Debt Crisis Shows Obama Lacks Presidential Skills

July 29, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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As the negotiations and the vote-getting on raising the debt ceiling have dragged on these last two weeks, it's became clear that President Obama really is not a good negotiator. Several times, just as a deal seemed imminent, the discussions have collapsed—and very publicly. There were leaks from the administration, he-said-she-said accounts from both sides, angry White House press conferences—just a "parade of horribles," as lawyers would call it. The result is a rising tide of public disgust and frustration. Not only has he lost bipartisan support in both the House or the Senate, his lack of ability to persuade people to join his cause has cost President Obama the vital center of the electorate.

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According to yesterday's Pew Research national survey, with results collected just this week, only 31 percent of independent voters want to see Obama re-elected, down from 42 percent in May. Two months ago, Obama held a 7 point lead among independent registered voters two months ago, but independent support has swung 15 points the other way, giving an 8 point advantage to a generic Republican. "This is consistent with a drop in Obama's approval among all independents. Currently, a majority (54 percent) disapprove of Obama's performance for the first time in his presidency," according to Pew. [Check out our editorial cartoons on President Obama.]

Maybe it's because Hillary Clinton's "three in the morning" ad was right—maybe he just doesn't have the experience to be president. Of the top 100 jobs that would qualify one to be president, being a law professor isn't one of them. A plumber would be better qualified than a law professor. Seriously—a plumber is a problem solver who has to keep customers happy. A used car salesman knows how to close a deal. A UPS deliveryman knows how to meet a deadline. A diplomat knows how to be, well, diplomatic. Meaning he doesn't lecture people about "eating their peas" when he needs them to jump on board. [See photos of the Obamas behind the scenes.]

Think about some of our former presidents and their qualifications for the job. Bill Clinton had been a governor, a job that involves being an executive decision-maker. Ronald Reagan had headed the Screen Actors Guild and worked for General Electric, in addition to being governor. President Bush 41 had served as ambassador to the U.N., liaison to Communist China, head of the RNC during Watergate, director of the CIA during its most difficult years, and had even served as a freshman Republican in a Democratic Congress. Harry Truman had run a men's clothing store that failed in a recession and narrowly escaped bankruptcy—certainly something that would have prepared him for the job today. Surely some of them got elected for reasons other than their qualifications—after all, the desire for economic or political change can be a powerful force among voters, no matter who is running— but certainly some presidents' past experiences helped them once they got in office. [See a photo gallery of Ronald Reagan.]

Peggy Noonan writes today that "the secret of Mr. Obama is that he isn't really very good at politics, and he isn't good at politics because he doesn't really get people."  I think that's right. Being a plumber or a used car salesman—or a union organizer or a men's clothing store owner or the liaison to Communist China—requires you to know how to deal with people and how to negotiate in good faith. Being a law professor doesn't.

Tags:
debt,
Obama administration,
Barack Obama

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Running a country is serious business and I'm glad we hired as smart as we could get. Still its not Obama's fault that some of his opponents hat this country so much they are willing to blow up its economy for their political showboating.

Revenue is the problem obviously. Obama is right to ask the rich to pay something. Our tax collections are the lowest rates worldwide.

All the anti-growth teabaggers are idiotic flimflammers. Patrick T of NY is happy to kill our economy so teafascists can take over and loot the nation.

The teabaggers are liars. they are just lobbying for billionaires tax cuts and the corrupt tax loopholes. Its clear our biggest problem is all the tax loopholes that let billionaires and corps get along without paying any taxes at all.

All the lies about spending point to problems are paying for two trillions dollar wars and tax cuts for the rich and corporations that were never budgeted for.

Kent of IN 6:22PM August 06, 2011

I just paid $22,87 for an iPad2-64GB and my girlfriend loves her Panasonic Lumix GF 1 Camera that we got for $38,76 there arriving tomorrow by UPS. I will never pay such expensive retail prices in stores again. Especially when I also sold a 40 inch LED TV to my boss for $675 which only cost me $71,32 to buy. Here is the website we use to get it all from, MetaCent. com

clementsCharlie of AL 5:16PM August 02, 2011

In every decade since the 1950s, income and/or capital gains tax rates have, on the whole, been cut.

And in every decade since the 1950s, federal revenue growth has outpaced the combined rate of inflation and population growth.

And in every decade since the 1950s, federal SPENDING growth has outpaced federal revenue growth.

The problem is spending, not revenue. This is the obvious. All the Tea Party did was state the obvious. Obama had no choice but to accept it.

This was not an ideological debate. An ideological debate would have been "the money is there, and the question is whether, and if so how much, we should spend it on bigger government and redistribution."

We had that debate many times over the last several years, and although the "right" side appeared to win on logic, economics and - most of the time - in popular opinion, the "left" side got what it wanted - - revenue went up, and spending went up faster.

We didn't have that debate this time.

We didn't debate how much of the money should go to government.

We just ran out of money.

Patrick T of NY 4:19PM August 02, 2011

Mary Kate Cary

Mary Kate Cary

Mary Kate Cary is a former White House speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush. She currently writes speeches for political and business leaders.

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