Obama's 2016 Olympics Bid Was Inept Politics

October 2, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Robert Schlesinger, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

What exactly were the folks in the White House thinking? Granted that President Obama's Olympic tumble will quickly fade into the realm of "remember that?" trivia, but it's a fundamental rule of politics that you don't make high stakes long-shot bets without a requisite payoff.

In the case of the 2016 Olympics, the payoff—the president's home town hosting the Olympics—was not big enough to justify the prestige of a full court presidential press. The only way his trip to Copenhagen would have made sense was if the fix was in. Why, with literally the world watching, send the president vaulting over a bar if you aren't absolutely sure he can clear it?

Or to put it in terms that former members of Congress like Obama and White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel might understand, congressional leaders don't send a bill to the floor without whipping it and knowing that either they have the votes or can get within a few arm-wrangles of them. This was the Olympic equivalent of a high profile but symbolic resolution going down on a procedural vote: big embarrassment over something that would have had little payoff anyway.

Or as Tucker Carlson put it on washingtonpost.com:

Why didn't Obama see this coming? He spends all this time, gets all this press, uses all this political capital to promote Chicago, and then loses? What an amateur. Prosecutors don't ask witnesses questions in court unless they're sure of the answers. Presidents don't stake their personal reputations on contests whose outcomes are uncertain. Very foolish move. No wonder he can't get health care passed.

That's what's so confounding about this. It was an unforced error. There was no compelling reason to make the bid and the decision to go for it was made at the last minute. (In fairness to the president: At least his unforced errors didn't get us into any unnecessary, preventive wars.)

It also underscores a point I've made a number of times, most recently in my column last month: Presidential speeches can be a powerful tool, but they have their limitations. They can make a difference when the surrounding circumstances are lined up correctly. They can catalyze a trend and focus national attention on an issue. But they rarely in and of themselves redirect events.

That is a lesson the president and his aides still apparently have to learn.

Tags:
Olympics,
Barack Obama

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davonnasha of DE 5:09AM October 13, 2009

We real and may I state real Americans are on to you. You will never serve another day in office past your first and only term as you have already failed so miserably and let down our veterans and troops with your ENDLESS NONSENSE FILLED speeches to inferior leaders of other nations. Shame to you!

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I.P.Daily 12:10AM October 04, 2009

but i know for sure they will fail miserablely even on the first round pick because u got bunch o idiot young black kid go around beat and shot people but get away with that sort of stuff, now u all also hear that on the news the citizen and state of Detroi and Michigan have 60-80 dead body at the corner unclaim be cause their love couldn't afford to take them back and those corpse is still there without state or chairity fund from church which out noway they are be able to solve it. Samething in LA before they spoke i think they should used their head b4 they make laughing stock for the world. If we try to look good but inside we over spend our budget just to look good on the outside but in the inside we are really poor and not make the people of our country feel happy first than i think that we really try too hard on something else but inside we are really ain't doing anything good for ourself and our people beisde just making us looking good on the news. Don't try to show off that ya rich but inside ya not ya just in a poor deep $hit broke @$$ condition just be trueful to yaself

nice try but it ain't working with the comite conference of CA 10:22PM October 03, 2009

Robert Schlesinger

Robert Schlesinger

Robert Schlesinger is managing editor for opinion at U.S. News and World Report, overseeing all opinion editorial content. He is the author of White House Ghosts: Presidents and Their Speechwriters. E-mail him at rschlesinger@usnews.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rschles.

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