Obama Ignores Republican Wave, Left Eggs Him on this Dangerous Path
By Ron Radosh
PJMedia.com
At Wednesday’s press conference, President Obama
made his position very clear: despite the electoral
whacking his party took in the midterm elections, he
will do all he can to continue with his agenda,
using executive action where he can to advance it.
Two
Washington Post reporters explain Obama’s
position:
Despite his nod to shared responsibility, however,
Obama sounded less introspective and remorseful in
the wake of the Democrats’ resounding midterm
election defeat this year than he did four years
ago, when he described the outcome as a
“shellacking” for Democrats. The president noted
that two-thirds of those eligible did not vote
Tuesday, suggesting the lack of a broad GOP mandate,
and he reminded reporters that the policies he has
championed, including an increase in the minimum
wage, were endorsed by voters in a number of states.
Liberal columnist and Obama supporter
Dana Milbank wrote:
A dismissive shrug is inappropriate. … [The
election] went in one presidential ear and out the
other. … [W]hen Obama fielded
questions for an hour Wednesday afternoon, he
spoke as if Tuesday had been but a minor irritation.
He announced no changes in staff or policy,
acknowledged no fault or error and expressed no
contrition or regret.
Consider the contrast with Bill Clinton. After
Democrats received a similar beating in 1994, which
Newt Gingrich and others referred to as a
“Republican revolution,” President Clinton took
responsibility himself and quickly moved to the
center. He hired Dick Morris as his political
advisor, and worked with Republicans for trade
agreements and — most importantly — welfare reform.
Without Republican votes, neither of these would
have been able to pass Congress.
And as Milbank notes, when President George W. Bush
found his party skewered in the midterms, he fired
Donald Rumsfeld and changed his Iraq policy.
Clearly, the vote reflects the unhappiness Americans
have with the Democrats’ handling of the economy.
Some on the left, like columnist Harold Meyerson,
admit that the Democrats “did not deliver broadly
shared prosperity as they used to.” He continues:
Even in the people’s republic of Vermont, the
incumbent Democratic governor won so narrowly that
the race will be tossed to the legislature (as
Vermont law requires when no gubernatorial candidate
breaks 50 percent).
Others on the Left are not so willing to take any
part of the blame. Rather, they call for Obama to
double down. In The Nation, editor-in-chief
Katrina vanden Heuvel provides a guide for the
president:
The Obama administration should act right away to
use its executive powers to take steps to deal with
long-ignored issues that need to be dealt with for
the good of the nation.
This cannot be done quietly. To change the media
narrative, issues acted upon will have to be
controversial enough to dominate the news. President
Obama should embrace good progressive public policy
while expecting — indeed, hoping for — a massive
outcry from the wing-nut section of the GOP.
Note her juxtaposition: what she favors is “good
progressive policy,” and what Republicans present as
an alternative are simply “wing-nut” ideas. Keep in
mind vanden Heuvel’s concrete suggestions as we see
what Obama moves to implement next. We know what he
is pledged to do about immigration. Will he support
her proposal to “cancel the Keystone XL pipeline,”
giving the leftist environmentalists what they want
while standing against the very AFL-CIO unions that
support the pipeline and worked hard for his
re-election?
In The Daily Beast, left-wing columnist Michael
Tomasky acknowledged that his side can no longer use
the argument that the people are voting against
their own interests, as expressed by Thomas Frank in
his best-selling book What’s
the Matter with Kansas?. Tomasky shrewdly notes:
People don’t vote against their interests. They vote
for their interests as they see them. And right now,
working-class and blue-collar whites think the
Democratic Party is just implacably against them.
What he does not accept, however, is that those
voters’ understanding of the situation is correct.