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How Obama Has Fundamentally Transformed American Politics
Townhall.com ^ | September 16, 2015 | Michael Barone

Posted on 09/16/2015 5:13:04 AM PDT by Kaslin

In this presidential cycle, voters in both parties, to the surprise of the punditocracy, are rejecting experienced political leaders. They're willfully suspending disbelief in challengers who would have been considered laughable in earlier years.

Polls show more Republicans preferring three candidates who have never held elective office over 14 candidates who have served a combined total of 150 years as governors or in Congress. Most Democrats are declining to favor a candidate who spent eight years in the White House and the Senate and four as secretary of state.

Psephologists of varying stripes attribute this discontent to varying causes. Conservatives blame insufficiently aggressive Republican congressional leaders. Liberals blame Hillary Clinton's closeness to plutocrats and her home email system.

But in our system the widespread rejection of experienced leaders ultimately comes from dismay at the leader in the White House. In 1960 Richard Nixon, after eight years as vice president and six in Congress, campaigned on the slogan "Experience counts." No one is running on that theme this year.

Nixon could, because over the preceding quarter-century the majority of Americans mostly approved of the performance of incumbent presidents. Presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Eisenhower still look pretty good more than 50 years later.

Barack Obama doesn't. His deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes recently said that the president's nuclear weapons deal with Iran was as important an achievement of his second term as Obamacare was of the first. Historians may well agree.

These two policy achievements have many things in common.

Both were unpopular when proposed and still are now. In March 2010 Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that people would know, and presumably like, what was in the bill after it was passed. But most Americans didn't like it then and most don't today, five and a half years later. As for the Iran deal, Pew Research reports it has only 21 percent approval today, much lower than Obamacare in 2010.

Both Obamacare and the Iran deal were bulldozed through Congress through legislative legerdemain. Democrats passed Obamacare by using the temporary 60-vote Senate supermajority gained through a Minnesota recount and the wrongful prosecution of Sen. Ted Stevens. After they lost the 60th vote, they resorted to a dubious legislative procedure.

This year Obama labeled the Iran treaty an executive agreement, and Congress concocted a process requiring only a one-third-plus-one rather than a two-thirds vote for approval. Only 38 percent of members of Congress supported it. Many, such as House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, did so only after saying that they never would have accepted it in negotiations.

In 2008 Obama promised he would "fundamentally transform" America, and Obamacare and the Iran deal are indeed fundamental transformations of policy --transformations most Americans oppose.

Obamacare assumed that financial crisis and recession would make most voters supportive of, or amenable to, bigger government. But as National Review's Ramesh Ponnuru points out, polling doesn't show that. Obama assumed that if America could "extend a hand" to such propitiated enemies as the mullahs of Iran, they would become friends with us. Most Americans think that's delusional. No wonder voters are angry.

Republican voters are frustrated and angry because for six years they have believed they have public opinion on their side, but their congressional leaders have failed to prevail on high visibility issues. Their successes (clamping down on domestic discretionary spending) have been invisible. They haven't made gains through compromise because Obama, unlike his two predecessors, lacks both the inclination and ability to make deals.

So Republicans who imposed harsh litmus tests in previous presidential cycles (like asking candidates if they've ever supported a tax increase, or if they've ever wavered in their opposition to abortion) are flocking to Donald Trump, a candidate who would fail every one of them. They are paying little attention to candidates -- Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Scott Walker, Chris Christie, Bobby Jindal -- who advance serious proposals to change public policy.

In polls, Democratic voters have stayed loyal to the president. But to listen to their candidates (and maybe-candidate Joe Biden) you would think we are in our seventh year of oppression by a right-wing administration. You don't hear much about the virtues of Obamacare or the Iran deal -- or "choice."

Most Americans hoped the first black president would improve race relations. Now most Americans believe they have gotten worse.

And so a president who came to office with relatively little experience has managed to tarnish experience, incumbency and institutions: a fundamental transformation indeed.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: barack0bama; change; communistpartyusa; cpusa; transformation
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To: cymbeline

That and not being owned by the RNC.


21 posted on 09/16/2015 6:31:33 AM PDT by 3boysdad (The very elect.)
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To: Little Ray
Thank you. The links in that article do not work so I found the Appellate Opinion, which I have uploaded here.

Cordially,

22 posted on 09/16/2015 6:35:25 AM PDT by Diamond (He has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people,)
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To: Verginius Rufus

“He doesn’t have to make deals because he can always shut down the government if they don’t cave, knowing that the media will blame the Republicans for the shutdown and the public will be fooled into thinking that is the case.”

The Republicans can easily eliminate the shutdown threat. Instead of sending one giant budget bill to the president, they can send hundreds or thousands of individual appropriations bills funding each agency or even each program. The president can then choose which to sign and which to veto. No government shutdown unless he vetoes all of them. In that case, even the most stupid voter would have to recognize it is the president shutting down the government. It is the single giant “all or nothing” spending bill, sent to the president at the last minute, that gives the president his power.

Why won’t the GOP fund the government in hundreds or thousands of individual spending bills? Perhaps they like the drama.


23 posted on 09/16/2015 6:37:24 AM PDT by Soul of the South (Yesterday is gone. Today will be what we make of it.)
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To: Maceman

Seriously????

That might explain why I had photographic evidence of Dems violating election laws (not sure if it qualified as voter fraud, but they were flagrantly violating the law after being repeatedly warned not to) in 2012 and the local Repubs were pretty excited about it, but did very little about it.


24 posted on 09/16/2015 6:37:51 AM PDT by generally (Don't be stupid. We have politicians for that.)
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To: All

All three branches of government have been corrupted completely. And the media, in a sense (propaganda branch), makes it FOUR completely corrupt branches of government.


25 posted on 09/16/2015 6:43:41 AM PDT by mmichaels1970
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To: Nip

Lucky...at least you had the one opportunity to vote “for” a president!! I’m 47 and my presidential votes have always been because the other guy was worse thus an “against” vote. I decided after the last election, no more “against” voting for me in any level election.


26 posted on 09/16/2015 6:48:17 AM PDT by ebersole
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To: Kaslin

Alternatively, we hate the GOPe so badly that there is a clear majority for anti-establishmentarians.

Trump + Cruz + Carson > 50%.

Suck it, RINOs.


27 posted on 09/16/2015 6:50:03 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (If the GOPe ever fought Liberals as hard as they fight Conservatives, we'd win!)
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To: Kaslin

In his Presidency he has transformed the Presidency to that of Elective Dictatorship.


28 posted on 09/16/2015 7:04:40 AM PDT by arthurus (It's true.)
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To: Kaslin
Polls show more Republicans preferring three candidates who have never held elective office over 14 candidates who have served a combined total of 150 years as governors or in Congress. Most Democrats are declining to favor a candidate who spent eight years in the White House and the Senate and four as secretary of state.

Psephologists of varying stripes attribute this discontent to varying causes. Conservatives blame insufficiently aggressive Republican congressional leaders. Liberals blame Hillary Clinton's closeness to plutocrats and her home email system.

No, Michael, it isn't Obama, it is virtually ALL of the politicians in DC that are responsible for the rise of Trump (and Sanders, for that matter). It is nothing more complicated than the FACT that the political class has miserably failed the people of this country. Hillary Clinton qualified for the WH? Really? What did she ACTUALLY do to earn that kind of reputation? She is nothing more than a self-serving, corrupt politician (and not a very good politician, at that - she's CLEARLY riding on her husband's coat tails, to this day). Just serving in office makes you qualified for NOTHING - and, in fact, seems to be a DIS-qualifying factor more than anything else. We don't WANT more of the same, get it?

As for the Republicans, they've become so comfortable as a minority party that they just want to be there, to be invited to the "right" cocktail parties in Georgetown. They couldn't give a rat's ass about the base of the Party that sent them there - and, in fact, look at the base as a bigger enemy than the Democrats.

Well, Michael, we have had enough of this crap - THAT is why Trump and Sanders are so popular, because they are NOT typical pols, they say what they think (damn, but that is refreshing) and they just don't care what anyone in the media says (again, DAMN, but that is refreshing).

Michael, to paraphrase a well-known statement about war: "Politics is too important to leave to the politicians."

29 posted on 09/16/2015 7:22:27 AM PDT by Ancesthntr ("The right to buy weapons is the right to be free." A. E. van Vogt)
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To: Soul of the South
Perhaps they like the drama.

Or perhaps it's because they are the stupid party.

30 posted on 09/16/2015 8:07:01 AM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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