reasonable, has had profound consequences for Obama. First, when
he takes the same course of action that Bush took, however pragmatic it
might be, he looks like a sellout to his most ardent supporters and he
looks spineless or unprincipled to moderates. They begin to ask: What
does Obama really stand for? Thus, second, Obama lost, quite early in
his administration, a President’s most precious commodity: the trust of
the American people.
They no longer knew whether he said what he meant
and meant what he said. And third, this puts him in a tough position
entering the election contest. Obama can deliver the same soaring
speeches, but soaring speeches swiftly turn sour when the speaker’s
actions contradict his words.
As I’ve written before,
the problem with the Obama administration is not the salesmanship; it’s
that America no longer trusts that the salesman really believes in what
he’s selling.
When hope and change was your mantra the first time around, I really mean it this time is not an inspiring followup.
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