Posted on 07/28/2010 9:53:17 AM PDT by neverdem
Obamas Real Problem
Why the presidents poll numbers have declined.
According to a popular myth, President Obama’s declining poll numbers are a consequence of his failure to be liberal enough. On race, in the wake of the Shirley Sherrod mess, we are told he needs to appoint more African Americans and bring in more advisers from the black community. On the economy, liberal economists decry his unwillingness to borrow and stimulate more.
This is lunatic in political terms.
Obama’s poll numbers are falling for three reasons clear to any amateur student of politics.
First, the voters in 2008 did not vote for liberal change, but for change from the costly and lengthy Bush wars, deficits, spending policies, and immigration proposals. Obama voters were also motivated by a desire to elect our first African-American president, fear over the September 2008 financial meltdown, a lackluster McCain campaign, and the strange perception that Obama was a centrist.
Since his election, Obama has outdone the average Bush deficits by a factor of four or five. His brief “stimulus” became the prelude to a gorge-the-beast reordering of American society. Meanwhile, after demagoguing as a candidate everything from Guantanamo to Iraq, Obama in office has kept in place almost every major security protocol that Bush had established. He has broken his promises to close Guantanamo, try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in New York, and pull out of Iraq. This has meant alienating his shrinking base while being exposed as a hypocrite to suddenly wiser and less forgiving independents.
Second, after ramming through his health-care bill without either bipartisan support or public approval, Obama is polling badly on just about every hot-button issue. The electorate simply does not want cap-and-trade, amnesty, more deficits, and higher taxes. Rather, it prefers to produce more oil and gas, and more hydroelectric and nuclear power; it wants to follow the Arizona immigration model; it wants to cut spending; and it wants to balance the budget.
The Left may be disheartened that Obama has not borrowed more for green-energy subsidies, has not yet rammed through an amnesty for illegal immigrants, and has not spent more money trying to stimulate the economy. But these are not the reasons that Obama is sinking in the polls. Indeed, a good way for Democrats to lose both the House and the Senate would be to use the health-care model to push through amnesty and cap-and-trade legislation before November.
Third, the problem is not that Obama is insufficiently attuned to race, but that he is perceived (fairly or unfairly) to be obsessed with it. Since 2008, both Barack and Michelle Obama have committed a series of gaffes that appeared to reflect an attachment to identity politics. Taken together, these divisive musings have fostered the impression that the first couple is excessively concerned with racial issues.
In terms of Obama’s appointees, no one forced Van Jones to brag of his earlier Communist sympathies; to get involved, even tangentially, with the 9/11 “truthers”; or to say that white teens are more likely than black teens to be mass murderers, and white adults more likely to be polluters. The Left may see Jones as a sacrificial lamb, perhaps deserving of an Ivy League sinecure; but the public was glad to see him go, and even more relieved to see him stay away. Beyond Jones, the comments made by Anita Dunn, NASA chief Charles Bolden, “documented or not” Hilda Solis, and Donald Berwick certainly have not made the case that Obama needs to bring in more hard-core liberal ideologues.
Indeed, to use a rather brutal metaphor, Obama has planted throughout his administration a number of far-left time bombs. On any given day, one of them can go off. A dozen or more may very well implode before the November elections.
By the time the public learned that Shirley Sherrod had really delivered a speech about class divisions and the culpability of the rich rather than a racist diatribe about the culpability of whites, she had managed to evoke slavery in Jesse Jackson fashion. As the week ended, her husband was on YouTube peddling the same old tired racist cant with a very thin progressive veneer. One unmentioned lesson from the Sherrod saga is that the public does not want to hear federal agricultural officials weigh in on either racial or class activism in front of national advocacy groups.
If Obama appoints more advisers and officials primarily on the basis of race, he surely will not see a sudden rise in his approval rating among independent voters. A talking head on MSNBC may be outraged that we did not initially hear Sherrod expand on why she is no longer a racist in sincere and conciliatory terms. But the public might wonder why she admitted to being one in the first place — and how dividing people on the basis of class rather than race represents a significant moral evolution.
In terms of poll ratings, Obama is in poor shape, but not necessarily in poorer shape than various past presidents who eventually were reelected. His problem is not, as he alleges, that he inherited a worse mess from Bush than Reagan did from Carter or Bush did from Clinton. Nor is his problem that he slightly deviated from his left-wing hope-and-change rhetoric and disappointed his base. His problem is more fundamental: It is one of self-knowledge.
Obama and his supporters have somehow convinced themselves that 2008 was the result either of (1) a left-wing American majority that finally came out of the shadows, or (2) a mesmerizing personality that by sheer force of rhetoric and charisma could take America where it otherwise did not wish to go. Neither is true. America remains a center-right country, and Obama, the teleprompted messiah, has grown tiresome. If the president wishes to recovery politically, he must embrace a responsible, workmanlike centrist agenda, just as Bill Clinton did between 1994 and 1996.
Obama can choose to be a successful triangulating Clinton, or he can insist on being a failed ideological Carter. As the November election draws closer, those bad and worse choices will become even clearer to the president and his liberal supporters.
— NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, the editor of Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome, and the author of The Father of Us All: War and History, Ancient and Modern.
I like Hanson’s columns in general, but I don’t buy Obama’s poll losses are because he isn’t liberal enough. Most of his recent losses are from independents who tend to be more moderate than lib. Yes he is losing some dems as well but probably more of the moderate dems who are among the working class who are getting nailed by the recession, not the limo libs.
I have no doubt that O will be re-elected.
The average American doesn’t realize the damage he is doing to the country.
I just lectured to people at the CIA about the state of the economy (but was told not to mention politics). Instead, I said the bank industry is dead and on life support and the banking bill only made matters worse.
I have no doubt that O will be re-elected.
The average American doesn’t realize the damage he is doing to the country.
I just lectured to people at the CIA about the state of the economy (but was told not to mention politics). Instead, I said the bank industry is dead and on life support and the banking bill only made matters worse.
A good analysis!
no ... zero will NOT be re-elected ... instead his own democratic party (secret leadership) has ALREADY decided that zero is finished ... zero will be DENIED even the opportunity to campaign in the democratic primaries ...
His point is the ‘Obama’s policies aren’t liberal enough’ line is a myth.
Bookmark
Did you read the column? The whole point is that Hanson doesn’t buy that O’s poll losses are because he isn’t “liberal” enough, but that his deluded supporters, whether among his “czars”, in the media or among the nutroots think that.
Hansen said just the opposite, i.e. that attributing his poll decline to not being liberal enough “is lunatic in political terms.”
Well...
There is NO cocktail so unwholesome and ruinous as anything the MSM and its political ally are capable of producing when so motivated. And they WERE motivated. McCain was beatable and THAT was all the MSM needed to know. The “O” administration is the perfect political storm for the US.
Unfortunately for “O”, storms expose as much as they destroy.
“O” is flagging with Americans now, because much of his character which was whitewashed during the campaign, is now obvious. Some people REALLY need a house to fall on them.
I believe you are correct about the average American, but I BELIEVE THEY ARE WAKING-UP. OBOZO IS dead meat but like a corpse the smell will continue for a while.
“I have no doubt that O will be re-elected.”
My money’s with you. If the gop had someone who could attract independents and keep the conservative base fired up, the slug presently in the WH likely wouldn’t win reelection, but no doubt the msm will make sure the gop chooses another Bob Dole to run in 2012. We’ll just have to wait and see how this plays out.
“some sort of golden child no rational person could reject.”
What? Are you implying I’m not rational? :-)
LLS
The only way Obama can get reelected is if the economy somehow miraculously recovers by 2012. IMHO we will be in a full blown depression by then, with official unemployment in the high teens, and true unemployment double that. People simply won’t put up with it.
If media were doing it's job the Obama team would already be neutralized
Where did he say that?
There, fixed the only thing wrong with the article.
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