David Brooks: How Obama Seduced Me

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04/24/09 06:26 PM

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David Brooks

I've heard it said that President Barack Obama's tactical game proves that he may be the best student of counter-insurgency strategy among the civilian class. His modus operandi is classic COIN: engage the opposition, peel off the persuadables, marginalize the dead enders, and make it look like the refuseniks missed out on the deal of the century. Then, sit back and watch the public sentiment shift in your direction.

From a political standpoint, it's paid dividends -- the GOP, in the public eye, is the party of "No," of Limbaugh, of Michael Steele's hip-hop jams, of incoherent Tea Parties. Naturally, outside the realm of the purely political, that will only get you so far. Putting the opposition in check doesn't mean that this will have any practical effect on the efficacy of policy.

And none of that means that it will have any alteration on the media terrain, either. Everyone's still playing their old roles. Critics of the President reflexively accuse the press of being "in the tank," as they will forever and ever. The press will fight off the criticism by wildly overcompensating and picking fights with the White House that are increasingly pointless and picayune. And the Obama White House will continue to treat the press as they always have, since the campaign began -- as a largely dispensable annoyance that's no longer the primary vector of "messaging."

Of course, there's at least one member of the press who has thus far refused to not be entirely seduced by the President -- besides Chris Matthews. I refer, of course, to the New York Times' David Brooks, who was on the Charlie Rose show last night, walking through the first 100 Days...and Nights, of romance...and at least one unfortunate Freudian slip, which you should be able to pick out of the transcript, below.

BROOKS: I think he sees himself...as a Burkeian, if I'm going to keep throwing that out there, as someone who sees change gradually coming from the ground up.


ROSE: Either that, or he knows exactly where your instincts are.

BROOKS: He is, like all supreme politicians, you come out of the guy thinking--you come away from the guy thinking, "Oooh, Mr. President, I love you."

ROSE: He knew exactly what would push your buttons.

[Crosstalk]

Story continues below
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BROOKS: I actually once went in to a - David Axelrod walks into a meeting with me, carrying The Reflections On The Revolution In France by Edmund Burke. They're not without manipulation.

Such naughty, naughty manipulation!

Along the way, evidence of a charmed Brooks abounds. Obama is the second coming of Marcus Welby, apparently! Or John Kennedy. Or Michael Jordan! But most importantly, while "he may agree with people on the left in the long term" the fact that Obama is slow to embrace them indicates that the President has Brooksian "cultural conservative" cred. "The guy is forty-seven. He's barely been in Washington," enthuses Brooks, the 48 years old self-styled Beltway outsider. And later, a lengthy discussion of Obama's "inner coolness." He's got "inner cool," now? Not long ago, Brooks didn't think Obama was showing enough panic about the economy.

But look, we get it. Brooks has been charmed. Is there anything Brooks doesn't like about Obama? The budget, apparently. "It's a trillion dollars a year, forever."

Of course, as much as Brooks may not care for that policy in principle, he's nevertheless gone out of his way to muster the support he could not provide for it. In a March 5 column -- bearing a snarky title, "When Obamatons Respond," that belies the piece's overall willingness to make Obama's case at length -- Brooks essentially parrots back the response to his criticism from the White House, at length. It begins thusly:

On Tuesday, I wrote that the Obama budget is a liberal, big government document that should make moderates nervous. The column generated a large positive response from moderate Obama supporters who are anxious about where the administration is headed. It was not so popular inside the White House. Within a day, I had conversations with four senior members of the administration and in the interest of fairness, I thought I'd share their arguments with you today.

First of all, on one level, I have to say: kudos. I applaud Brooks for using his own space to admit to a viewpoint other than his own. That's rare among columnists. People even. But what New York Times Public Editor Clark Hoyt discovered later about the column strikes me as deeply weird:

To see how pervasive the culture of anonymity is in Washington, consider that President Obama recently walked in on his way to dinner and joined senior members of his administration who were arguing with The Times's David Brooks about one of his columns. In Brooks's next column, about this meeting, the most senior of all officials simply became one of "four senior members of the administration." His cover was blown later.


I asked Brooks if he had asked the president to go on the record. He said he had not, because "I thought in those informal circumstances it would be wrong to quote him by name." Brooks said that, as a columnist, he looks for information to shape opinions for which he takes full responsibility. He sees that as different from the role of a reporter seeking facts from identifiable sources. I understand the difference, but I would have asked.

Wow. You write a column one week, and within days, you have the President of the United States taking the time to personally debate the matter with you? I'd definitely be noting the way my criticism had an impact. That's big news. But it never even occurs to Brooks to get Obama on the record? From the outset, Brooks subordinates the effect his own writing had on the President, for the sake of...what, exactly? The privilege of returning to similar "informal circumstances?"

That's not so much burying the lede as it is pressing the lede, like a rose, in the pages of Edmund Burke's The Reflections On The Revolution In France.

[Would you like to follow me on Twitter? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com -- learn more about our media monitoring project here.]

I've heard it said that President Barack Obama's tactical game proves that he may be the best student of counter-insurgency strategy among the civilian class. His modus operandi is classic COIN: enga...
I've heard it said that President Barack Obama's tactical game proves that he may be the best student of counter-insurgency strategy among the civilian class. His modus operandi is classic COIN: enga...
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Obama slipped Brooks a roofie. Seduction was sweet and simple after that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 PM on 04/25/2009

Hes upset because obama never calls.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:42 PM on 04/25/2009
- jemiltd I'm a Fan of jemiltd 92 fans permalink
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Strange but maybe true. He believes he has a relationship with the President that doesn't really exist. Kind of like a soft obsession,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 PM on 04/25/2009

I find it really hard to care what David Brooks thinks. I try and try, but he is bland...an­d wishy-wash­y...and erudite but wrong. Not morally wrong...he­'s like a well read mechanic who can talk for days about the need for a new radiator, and be convincing at times...ce­rtainly convincing that he knows a whole lot about cars and radiators.­..but somehow he never notices the water pump is leaking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 PM on 04/25/2009
- jemiltd I'm a Fan of jemiltd 92 fans permalink
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Perfect analogy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 04/25/2009
- Secularist I'm a Fan of Secularist 15 fans permalink

I disagree. I like David Brooks. He's one of the few Republican pundits who are actually not angry morons.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 04/25/2009
- larce1948 I'm a Fan of larce1948 14 fans permalink

Yep! Just what we need; the yammerings of another pansy pundit. Why are any of these clowns taken seriously?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 04/25/2009
- hamchunk I'm a Fan of hamchunk 20 fans permalink

"David Brooks - How Obama seduced me."

Yeah, that is a mental image that will take a bagful of dead puppies to erase from my mind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 04/25/2009
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jason linkins you are awesome!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 04/25/2009
- Grunty1 I'm a Fan of Grunty1 218 fans permalink

[His modus operandi is classic COIN: engage the opposition, peel off the persuadables, marginalize the dead enders, and make it look like the refuseniks missed out on the deal of the century]

Brooks describes the Rushpublican Party as "dead enders" and "refuseniks". Loving it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 04/25/2009
- Dustee I'm a Fan of Dustee 60 fans permalink
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I loved the statement that David Brook made about Obama, after Obama became US senator for the first time.

He said sometimes after he would write a column, Obama would call him and tell him why he had made some of his statements and why Brooks purposely left certain things out of his column. He said Obama could read him a book. ha!

I truly think Brooks has great respect for President Obama even if he doesn't always agree with him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 04/25/2009
- Dustee I'm a Fan of Dustee 60 fans permalink
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correction: Obama could read him 'like' a book.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 04/25/2009
- AFAN I'm a Fan of AFAN 33 fans permalink

I've alway been a huge critic of him because of his defense of President Bush's push to the war in Iraq but he started to see the light of both Bush and the Republicans. He and Michael Smercanich are the only two conservative that I like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 04/25/2009
- Yola I'm a Fan of Yola 11 fans permalink

I second that!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 04/25/2009
- TRichards I'm a Fan of TRichards 19 fans permalink
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Shepard Smith has his very good moments. And, though he will spin hard (and without his integrity at times) for the Republicans, one has to hand it to Pat Buchannan for identifying and coming out against the neocon hawks when Iraq was on the table. Early in the Iraq War, he was among the most vocal and most articulate of the dissenters.

If Andy Sullivan is a conservative, then he, too, is OK.

But, from this point on we're in agreement. The rest of them are a pretty mean-spirited and intellectually dishonest lot, starting with the Obama-hating Republican leadership including John Boehner.

The most annoying? The Great Hypocrite and Pontificating Orrin Hatch.

The most manipulative and consciously evil? Rush Limbaugh -- he who continues "debating" with the few callers who get past the screening long after he has silenced them not with the force of his arguments but with a press of the cut-off button. Rush not only doesn't exhibit a trace of integrity, he seems to regard it as a liability when he spots it in others.

The most inane? Impossible to decide. Too many are so close to the apotheosis of inanity that this category has to be retired.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 04/25/2009
- petzl I'm a Fan of petzl 3 fans permalink

Someone help me. Where is the "freudian slip"? (And it ain't "ooh, mr. president I love you",
thats not a slip thats just a statement.­)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 04/25/2009
- Paxhope I'm a Fan of Paxhope 9 fans permalink
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like any good Freudian slip
it has to do with a sex act
(unless I'm wrong)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 04/25/2009
- DebM I'm a Fan of DebM 3 fans permalink

BROOKS: He is, like all supreme politicians, you come out of the guy thinking--you come away from the guy thinking, "Oooh, Mr. President, I love you."

Come OUT of the guy? There's your slip.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 04/25/2009
- JoeSchmuk I'm a Fan of JoeSchmuk 14 fans permalink

"you come out of the guy." Nudge nudge wink wink say no more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 04/25/2009
- Sonni I'm a Fan of Sonni 9 fans permalink
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This is quite simple... I agree that Brooks has ratcheted down his commentary­... But I don't believe he or any others in opposition are seduced... It is simply that Obama has pretty much stayed consistent without to much slippage..­. He (Obama) is wearing them all out... Maybe Brooks is just exhausted and out of breathe... Just like Hannity... sometimes you just can no longer carry along the party line.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 04/25/2009
- ccairnes I'm a Fan of ccairnes 5 fans permalink

I disagree with you, Sonni. I remember noting that Brooks was smitten with Obama towards the end of the campaign. By the convention he was totally enamored. Every time I see him now on the News Hour Friday segment it appears to be an effort for him to remain objective in his opinion of the administration's performance. There is no doubt that Brooks is a huge admirer of Obama's in spite of himself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 04/25/2009
- FrankenPC I'm a Fan of FrankenPC 48 fans permalink

I like that phrasing: [mainstream media] is no longer the primary vector of "messaging".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 04/25/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 162 fans permalink
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Oh sure the more Obama abandons all promise of change, and denies the rights of the individual, the more Brooks and the rest of these insipid, insidious, pernicious, usurpers will love him..!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 04/25/2009
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TJ, even though I'm with you on some of this, you just have to keep remembering that politics is often the choice of the lessor of two evils.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:01 PM on 04/25/2009
- Pammy2 I'm a Fan of Pammy2 20 fans permalink

Obama is doing exactly he campaigned on. And won, by the way. By 9 million votes (in 2000 Bush only won by 1 vote - in the Supreme Court). To the victor go the spoils, as they say.

As bitter as the 22% of you remaining Bush supporters are, keep in mind that what you are feeling right now is what most of us have been feeling for the last 8 years. Repugnance, embarrassment, incredulity, but mostly embarrassment. Seriously, you may hate Obama, but you have to admit at least he's not an embarrassment. He's coherent, educated, involved, curious, intelligent - none of which can be said about George "Smirky" Bush. The rest of world thought we had lost our minds electing him a second time. He was a laughingstock. And rightly so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 04/25/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 162 fans permalink
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I voted for Obama and worked for Edwards and Kucinich..­.just for the record...

You see some of us have a little experience in government, ethics, economics, law and philosophy and were not raised to be lemmings..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 PM on 04/25/2009
- Grunty1 I'm a Fan of Grunty1 218 fans permalink

[Repugnance, embarrassment, incredulity, but mostly embarrassment. ]

The difference is that we had good reason to feel this way as "our" president t0rtured people, started wars because he really wanted to, and started deconstructing the Constitution and rule of law.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 04/25/2009
- Querent I'm a Fan of Querent 62 fans permalink
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Really? I don't remember President Obama campaigning on a promise to claim the absolute right to wiretap and eavesdrop on anyone the government chooses. I don't remember him promising to keep torturers who were "only following orders" from being prosecuted either. I'm pretty sure that on the day I stood in line for 3 1/2 hours to vote for Barack Obama in the primary, I hadn't heard him say anything like that, even though I was following the campaign compulsively. Hate President Obama? Far from it. I support most of what he has done, but I reserve the right to criticize him when I believe his decisions and policies are wrong, whether on not they are what he "promised".

By the way, your assertion that the President is "doing exactly what he promised" is looking a little threadbare these days. It's been a reliable weapon for you and others to deflect every and any criticism of the President. But the corners have been knocked off it the last few times you forced it into a round hole. You might want to stop reaching for a stock tool in these discussions and instead address the arguments of those you are opposing.

I'd also like to point out that TJ has been consistent in supporting the President until recently, when the President started tacking sharply to the right on civil rights. Calling him a 25%er is another indication that you think one set of arguments fits all situations. Really, it doesn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 PM on 04/25/2009
- MaryanneAZ I'm a Fan of MaryanneAZ 117 fans permalink
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I cannot speak for anyone else, but I always get my tr/ll guard up when statements are made in absolutes. It might be more credible and lead to better discourse to say "Obama abandons some of his promise of change. For example, he ..." "All" shuts down the discussion. I would find it helpful if someone who cares enough to blog would take the time to make a complete, well-supported statement. A blanket statement like "denies the rights of the individual" leaves me wondering what specifically you are referring to. Finally, name calling is pretty juvenile and is a real turn off. Just my observations, TJ.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 04/25/2009
- Balzac I'm a Fan of Balzac 126 fans permalink
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David Brooks is very, very annoying. It's hard to quantify exactly how annoying he is, because he has an under-stated style. One thing is obvious - he's fully committed to being a nuisance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 04/25/2009
- Oonagh I'm a Fan of Oonagh 30 fans permalink

That should be his job... he just did not do it when bush was in office.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 04/25/2009
- larry278 I'm a Fan of larry278 48 fans permalink

That evil Obama. He made a proposition. David bit. Brooks thought that Obama gave him a promise & a pledge. Wise up, David. It happens in parking lots all the time, at closing time. That's the reason the parking lot paving contains latex.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 04/25/2009
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