Wednesday, November 25, 2009

President Obama

Obama's Uphill Battle on Healthcare, Economy

The president hopes his speech to Congress will help get Americans to back his proposals

Posted September 8, 2009

It has not been a good summer for President Obama. He's losing momentum from earlier in the year, partly because many Americans are confused about what his healthcare plan is all about and how it would affect them. So for many Obama supporters, his prime-time speech to Congress this week comes none too soon. Aides say he will try to inject new life into his healthcare agenda by urging Americans to rally around his goals and will finally draw some "lines in the sand" to clarify what he will and won't accept in healthcare legislation.

The president's job-approval ratings have dipped 20 points to about 50 percent in some polls. More broadly, doubts are growing about his vast federal spending and policy choices, including overhauling healthcare and bailing out key industries such as banking and automaking. On a personal level, Obama's aides say he got only a partial break from the pressures of the White House during his weeklong vacation at Martha's Vineyard, Mass., in late August. The death of Ted Kennedy prompted him to interrupt his holiday to give the eulogy at the Massachusetts senator's funeral. Obama also took time out to announce that he will reappoint Ben Bernanke as head of the Federal Reserve Board. And his focus was suddenly diverted from the beach and his family to the decision by Attorney General Eric Holder to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the Central Intelligence Agency for possible abuse of suspected terrorists during George W. Bush's administration. This caused a firestorm of criticism by former Vice President Dick Cheney and others who say that Obama's administration is obsessed with the past and isn't tough enough to adequately protect national security.

As the furor over the harsh interrogations showed, Obama's problems aren't only domestic, even though healthcare has dominated the headlines. U.S. casualties are rising in Afghanistan, and the latest assessment from the military is gloomy. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, says a new strategy is needed to shield the population from the Taliban, and he is expected to request more troops soon. Meanwhile, 51 percent of Americans think that the war in Afghanistan is not worth fighting, up from 45 percent in July, according to a recent ABC News/Washington Post poll. Liberal Democrats are increasingly worried that Obama is blundering into a Vietnam-like morass, and even conservative commentator George Will called last week for the start of a U.S. withdrawal. "Obama shouldn't be sending in more troops," says a former foreign policy adviser to a Republican president. "It's like we're fighting ghosts over there."

One upbeat note came last week when the long-stalled Mideast peace process seemed to gain a bit of momentum. Cabinet-level discussions on economic cooperation resumed between Israel and the Palestinians as the United States pushed for full-scale peace talks.

But domestic issues are Americans' major concern right now, and the news hasn't been very encouraging on that front. Unemployment increased from 9.4 percent in July to 9.7 percent in August, a 26-year high. Consumer confidence remains shaky. And a new government projection says that federal deficits will grow to a total of $9 trillion over the next decade, up from an estimate of $7.1 trillion.

Congress seems as balky as ever. On energy, there is still strong resistance in the Senate to the cap-and-trade legislation favored by Obama and passed by the House. It would allow businesses to buy and sell pollution waivers in order to cap harmful emissions, but there are fears that, if the bill becomes law, consumers will pay much more for energy.

And then there is healthcare, Obama's signature initiative. The public is increasingly worried that his proposals would be too costly, would impose too much government interference, and would worsen coverage for millions, according to the polls. And the political battle is growing more ferocious by the day. The Democratic National Committee is organizing activists around the country in support of Obama's agenda, while the Republican National Committee continues to mobilize opposition. Each side complains of misinformation and outright lies from its adversaries.

In recent weeks, the advantage seems to have gone to the GOP. Angry anti-Obama protests at Democratic town hall meetings on healthcare have gained extensive media coverage, raising wider doubts among voters, especially independents, about the president's ideas. Those protests will continue, and in the next few weeks conservative activists hope to present Congress with petitions containing more than a million signatures of Americans opposed to Obama's healthcare plan.

Reader Comments

The Obama-Pelosi-Reid "Personal Agenda"

There is a HUGE failure in Washington to face reality.

Mr Obama has ignored the crisis that he partially inherited and has made WORSE. He has instead chosen to pursue HIS personal agenda in lieu of dealing with the needs of the American People.

The Democratic Congress is behaving like children in a candy store trying to grab all they can before 2010.

SAD state of American Government.

We are the only ones who can correct this mess and when the Republicans get back in office,

WE must keep their feet to the fire as well.

Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Health care

The comments of the people before me are all cuckoo. Ideology has been the problem why Congress is balking at healthcare, cries of "socialism" and "quid pro quo", and people buying into those lies about "birthers", "deathers" etc. If Congress will do nothing, a pox on both parties, and let's form a centrist, independent third party that pays no attention to being reelectd and does not honor quid pro quo.

A Financial Medical Standpoint

I have one comment, It does not matter if it's government ran or private sector. The more complex issues is do any of the plans give you choice well the answer is "NO" The "Take a Stand People" post I speak to people like that everyday..I can afford it I'l take care of my own, but unless you are in the field of medecine and now how much thngs really cost, your just blowing smoke. I quote and prices to people every day who claim to say I don't care how much it cost I can afford it and once I drop a number so does their attitude. Healthcare is expensive. Every hospital is not the best and neither is evry clinic office. So like I asked before nio matter the cost , n matter the plan and no matter who runs it, If the plan does not give you choice it worthless anyway.

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