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Enemies of the White House - Discontent is growing on the center-right.
THE WEEKLY STANDARD ^ | 03/16/2009 | Fred Barnes

Posted on 03/07/2009 3:36:30 PM PST by neverdem

President Obama isn't riding as high as he thinks. He's popular, though no more than is usual for a new president. His party is in charge on Capitol Hill, but its command of the Senate is fraying. And just last week, the faint outlines of a center-right coalition in opposition to Obama's policies--and increasingly to Obama himself--began to emerge. It's an embryonic grouping that may prove to be ephemeral. But maybe not.

Obama's situation is the same as Bill Clinton's in 1993. Clinton had run for president as a moderate, just as Obama ran as a pragmatic, rather than an ideological, liberal. But both turned sharply liberal once in the White House. Clinton alienated the political center by promoting a government-run health care plan, gays in the military, and midnight basketball as a crime-fighting tool. Obama is doing the same--at least he's starting to--with his bid to enact the most far-reaching and costly set of liberal programs since the New Deal.

If the political attitudes of Americans have been propelled to the left by the Obama campaign and the economic slump, as many liberals insist, the president should have little to worry about. But if America is still predominantly a moderate-to-conservative country, as I believe it is, then Obama may be fostering a stronger and more united gathering of opponents than he and his strategists imagine.

They look at Republicans and their cockiness is reinforced. Indeed, Republicans do appear anemic at the moment. Their new national chairman, Michael Steele, is off to an unimpressive start. Conservatives, the base of the party, are squabbling among themselves. But what Republicans do now is considerably less important than what Obama does. Republicans had a skillful leader in 1993, Newt Gingrich. He wasn't the biggest factor in their comeback, however. A failed Democratic president was.

Obama hasn't failed. He's been in office less than two months. But he is sowing the seeds of failure, both economically and politically. He doesn't quite own the economy yet, but he does own the stock market. It's a bet on the future. And so far the stock market has registered a resounding vote of no confidence in Obama's economic policies. Nor has Obama helped matters with his seeming indifference to the uninterrupted decline in equities since his inauguration.

What doesn't the market like? The pork-filled stimulus package was anything but reassuring. The failure of the Obama administration to produce a credible bank rescue plan is downright alarming. On top of those stumbles, the Obama budget for the next 10 years has spooked the stock market all the more. It calls for a huge burst of domestic spending paid for by higher taxes on the well-to-do and business. That's a recipe for a transfer of wealth, not for an economic recovery or surge in stock prices.

The budget scared prominent Obamaphiles like David Brooks of the New York Times and Jim Cramer, the boisterous financial broadcaster. Brooks wrote that Obama "is not who we thought he was." Cramer said Obama is causing "the greatest wealth destruction I've seen by a president." Criticized for his comment by White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, Cramer responded: "If that makes me an enemy of the White House, then call me a general of an army that Obama may not even know exists--tens of millions of people who live in fear of having no money saved when they need it and get poorer by the day." Moderate Democrats and Republicans were also shaken and said so publicly. The business community, which has tried to appease Obama, is growing fearful.

Here's the point: These are the people who drive centrist opinion. And the key to building a center-right coalition is drawing them away from Obama. The right is already in full anti-Obama mode. But attracting centrists and independents is something Republicans can't pull off on their own. Now they are getting help.

Congressional Republicans are actually doing a better job than they've gotten credit for in making themselves acceptable to centrists. The refrain of House Republican leader John Boehner is that Republicans must have "better solutions" to "win the issues." Their alternatives to Obama's economic policies have gotten little media attention, but they do exist and most are sensible. That's sufficient for the time being.

Democratic anxiety over the possibility of losing centrists--what there is of it--was reflected in the White House campaign to identify talk show superstar Rush Limbaugh as the leader of the Republican party. He's not. Parties in the minority seldom have leaders except in parliamentary systems. But Limbaugh, though he may not appeal to centrists, is important. He and his followers are an indispensable part of an effective center-right coalition--a simple fact of political life that appears to have been lost on Republican snobs who would ostracize Limbaugh.

A majority coalition of centrists and conservatives is a long shot for the near future. In Clinton's case, it didn't spring into being until his second year in office. But in Obama's case, the same elements are already present. Pollster David Winston found in a survey last fall that the electorate's ideology hadn't changed. Most voters, including independents, remain right of center. This was ratified by the exit poll on Election Day. Only 22 percent identified themselves as liberal, while 34 percent were conservatives and 44 percent moderates.

Clinton didn't notice that a coalition had congealed in opposition to his policies until Republicans captured Congress in the 1994 landslide. He survived by shifting to the right and compromising with Republicans. Obama, for all his talk about bipartisanship, isn't ready to do that, and he may never have to. Then again, the possibility he'll need to accommodate a center-right alliance is growing.

Fred Barnes is executive editor of THE WEEKLY STANDARD.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008exitpoll; bho2009; bho44; democrat; democrats; impeachobama; obama; zeronomics
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Deficits and Fiscal Credibility--A Democratic senator says no to a huge federal spending bill
1 posted on 03/07/2009 3:36:30 PM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Obama will never come to the right politically for any reason.


2 posted on 03/07/2009 3:40:30 PM PST by txnativegop (God Bless America! (NRA-Endowment))
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To: neverdem

I would not call Feingold part of a center right coalition. Not even Bayh.


3 posted on 03/07/2009 3:42:19 PM PST by Brilliant
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To: txnativegop

Why does Obama and Emmanuel and his boys waste time on stupid things like demonizing Rush Limbaugh?


4 posted on 03/07/2009 3:42:55 PM PST by Dilbert San Diego
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To: neverdem
Obama will never accomodate a center right alliance. And the election in 2010? We take back Congress.
5 posted on 03/07/2009 3:43:45 PM PST by Candor7 (I love Lucy : http://www.fiftiesweb.com/lucy.htm ( Those were better days))
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To: neverdem

The man has always been a COMMUNIST and always will be a COMMUNIST. The sooner he is rejected the better the chances of saving our Republic!


6 posted on 03/07/2009 3:43:53 PM PST by End_Clintonism_Now (POLITICAL DISSIDENT as of 11/4/08)
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To: neverdem
Indeed, Republicans do appear anemic at the moment.

That's not anemia, Fred. It's cadaveromia.

7 posted on 03/07/2009 3:44:09 PM PST by TADSLOS ( Join the Conservative Revolution! http://falconparty.com/)
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To: neverdem

Why do people keep calling it “transfer of wealth”?

IT’S THEFT, PEOPLE! Plain ol’ stealing!

It’s theft at the end of a very real.

What’s the problem with Madoff? He merely “transferred wealth”, right? No big deal.


8 posted on 03/07/2009 3:44:09 PM PST by Boucheau
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Because they are lashing out like immature children at the thing they fear most.

It is very telling about this bunch.


9 posted on 03/07/2009 3:44:21 PM PST by txnativegop (God Bless America! (NRA-Endowment))
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To: neverdem
Obama will never accomodate a center right alliance. He will circle the wagons, use executive rders to dole out the billions onn allocations he has scammed from Congress, and tell them all the eff off. We will have 4 years of the battle between fascist Utopians and the People themselves, Cogress will simply be irrelevant.Obama will veto bill after bill.

And the election in 2010? We take back Congress.

10 posted on 03/07/2009 3:44:23 PM PST by Candor7 (I love Lucy : http://www.fiftiesweb.com/lucy.htm ( Those were better days))
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To: Boucheau

...very real GUN.


11 posted on 03/07/2009 3:44:36 PM PST by Boucheau
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To: neverdem
OK. Let us look at history.

Sure the Repubs might make a foothold in 2010/12(maybe President if lucky).

Then what? Even if by chance they end up being true conservatives, they won't last long. "Senior's to eat dog food," "children to go homeless," "rich get richer," will be the hew and cry throughout the left establishment and they will be out on their you know what with the new election cycle.

Then socialism continues her course.

I believe it is going to have to be something greater than elections to stop the serfdom train.

12 posted on 03/07/2009 3:44:36 PM PST by deadrock (Liberty is a bitch that needs to be bedded on a mattress of cadavers.)
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To: neverdem

Enemies of *IN* the White House - Discontent is growing on the center-right.



You had a little typo there, but I fixed it for ya at no extra charge. ;-)
13 posted on 03/07/2009 3:46:05 PM PST by pillut48 (CJ in TX --"God help us all, and God help America!!" --my new mantra for the next 4 years)
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To: neverdem
Dems are smelling landslide defeat
14 posted on 03/07/2009 3:47:48 PM PST by Las Vegas Ron (FUBO, he says we should listen to our enemies, but not to Rush)
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To: Candor7

Is it possible that not a single democrat returns or is elected? ‘Cause if this destruction of the American economy continues at the rate HolyO and his cronies are moving (at the speed of SOUND) then I predict the sleeping giant will awaken and you are correct—conservatives (and republicans, if they EVER clean up their act!) will take back the House and the Senate—and two years later, the White House as well!!!


15 posted on 03/07/2009 3:48:31 PM PST by pillut48 (CJ in TX --"God help us all, and God help America!!" --my new mantra for the next 4 years)
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To: DEADROCK

4 years of Obamunism will bring about that change. Dramatic change. If the first days are any indication, he will cause a Revolution by those of us who care before his term is up..


16 posted on 03/07/2009 3:49:14 PM PST by datura ("Against all enemies, both foreign and domestic")
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To: Las Vegas Ron
Baby, I'm predicting a

MANDATE!!!

for change!!! :-)
17 posted on 03/07/2009 3:49:18 PM PST by pillut48 (CJ in TX --"God help us all, and God help America!!" --my new mantra for the next 4 years)
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To: Brilliant
I would not call Feingold part of a center right coalition. Not even Bayh

Give it another month and Feingold will appear further right than "center right" and Olympia Snowe will be unelectable presidential material for appearing to be a "right wing extremist". Center is being redefined. :(

18 posted on 03/07/2009 3:51:46 PM PST by tsowellfan (The New Tone Has Finally Come Home To Roost)
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To: pillut48
I hope you're right.

And it's gonna have to be a strong one. As another poster pointed out, the pendulum swings back too rapidly back to the socialist side, we'll need to hold on to it for a long, long time.

19 posted on 03/07/2009 3:54:18 PM PST by Las Vegas Ron (FUBO, he says we should listen to our enemies, but not to Rush)
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To: Las Vegas Ron
Dems are smelling landslide defeat

Hence the deployment of the Hope & Change Plumbers ,Carvile & Begala, for damage control. Their appearance is way earlier than I expected.

20 posted on 03/07/2009 3:55:06 PM PST by End_Clintonism_Now (POLITICAL DISSIDENT as of 11/4/08)
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