The Obama Contradiction

· Saturday, January 30, 2010

When you watch a president give a State of the Union Address on television, you're always watching three people: the president at the podium, and the vice president and House speaker on the rise behind him. As a TV shot it's awkward. The vice president and the speaker have been instructed by media professionals not to let their eyes do what they want to do, which is survey the doings in the chamber. Instead they must stare unwaveringly at the back of the president's head. This is so that they appear to be fascinated by what he's saying, as if he's so interesting that they can't take their eyes off him. It's also so that you, the viewer, don't become distracted by wondering whom they're looking at in the audience.

It's uncomfortable for them, and boring. You, as a member of the TV audience, get to watch the president. The speaker and the vice president get to think, "Huh, he's getting a little gray in the back." The reason Nancy Pelosi often seems a little dart-eyed in these circumstances is that she's always trying to get a look at the chamber when she thinks the camera isn't on her. Joe Biden seems happy to be the fascinated person with crinkly eyes and shining teeth. But for Mrs. Pelosi it's a challenge. This is her chamber, all her people are here, and she wants to be looking at John Boehner's face and Harry Reid's and see who's cheering and who's wearing what.

But the three-shot the other night was also the president's problem. It underscored that he gave the first year of his presidency to the Democrats of Congress, that they wrote the costly and unpopular health-care and spending bills.

James Baker, that shrewd and knowing man, never, as Ronald Reagan's chief of staff, allowed his president to muck about with congressmen, including those of his own party. A president has stature and must be held apart from Congress critters. He can meet with them privately, in the Oval Office. There, once, a Republican senator who'd announced opposition to a bill important to the president tried to claim his overall loyalty: "Mr. President, you know I'd jump out of a plane for you if you asked, but—"

"Jump," said Reagan. The senator, caught, gave in.

That's how you treat them. You don't let them blur your picture and make you more common. You don't let them call the big shots.

***

President Obama's speech was not a pivot, a lunge or a plunge. It was a little of this and a little of that, a groping toward a place where the president might successfully stand. It was well written and performed with élan. The president will get some bounce from it, and the bounce will go away. Speeches are not magic, and this one did not rescue him from his political predicament, but it did allow him to live to fight another day. In that narrow way it was a success. But divisions may already have hardened. In our current media and political environment, it is a terrible thing to make a bad impression in your first year.

There were strong moments. Of what he frankly called the "bank bailout," he observed: "I hated it. You hated it." His unfancy language was always the most interesting: "We don't quit. I don't quit." The president conceded, with striking brevity, having made mistakes, but defensively misstated the criticism that had been leveled his way. He said he was accused of being "too ambitious." In fact he'd been accused of being off point, unresponsive and ideological.

They've chosen a phrase for the president's program. They call it the "New Foundation." They sneaked it in rather tentatively, probably not sure it would take off. It won't. Such labels work when they clearly capture something that is already clear. "The New Deal" captured FDR's historic shift to an increased governmental presence in individual American lives. It was a new deal. "The New Frontier" — we are a young and vibrant nation still, and adventures await us in space and elsewhere. It was a mood, not a program, but a mood well captured.

"The New Foundation" is solid and workmanlike, but it attempts to put form and order to a governing philosophy that is still too herky-jerky to be summed up.

The central fact of the speech was the contradiction at its heart. It repeatedly asserted that Washington is the answer to everything. At the same time it painted a picture of Washington as a sick and broken place. It was a speech that argued against itself: You need us to heal you. Don't trust us, we think of no one but ourselves.

The people are good but need guidance — from Washington. The middle class is anxious, and its fears can be soothed — by Washington. Washington can "make sure consumers . . . have the information they need to make financial decisions." Washington must "make investments," "create" jobs, increase "production" and "efficiency."

At the same time Washington is a place "where every day is Election Day," where all is a "perpetual campaign" and the great sport is to "embarrass your opponents" and lob "schoolyard taunts."

Why would anyone have faith in that thing to help anyone do anything?

The president did not speak of health care until a half hour in. "As temperatures cool, I want everyone to take another look at the plan we've proposed." Then, "If anyone has a better idea, let me know." Those bland little sentences hidden in plain sight heralded an epic fact: The battle over the president's health-care plan is over, and the plan will not be imposed on the country. Waxing boring on the virtues of the bill was a rhetorical way to obscure the fact that it is dead. To say, "I'm licked and it's done" would have been damagingly memorable. Instead he blithely vowed to move forward, and moved on. The bill will now get lost in the mists and disappear. It is a collapsed soufflé in an unused kitchen in the back of an empty house. Now and then the president will speak of it to rouse his base and remind them of his efforts.

All this got hidden in the speech. In unconscious emulation it even got hidden in this column.

***

As the TV cameras panned the chamber, I saw a friendly acquaintance of the president, a Republican who bears him no animus. Why, I asked him later, did the president not move decisively to the political center?

Because he is more "intellectually honest" than that, he said. "I don't think he can do a Bill Clinton pivot, because he's not a pragmatist, he's an ideologue. He's a community organizer. He mixes the discrimination he felt as a young man with the hardship so many feel in this country, and he wants to change it and the way to change that is government programs and not opportunity."

The great issue, this friendly critic added, is debt. The public knows this; Congress and the White House do not. "To me the Republicans are as rotten as the Democrats" in terms of spending. "Almost."

"I hope we have big changes in 2010," the friend said. Only significant loss will force the president to focus on spending. "To heal our country we need to get the arrogance out of the White House and the elitists out of the Congress. We need tough love. We need a real adult in the White House because we don't have adults in the Congress."


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Comments

Mike

Ms. Noonan, as usual, nailed the tone and substance of the speech. Obama is not a leader, he assumes central planning is requisite for the idiot masses and he wants us to get out of his way so he can create perfection in his own image (where have I heard that before... Genesis maybe?)

Posted January 30, 2010 at 6:27:53 AM


tdrag

We can go back and look at any of the junk this president and his Socialist Fellow Travelers have foisted on the taxpayers this past year and it will still be warmed over Marxism. The "friendly Republican" Ms. Noonan writes about unknowingly summed this poser up when he talked about "the discrimination he (Obama) felt as a young man". So, is Barack Obama punishing America for this perceived discrimination? I for one am glad he did not pivot in the SOTU he is driving us all over the cliff (except those he has thrown under the bus). America must wake up to the danger this man and his Fellow Travelers pose to our nation, the sooner we get over The American Idol Presidency the better. Remember in November!

Posted January 30, 2010 at 3:26:27 PM


Anton D Rehling

The only people we need in our Congress and Senate as well as POTUS are men and women of moral character. People who will follow the Constitution and honor the limits put in place to protect our Rights and Liberty. Those who violate their oath of office and act outside the limits placed upon them violate the law and should be prosecuted, removed from office and spend time behind bars in a federal prison. Anyone who violates the trust of the people by passing unconstitutional legislation and imposing tyrannical dictates on the American people are nothing more than common criminals, no less guilty of a crime than Madoff was and is.

Posted January 30, 2010 at 3:46:15 PM


TJ

When I first saw the title of the article, I asked myself "Which one?"

Posted February 1, 2010 at 9:09:49 AM


joltinjoe

A great column once again. The self contradicting speech is classic hubris. Much ado about nothing. President Obama was swept into office during a perfect storm of opposition to Republican GW Bush. Obama will be swept out of office by the backlash of reckless spending, immaturity, and self contradicting policies. He said as much during the campaign but nobody listened. He is still saying it after one year of failure. 2010 will put on the breaks even harder on his liberal agenda. 2012 will stop the runaway train in a Democratic train wreck. Now you know.

Posted February 1, 2010 at 4:22:56 PM


Michael Gilroy

I agree with Ms. Noonan, but the speech is more of a mistake than that.

It is not a State of the Union speech but a State of Denial by Mr. Obama and his party. The middle of psychological denial of an addition to ideological tyranny at the expense of rationality.

He denies that our greatest moments as a country have not come from unity but a persistent minority aligning themselves with moral right.

He denies that he is acting as President rather than a canditate.

His administration IS the status quo that needs to be changed. He is denying that his party have been in control for more than four years.

He has continued all of the bad policies of Goldman Sachs/Bush, and is running over the good ones.

"New Foundation" is the same insane thing that has gotten us into this mess.

And then the mock elephant in the room which everyone refuses to talk about..tax cuts. He offered tax credits..which is a nice means of the plantation owner to force an economic slave to subsist ONLY if he takes the carrot the government puts before him.

The last great denial is MATH. Apparently, the greatest addition to the National Debt in 2009 was not enough, we must now top that by 300 Billion with a new budget w/spending freezes.

One word-Pathetic.

Posted February 2, 2010 at 3:56:07 AM


Anton D Rehling

Having Obama run this train is like having a child with training wheels on their bike drive the family car.

Posted February 2, 2010 at 10:12:28 PM


Greg Welch

Welcome back to the reality based side Peggy. How was your vacation during the '08 election? Is the swooning period over now?

Posted February 6, 2010 at 4:27:27 PM


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