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The Trouble With BarackObama is accused of being too radical, but he's been governing from the middle for a year. So why all
the anger? Because he's leading with his head, not his heart.
By Jon Meacham| NEWSWEEK
Published Jan 22, 2010
From the magazine issue dated Feb 1, 2010
First, a bit of personal history. I am a Southerner, a churchgoer, and a swing voter in presidential elections. I
believe America is a center-right nation. I am at work on a biography of George H.W. Bush. I pay plenty of
taxes already, thanks, and I have no automatic faith in government's capacity to solve problems. I share these
details to make clear that I am not a reflexive lefty. Far from it.
That said, I hope President Obama does not take the conventional message from the Democrats' drubbing in
Massachusetts (where they lost a Senate seat they'd held since 1952, the year John Kennedy beat Henry
Cabot Lodge): go to the center, Mr. President. Turn right before it is too lateor, at the very least, stop trying
to do so much. Even my friend David Brooks of The New York Timesa columnist whom Obama reads very
closelybelieves the president tried to change the equation of American life in favor of too much
government, too radically and too quickly.
To me, however, the evidence fails to support the
contention that the Barack Obama who governed from
Jan. 20, 2009, to Jan. 20, 2010the day after Scott
Brown's defeat of Martha Coakley in the
Massachusetts Senate racewas a Chicago Che or
even an unreconstructed Great Society liberal. Obama
is essentially a centrist. His world view cannot be
easily consigned to the familiar categories of left and
right. In fact, those categories have been obsolescent
since George W. Bush effectively nationalized the
banks and Obama won the nomination on a center-
right cultural platform. No matter how simplistic
competing cable networks try to make things, when
you have a Republican president behaving like aEuropean socialist and a Democratic president who opposes gay marriage and has added troops to
Afghanistan, you are living in a volatile ideological age.
And yet many Americansor at least many politically engaged Americans, who are the ones who count most
in such mattersappear to think Obama has been a revolutionary who is only now learning his lesson. In an
interview with Jonathan Karl of ABC News, Sen. Evan Bayh, the Indiana Democrat, said, "There's going to be
a tendency on the part of our people to be in denial about all this If you lose Massachusetts and that's not a
wake-up call, there's no hope of waking up." Bayh continued, "The only way we are able to govern
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successfully in this country is by liberals and progressives making common cause with independents and
moderates. Whenever you have just the furthest-left elements of the Democratic Party attempting to impose
their will on the rest of the country, that's not going to work too well." It is a neat and familiar storyline. But
that does not make it accurate.
Yes, the deficit is too great, our debt is too deep, unemployment is too high, and the health-care debate has
been confusing and counterproductive. And yes, the stimulus bill added to that deficitbut a great deal of
the package cut taxes, and even conservative economists agree it has helped (and many liberals think it was
too small, so there is a big damned-if-you-do element at work here).
A few counterintuitive points: Obama was not about to socialize American medicine. The president's health-
care plan was to the right of where Richard Nixon was on the issue more than 35 years ago. The bailouts of
Wall Street and Detroit automakers either began under the previous administration or seemed essential to
averting greater economic calamity. (A tough sell, these preventive wars. "It's always hard in politics to make
the case that things would have been worse if this or that had not happened," Obama counselor David
Axelrod told me last week.) On taxes and discretionary spending, the president has been to the right of
center. He wants to end the Bush tax cuts in order to return rates to Reagan-era levels. And he has been moresuccessful at trimming discretionary spending than George W. Bush was late in his reign. Unemployment is
grim, but presidents have historically proved unable to do much about joblessness in the short run unless
they go even further than Obama went in the stimuluswhich, given Republican opposition, hardly seems
practical even if it were desirable.
This is not an apology for the president. He has grandly failed so far in doing what presidents must do, which
is to lead the nation emotionally as well as rationally. It would be great if politics were fact-based, but it is
not, and it is surely not nuance-based. What works in a classroom or a think tank does not work on Capitol
Hill or in the White House. Obama sometimes seems to be running the Brookings Institution, not the
country.
Like all of us, Obama has the vices of his virtues. He is cool and steady, but can seem cold and remote. He is
thoughtful and thorough, but can appear eggheady and out of it. He appeals to the intellect, but often fails to
make the visceral case for something. The question now is whether his presidency has simply hit one of those
unavoidable grim moments when nothing seems to go right (such moments come to every White House) or
whether a tactical shift could improve his chances of accomplishing more of what he wants to do.
One thing Obama could do without much pain would be to learn from the rhetorical clarity and practical
flexibility of a president whose example he has often considered: Ronald Reagan. In legend, Reagan was a
model of consistency, a leader who campaigned against government and the Soviet Union, stuck to his
principles, carried the day at home and abroad, and became a rightly revered figure.
There is much truth in this view, but a careful look back reveals, unsurprisingly, a more complex and
contradictory story. Reagan genuinely believed that less government and lower taxes would make the
country a better place. And so, in the summer of 1981, on a small outdoor table at his ranch in the mountains
near Santa Barbara, Reagan signed the Kemp-Roth tax bill that lowered marginal income-tax rates. He was
so happy that he kicked his leg in the air.
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That Reagan then raised taxes in three successive years is the kind of complicating detail that a man like
Obama knows, and from which he might draw some guidance, or at least reassurance. The lesson of Reagan's
record on taxes and spending is not that he was a hypocrite but that he was a pragmatist. He knew the world
is a complicated place, things never quite work out the way you want them to, and you should do what you
can when you can.
Then and now, the country knew that Reagan changed the conversation (and the tax rates), and they
appreciated the admixture of conviction and flexibility with which he made a difference in his time. The roots
of the appreciation grew not from the economic numbers of the early 1980snumbers that were dismalbut
from Reagan's clarity of mission and his capacity to connect with a broad swath of the public.
Clarity of mission has not been an Obama long suit. He should rethink his aversion to soundbites. Jesus
spoke in them, and his words have aged rather well. (The Sermon on the Mount is nothing if not user-
friendly rhetoric.) Reagan succeeded in no small part because Americans trusted that he was committed to
goals with which they generally agreed, even if the details were contentious. Taxes were too high, and
communism should go.
I am not arguing that Obama has tried to do too much, a trope that seems unmoored from the reality of the
office. He could, however, stand to think about a soundbite or two (or three) that would give the country a
clear sense of where he wants to leave us after his hour upon the stage.
There is no intellectual shame in pithiness. "The only thing we have to fear," "Ask not," "I have a dream,"
"Tear down this wall" all spoke to deep and complex forces in the life of the nation and of the world. Obama
has yet to add to his own tag to the American story. As soon as he does, the bond he needs will begin to form,
and this bond can make all the difference, if only once or twice in a presidency, for it's what encourages
voters to extend a White House the political credit needed to get something done. No bond, no trust; no
trust, no credit; and no credit, no progress.
Obama is no Gipper. He would be the first to tell you that. But there is hope. The last president who averaged
a 57 percent job-approval rating for his first year? Ronald Reagan.
With Andrew Romano
Find this article at
http://www.newsweek.com/id/232167
2010
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