The Ghosts of 1994 Loom for Obama and the Democrats

Haven't we seen this movie before?

June 24, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Everywhere I look, I see the ghosts of 1994.

There's the young Democratic president with an ambitious (overly so, some argue) agenda, seemingly intent on doing it all at once. Bill Clinton's initially charming peripatetic policy appetite quickly became a hallmark of his lack of focus. Obama and his supporters have thus far managed to frame comparisons with ambitious predecessors using Franklin Roosevelt rather than Clinton, but that could yet change. As with Clinton, Obama's agenda is topped by a major healthcare overhaul, the likes of which predecessors have attempted unsuccessfully.

The Democratic president faces a Republican Party thirsting for a return to power. Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh is rallying the faithful while Newt Gingrich is an omnipresent face of the opposition, throwing bombs and new ideas in equal measure.

Gay issues are forcing themselves onto the agenda. Then it was gays in the military; now it's same-sex marriage and. . .gays in the military.

The president's wife is even getting drawn into a scandal involving cronyism and improper political largess. Then first lady Hillary Clinton weathered questions about what role she played in the White House Travel Office staff getting sacked in favor of political allies. "Travelgate," as it came to be known, was the first notable scandal for an administration that pledged new openness in government. Now, Republicans want to know whether Mrs. Obama's office had any role in the decision to fire Gerald Walpin, the inspector general at the Corporation for National and Community Service. Walpin was canned in part, according to reports, because of his investigation of Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, an Obama supporter and former NBA-er, over allegations of misused federal funds. (A White House official told the Associated Press that Mrs. Obama had no hand in the firing.)

One could go on with more mundane comparisons: Rahm Emanuel is a key figure on the White House staff. Both Bill Clinton and Barack Obama have been called the nation's first black president. We know how this mix of characters and aspirations played out: the young Democrat laid low, Republicans ascendant. Haven't we seen this movie already? Is politics mimicking Hollywood: restarting the franchise with fresh faces but hitting on familiar themes?

Democrats can derive comfort from critical differences—and key similarities to 1994. Take, for example, Gingrich and Limbaugh. In 1994, Gingrich represented a new generation of Republican leadership that was not simply storming to power on a national stage but seizing it within the party. Newt, recall, shoved aside the genial (overly so in regard to Democrats, the young Turks thought) Bob Michel as leader of the House Republicans. Newt brought not only new Republicanism but also new ideas. And with the House class of 1994, he led the last (though it didn't seem so at the time) surge of the conservative wave that had first crested in 1980 with Ronald Reagan's presidential victory. In the intervening years, that conservatism has ebbed.

Now Gingrich and Limbaugh are familiar quantities. Limbaugh speaks for and to a minority out of step with most Americans. That Gingrich remains the most intellectually interesting Republican says as much about the leaders the GOP has produced in the past 15 years as it does about Newt himself. There seems no Gingrichian equivalent on the Republican leadership horizon now. Can you imagine John Boehner (another familiar face from those days) or Eric Cantor playing a Gingrich-like role as a political counterweight to a president? No.

And Obama has gone to school on Clinton's mistakes. He seems intent on not letting "gays in the military"-type issues derail and devour his agenda. He promised to repeal the "don't ask, don't tell" policy but has made little visible effort to do so. And while he also promised, as a candidate, to work to repeal the odious Defense of Marriage Act, which prevents states from being forced to recognize one another's gay marriages, his Justice Department defended it in court last week. The simmering outrage among gay groups apparently prompted Obama last week to extend spousal benefits to same-sex partners of federal employees. Whether that assuages his party's base without irritating mainstream voters remains to be seen.

Michelle Obama, too, seems to have learned from Hillary Clinton. Like Mrs. Clinton, Mrs. Obama is an accomplished professional, but she has managed to avoid the appearance of taking on a greater policy role than is traditional for a first lady.

Tags:
Bill Clinton,
Obama administration,
Barack Obama,
Michelle Obama,
democratic party,
Hillary Clinton

Reader Comments Read all comments (5)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Bet your eating your words now Duncan!

Ian of SC 12:50PM January 22, 2010

The Obama/Pelosi/Reid Trilogy are doing a GRAND job of placing the Republicans back in power and I can only hope they remember what REAL Republicans are when they get back.

Carter's "can't we all be friends" Foriegn Policy and DISASTEROUS economic policies set the stage just as Obamanomics has made a bad situation that would have corrected itself MUCH WORSE. No surprise Obama tried to ignore Iran's protestors when he clearly ignored the TeaParties in America as well.

Most Americans now know their MISTAKE.

We can't afford Washington as it is...

Throw ALL the career Politicians out the door and get some fresh blood.

Someone who has REAL WORLD experience and not Socialism 101 like "our" Favorite JR Senator.

Chris Petty of GA 11:12PM July 03, 2009

Your article highlights the problem with the mentality of the Republican party. They want to go backwards and not forwards.Fortunately the Republican party has become a regional party of midwestern farmers and southerners. If you think the constant back biting, xenophobia, and attacks on gays and working class policies is going to sway people to the Republicans. You could not be more wrong.

The numbers in fact prove you wrong. The things Republicans made hay off of in 1994 are not working. The veins of hate have all been mined, the dark hole of fear has been explored and the old tricks do not work.

The Republican party is going deeper into the hole of their own digging. If you think they're going to magic back to power using the tactics of 1994 you are delusional. The country has changed, we prised the Republican hands that were dragging down the country off. And speaking for myself the youth, vitality, and power of this country is motivated to see those same hands dont get a grip on us again.

Duncan White of TX 10:03PM June 28, 2009

advertisement

Debate Club

Was 2011 One of the Worst Years for the U.S. Government in American History?

Experts debate where 2011 ranks among Washington's worst years.

Latest Video

Thomas Jefferson Street Blog

It’s Washington’s Birthday—Not Presidents' Day

It's time for Obama and Congress to give Presidents’ Day back to George Washington.

Cuba Is Reforming, But Not Nearly Enough

Cuban officials exaggerate the extent of reforms being enacted in the Castro brothers' Cuba.

Rick Santorum Will Spell Doom for Republicans in November

If it nominates Rick Santorum over MItt Romney, the GOP will lose the White House and elections at all other levels.

Obama's Energy Policy Isn't 'Crony Capitalism'

A majority of the energy companies who have received funds under Obama are thriving

Michigan Is a Must-Win ... For Rick Santorum

Winning in Michigan is at least as important to Santorum's campaign as it is to Romney's.

Why the Catholic Contraception Controversy Is So American

Politically speaking, the contraception controversy is a quirk of the way we pay for healthcare.

The Upside of the Racist Hoekstra Ad

In this era of nasty political rhetoric and advertising, the public will draw the line at something brazenly racist.

Barack Obama's Budget Is Even Worse Than It Looks

If Obama's budget for FY 2013 is adopted as written, the federal budget would never balance again.

advertisement