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An ineffective and gutless presidency’s legacy is failure
Salon ^ | July 20, 2014 | THOMAS FRANK, yes that Thomas Frank

Posted on 07/22/2014 4:52:13 AM PDT by Second Amendment First

Full Title: Right-wing obstruction could have been fought: An ineffective and gutless presidency’s legacy is failure

Predicting the future course of American politics is a lively and flourishing vocation. Guessing how future generations will commemorate present-day political events, however, is not nearly as remunerative. In the interest of restoring some balance to this tragic situation, allow me to kick off the speculation about the Obama legacy. How will we assess it? How will the Barack Obama Presidential Library, a much-anticipated museum of the future, cast the great events of our time?

In approaching this subject, let us first address the historical situation of the Obama administration. The task of museums, like that of history generally, is to document periods of great change. The task facing the makers of the Obama museum, however, will be pretty much exactly the opposite: how to document a time when America should have changed but didn’t. Its project will be to explain an age when every aspect of societal breakdown was out in the open and the old platitudes could no longer paper it over—when the meritocracy was clearly corrupt, when the financial system had devolved into organized thievery, when everyone knew that the politicians were bought and the worst criminals went unprosecuted and the middle class was in a state of collapse and the newspaper pundits were like street performers miming “seriousness” for an audience that had lost its taste for mime and seriousness both. It was a time when every thinking person could see that the reigning ideology had failed, that an epoch had ended, that the shitty consensus ideas of the 1980s had finally caved in—and when an unlikely champion arose from the mean streets of Chicago to keep the whole thing propped up nevertheless.

The Obama team, as the president once announced to a delegation of investment bankers, was “the only thing between you and the pitchforks,” and in retrospect these words seem not only to have been a correct assessment of the situation at the moment but a credo for his entire term in office. For my money, they should be carved in stone over the entrance to his monument: Barack Obama as the one-man rescue squad for an economic order that had aroused the fury of the world. Better: Obama as the awesomely talented doctor who kept the corpse of a dead philosophy lumbering along despite it all.

The Age of the Zombie Consensus, however poetic it sounds, will probably not recommend itself as a catchphrase to the shapers of the Obama legacy. They will probably be looking for a label that is slightly more heroic: the Triumph of Faith over Cynicism, or something like that. Maybe they will borrow a phrase from one of the 2012 campaign books, “The Center Holds,” and describe the Obama presidency as a time when cool, corporate reason prevailed over inflamed public opinion. Barack Obama will be presented as a kind of second FDR: the man who saved the system from itself. That perhaps the system didn’t deserve saving will be left to some less-well-funded museum.

Another prediction that I can make safely is that the Obama Presidential Library will violate one of the cardinal rules of presidential museums: It will have to be pretty massively partisan. As I noted last week, presidential libraries usually play down partisan conflict in order to make the past seem like a place of national togetherness and the president himself like a man of broadly recognized leadership, but in order for Obama’s presidential library to deliver the usual reassuring message about himself, it will have to stand convention on its head. As president, Obama has been reluctant to take the reinvigorated right too seriously. But as legacy-maker, I predict that he will work to make them seem even crazier and more unstoppable than they actually are.

Why? Because all presidential museums are exercises in getting their subject off the hook, and for Obama loyalists looking back at his years in office, the need for blame evasion will be acute. Why, the visitors to his library will wonder, did the president do so little about rising inequality, the subject on which he gave so many rousing speeches? Why did he do nothing, or next to nothing, about the crazy high price of a college education, the Great Good Thing that he has said, time and again, determines our personal as well as national success? Why didn’t he propose a proper healthcare program instead of the confusing jumble we got? Why not a proper stimulus package? Why didn’t he break up the banks? Or the agribusiness giants, for that matter?

Well, duh, his museum will answer: he couldn’t do any of those things because of the crazy right-wingers running wild in the land. He couldn’t reason with them—their brains don’t work like ours! He couldn’t defeat them at the polls—they’d gerrymandered so many states that they couldn’t be dislodged! What can a high-minded man of principle do when confronted with such a vast span of bigotry and close-mindedness? The answer toward which the Obama museum will steer the visitor is: Nothing.

In point of fact, there were plenty of things Obama’s Democrats could have done that might have put the right out of business once and for all—for example, by responding more aggressively to the Great Recession or by pounding relentlessly on the theme of middle-class economic distress. Acknowledging this possibility, however, has always been difficult for consensus-minded Democrats, and I suspect that in the official recounting of the Obama era, this troublesome possibility will disappear entirely. Instead, the terrifying Right-Wing Other will be cast in bronze at twice life-size, and made the excuse for the Administration’s every last failure of nerve, imagination and foresight. Demonizing the right will also allow the Obama legacy team to present his two electoral victories as ends in themselves, since they kept the White House out of the monster’s grasp—heroic triumphs that were truly worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize. (Which will be dusted off and prominently displayed.)

But bipartisanship as an ideal must also be kept sacred, of course. And so, after visitors to the Obama Library have passed through the Gallery of Drones and the Big Data Command Center, they will be ushered into a maze-like exhibit designed to represent the president’s long, lonely, and ultimately fruitless search for consensus. The Labyrinth of the Grand Bargain, it might be called, and it will teach how the president bravely put the fundamental achievements of his party—Social Security and Medicare—on the bargaining table in exchange for higher taxes and a smaller deficit. This will be described not as a sellout of liberal principle but as a sacred quest for the Holy Grail of Washington: a bipartisan coming-together on “entitlement reform,” which every responsible D.C. professional knows to be the correct way forward.

How will all the legacy-shapers of the future regard the Obama movement, the political prairie fire of six years ago that transformed the Senator from Illinois into a folk hero even before he was elected? What will the Obama library have to say about the people who recognized correctly that it was time for “Change” and who showed up at his routine campaign appearances in 2008 by the hundreds of thousands?

It will be a tricky problem. On the up side, those days before his first term began were undoubtedly Obama’s best ones. Mentioning them, however, will remind the visitor of the next stage in his true believers’ political evolution: Disillusionment. Not because their hero failed to win the Grand Bargain, but because he wanted to get it in the first place—because he seemed to believe that shoring up the D.C. consensus was the rightful object of all political idealism. The movement, in other words, won’t fit easily into the standard legacy narrative. Yet it can’t simply be deleted from the snapshot.

Perhaps there will be an architectural solution for this problem. For example, the Obama museum’s designers could make the exhibit on the movement into a kind of blind alley that physically reminds visitors of the basic doctrine of the Democratic Party’s leadership faction: that liberals have nowhere else to go.

My own preference would be to let that disillusionment run, to let it guide the entire design of the Obama museum. Disillusionment is, after all, a far more representative emotion of our times than Beltway satisfaction over the stability of some imaginary “center.” So why not memorialize it? My suggestion to the designers of the complex: That the Obama Presidential Library be designed as a kind of cenotaph, a mausoleum of hope.

Thomas Frank is a Salon politics and culture columnist. His many books include "What's The Matter With Kansas," "Pity the Billionaire" and "One Market Under God." He is the founding editor of The Baffler magazine.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
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To: Fresh Wind

I am offended at that!

Outhouses serve a purpose.
Obama Libary serves propaganda.


21 posted on 07/22/2014 5:55:56 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Fresh Wind

I’ll bet there are some REALLY crazy rats in that thing!


22 posted on 07/22/2014 5:59:44 AM PDT by RipSawyer (OPM is the religion of the sheeple.)
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To: EQAndyBuzz

...faculty lounge of a third rate university passing itself off as an ivy league school.”
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

“Current evidence would seem to indicate that our ivy league schools ARE “third rate” universities now. Where would one go to find a genuine first rate university?


23 posted on 07/22/2014 6:02:56 AM PDT by RipSawyer (OPM is the religion of the sheeple.)
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To: Mears

bfl


24 posted on 07/22/2014 6:09:04 AM PDT by Mears
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To: rdcbn

You ought to read his book “What’s The Matter With Kansas?” like I did to discover incomprehensible. Basically, in this screed/article, Frank, like many radical leftists, laments that Obama is not Marxist enough for commies like Frank.


25 posted on 07/22/2014 6:55:42 AM PDT by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: Second Amendment First

Salon is wrong. As usual.

Barry Hussein is not “ineffective”, though “gutless” is probably correct. In any case, Barry Hussein is evil and destructive, and has been very effective in damaging America. All according to plan.


26 posted on 07/22/2014 6:57:46 AM PDT by NorthMountain
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To: Second Amendment First

The author is upset that BO merely set the country on fire instead of blowing it to bits.


27 posted on 07/22/2014 7:18:08 AM PDT by Dr.Deth
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

I agree.


28 posted on 07/22/2014 7:20:27 AM PDT by Terry L Smith
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To: driftless2

You ought to read his book “What’s The Matter With Kansas?” like I did to discover incomprehensible. Basically, in this screed/article, Frank, like many radical leftists, laments that Obama is not Marxist enough for commies like Frank.


It kind of ranks up there with Michelle Obama’s Princeton senior thesis which Christopher Hitchens commented on in Slate magazine

“I direct your attention to Mrs. Obama’s 1985 thesis at Princeton University. Its title (rather limited in scope, given the author and the campus) is “Princeton-Educated Blacks and the Black Community.” To describe it as hard to read would be a mistake; the thesis cannot be “read” at all, in the strict sense of the verb. This is because it wasn’t written in any known language. “


29 posted on 07/22/2014 7:26:03 AM PDT by rdcbn
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To: Buckeye McFrog

So the Hard Left is about to unleash it’s fury on Barack Obama because he was the only one who could have saved Communism and he blew it?

there, fixed it for ya.

Really, that is what this article is saying...


30 posted on 07/22/2014 7:35:59 AM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: tet68

It is bull feces too, since the L4B regime is accomplishing just what it was installed to do, destroy the We The People Republic so that it will not hinder the globalist agenda ever again.


31 posted on 07/22/2014 7:38:48 AM PDT by MHGinTN
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To: RipSawyer

““Current evidence would seem to indicate that our ivy league schools ARE “third rate” universities now. Where would one go to find a genuine first rate university?”

Do it online. It costs less, there are no ideological machinations by the factulty and in the end, it’s an accredited degree.


32 posted on 07/22/2014 9:28:57 AM PDT by EQAndyBuzz (GM is dead and Al Queada is alive.)
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To: rdcbn
If you've read Frank's book, then you know what I'm talking about. He became (in)famous from that book. All his major arguments were refuted by a number of people including his statement that most Kansas conservatives vote for Republicans on social issues. Of course social issues are part of the reason, but the major reason the very religious, socially conservative, Kansas Republicans voted that way is on economic issues something Frank refuses to believe.

I don't know if he's the originator of the common leftist trope about people "voting against their own economic interests," but the idea that many Americans reject the suggestion to rely on the government for making their lives is something Frank just cannot comprehend.

33 posted on 07/22/2014 11:04:58 AM PDT by driftless2 (For long term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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