Barack Obama, Diversity, Change, and Washington Experience
The Obama pre-presidency is three days and two appointments old. This seems like a pretty good time to start making judgments about it, right? (At least that's what the television bloviators seem to think.)
Can we please retire the following questions until, oh, I don't know, the inauguration? Is this the third Clinton term? Is the administration diverse enough?
These notions derive from the fact that Rahm Emanuel has been named the incoming White House chief of staff (Great choice.) and that Larry Summers is on the short list for Treasury.
One great advantage Barack Obama has that Bill Clinton lacked is a recent, successful Democratic administration from which to draw experience. The last Democrat preceding Clinton was Jimmy Carter, and arguably the last successful Democrat was John F. Kennedy (you can make a case for LBJ, but either way, staffers of that generation were past their prime in 1993).
The commentariat would presumably have Obama automatically disqualify anyone with Washington experience in the name of "change"?
Ask Presidents Clinton and Carter how Washington-inexperienced chiefs and staffs turned out. Clinton put together a young, inexperienced White House staff and it showed. His chief of staff, Mack McLarty, was amiable and hard working but didn't understand Washington. Remember the first two years of the Clinton administration?
You can bloody well bet that Rahm Emanuel does—and that he has a good sense of how to avoid the dumb mistakes that marred the early Clinton years.
This is the bottom line: Barack Obama will set the tone and decide the policy direction of the Obama administration. Rahm Emanuel and any other former Clintonites will be working for Obama, not he for them, and not secretly for Bill Clinton. And to the extent that Obama's policies are like Clinton's (imagine that, Democratic presidents with similar policies!), well, I have rather fond memories of the shape in which Clinton left the country.
Even more preposterous is the question of whether the incipient Obama administration is sufficiently diverse (MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell seems particularly taken with this question).
Seriously? Two appointments in (one of the appointees, by the way, being Jewish), people are questioning whether the first black president's administration is going to be sufficiently diverse? The mind reels.
(While we're on the subject, imagine the commentariat's reaction had Obama's initial appointees been all minorities without a whit of Washington experience.)
Take a deep breath, everyone, and wait for the Obama administration to take a bit more shape before dusting off these hoary queries again.
Tags: politics | Barack Obama | Bill Clinton | Obama administration | Obama transition
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Reader Comments
No experience.
The left-wing illuminati put these claims of change in schools and with the middle class in people's heads, and they bought it.
We may never see America like it has been ever again.
Americans wanted a change but the change is not going to be the best for the average American we had freedom. It is time Americans stop taking money and work for their money. If you want something bad enough it is possible. It is all how you manage your money I have been at the bottom and I am now rather comforable. So the average American has not given thanks for nothing happening like 9/11 in the past years but where has been the thnaks for President Bush he did not make all the decisions remember we had Democrates under him as well as Replicans. We also had alot of storms more than usual the President had to help with. Everyone has to take the responsiblity of spending money wrong. When we spend money on drugs, alcohol and other not necessary items yes you are responsible for spending money wrong. America wanted change I pray it is the change they want. I now fear for our lives. Opening up free borders, all the plans he has sounds not like a freedom country or one God will bless.
Wages & Industry in the future
Tkevan,
Clinton didn't benefit from the Dot.com boom until after he took office. He came in with different challenges than Obama, but challenges none-the-less. Does Obama have a bigger hole to fill? No doubt yes. But don't forget, the green revolution is just now and finally starting to get some traction and Obama promises to give it more traction. The story is similar with Clinton: the Dot.com revolution was just getting traction when he took office. Obviously, there are some major issues Obama has to deal with but I think within 2-3 years we'll see grown green industry that Obama will be able to take partial credit for.
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