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What a Disaster Looks Like
· Saturday, March 6, 2010
It is now exactly a year since President Obama unveiled his health-care push and his decision to devote his inaugural year to it — his branding year, his first, vivid year.
What a disaster it has been.
At best it was a waste of history's time, a struggle that will not in the end yield something big and helpful but will in fact make future progress more difficult. At worst it may prove to have fatally undermined a new presidency at a time when America desperately needs a successful one.
In terms of policy, his essential mistake was to choose health-care expansion over health-care reform. This at the exact moment voters were growing more anxious about the cost and reach of government. The practical mistake was that he did not include or envelop congressional Republicans from the outset, but handed the bill's creation over to a Democratic Congress that was becoming a runaway train. This at the exact moment Americans were coming to be concerned that Washington was broken, incapable of progress, frozen in partisanship.
His political mistakes were myriad and perhaps can be reduced to this:
There are all sorts of harm a new president can do to his presidency. Right now, part of the job of a new president in a hypermediaized environment is harm avoidance. This sounds defensive, and is at odds with the wisdom that presidents in times of crisis must boldly go forth and break through. But it all depends on what you're being bold about. Why, in 2009, create a new crisis over an important but secondary issue when we already have the Great Recession and two wars? Prudence and soundness of judgment are more greatly needed at the moment.
New presidents should never, ever, court any problem that isn't already banging at the door. They should never summon trouble. Mr. Obama did, boldly, perhaps even madly. And this is perhaps the oddest thing about No Drama Obama: In his first year as president he created unneeded political drama, and wound up seen by many Americans not as the hero but the villain.
In Washington among sympathetic political hands (actually, most of them sound formerly sympathetic) you hear the word "intervention," as in: "So-and-so tried an intervention with the president and it didn't work." So-and-so tried to tell him he's in trouble with the public and must moderate, recalibrate, back off from health care. The end of the story is always that so-and-so got nowhere. David Gergen a few weeks ago told the Financial Times the administration puts him in mind of the old joke: "How many psychiatrists does it take to change a lightbulb? Only one. But the lightbulb must want to change. I don't think President Obama wants to make any changes."
Sometimes when I look at the past three chief executives, I wonder if we were witnessing not three presidencies but three psychodramas played out on an intensely public stage.
What accounts for Mr. Obama's confidence and certainty?
Well, if you were a young progressive who'd won the presidency by a comfortable margin in a center-right country, you just might think you were a genius. You might not be surprised to find yourself surrounded by a cultish admiration: "They see him as a fabled figure," said a frequent White House visitor of some on the president's staff.
You might think the great strength you demonstrated during the campaign — an ability to stay in the game you're playing and not the game someone else is playing, an ability to proceed undistracted by the crises or the machinations of your opponents, but to just keep playing your slow and steady game — is a strength suitable to your presidency. If you choose to play health care, that's the game you play, straight through, no jeers from the crowd distracting you.
If you were a young progressive who'd won the presidency against the odds, you probably wouldn't see yourself as someone who lucked out, with the stars perfectly aligned for a liberal victory. And you might forget we are more or less and functionally a 50-50 country, and that you have to keep your finger very much on the pulse of the people if you're to survive and prosper.
And now here are two growing problems for Mr. Obama.
The first hasn't become apparent yet, but I suspect will be presenting itself, and soon. In order to sharpen the air of crisis he seems to think he needed to get his health-care legislation passed, in order to continue the air of crisis that might justify expanding government and sustaining its costs, and in order, always, to remind voters of George W. Bush, Mr. Obama has harped on what a horror the economy is. How great our challenges, how wicked our businessmen, how dim our future.
This is a delicate business. You can't be all rosy glow, you have to be candid. But attitude and mood matter. America has reached the point, a year and a half into the crisis, when frankly it needs some cheerleading. It can't always be mourning in America. We need some inspiration from the top, need someone who can speak with authority of what is working and can be made to work, of what is good and cause for pride. We are still employing 130 million people, and America is still competitive in the world, with innovative business leaders and practices.
The president can't be a hope purveyor while he's a doom merchant, and he appears to believe he has to be a doom merchant to justify ramming through his legislation. This particular legislation is not worth that particular price.
All this contributes to a second problem, which is a growing credibility gap. In his speech Wednesday, demanding an "up or down" vote, the president seemed convinced and committed — but nothing he said sounded true. His bill will "bring down the cost of health care for millions," it is "fully paid for," it will lower the long term deficit by a trillion dollars.
Does anyone believe this? Does anyone who knows the ways of government, the compulsions of Congress, and how history has played out in the past, believe this? Even a little? Rep. Bart Stupak said Thursday that he and several of his fellow Democrats won't vote for the Senate version of the bill because it says right there on page 2,069 that the federal government would directly subsidize abortions. The bill's proponents say this isn't so. It would be a relief to have a president who could weigh in believably and make clear what his own bill says. But he seems to devote more words to obscuring than clarifying.
The only thing that might make his assertions sound believable now is if a group of congressional Republicans were standing next to him on the podium and putting forward a bill right along with him. Which, obviously, won't happen, for three reasons. First, they enjoy his discomfort. Second, they believe the bill is not worth saving, that at this point no matter what it contains — and at this point most people can no longer retain in their heads what it contains — it has been fatally tainted by the past year of mistakes and inadequacies.
And the third reason is that the past decade has taught them what a disaster looks like, and they've lost their taste for standing next to one.
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John Culbertson
It is a disaster and it will only get worse!
Posted March 6, 2010 at 4:02:35 AM
ILEANA
It is a disaster and BO is not giving up until the deluge is complete.
Posted March 6, 2010 at 11:13:44 AM
Don R.
President Obama paints his own picture and is what he is. Remember, every time he looks in the mirror - "We the People" are looking too!
Posted March 6, 2010 at 1:22:31 PM
Sam
Ms. Noonan must have been living off planet for some time...just go back and look at Obama's record..do you really think he won't in some way include abortion funding in the health care bill? Do you think he chose Sebelius because she loves life? She was Tiller the baby killer's friend and colleague..he is weak on national defense, he has chosen some very, very questionable people as czars and advisors...he has bribed and lied whenever he had to...he voted against giving aid and comfort to a baby who survives abortion...infanticide!!! he is arrogant and condescending...he is president and...that's it. I used to enjoy reading Noonan's columns...this one, well...she must have been off planet for a while...
Posted March 6, 2010 at 1:50:05 PM
Greg Welch
Welcome back Peggy, off planet for awhile, is correct. Why the slow change on Barry Obama????? He has always been this way. Words mean something to Barry. At least he hasn't voted PRESENT over one hundred times, apologized for that bad nation, AMERICA, one hundred times though. How long will you stay onboard the lifeboat OBAMA this time????????
Posted March 6, 2010 at 5:18:24 PM
Jason
Noonan has shown the world that she is not a Conservative. She is an unprincipled individual who will support leftist when they are popular and criticize them when that is popular. She may get it mostly right here but she cannot be relied upon to consistently espouse the cause of Liberty. True lovers of Freedom must ignore her and her ilk.
Posted March 6, 2010 at 5:43:11 PM
L.M. Weatherly
Ms Noonan sounds like she is sorry he is failing and that she wants to help him. I can appreciate her subtle dig at the Republicans but this disaster eclipses anything that happened in the Bush administration.
Posted March 6, 2010 at 5:53:24 PM
veritaseequitas
In the first part of this "disaster" of a column, Ms. Noonan attributes BO's wrong moves to mistakes.
In the second half of her column she attributes BO's wrong moves to his ability to "sharpen the air of crisis," which speaks not to mistakes this stinker of a president has made, but to outright manipulation and lying to the American people in order to get his odious socialist agenda passed.
Ms. Noonan may think GWB was a disaster, and many things he did were, in fact, wrong for our country.
But, if permitted to continue, the absolute train wreck that is Barrack Hussein Obama is going to sink America for good.
America was asleep at the wheel when they elected this lying communist/socialist/marxist. It is time to wake up and realize that he and his despicable left wing liberal posse are at the center of what is wrong with our country.
Posted March 7, 2010 at 8:27:24 AM