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

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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While we're on this subject...why does the mainstream press let itself be manipulated by critics? If they see something being done right, they should feel free to say so and the opposite is also true. The majority of Americans support our president and what he's trying to do. I really doubt that these "critics" have that much power. I challenge the press to be fair, at the least. Who knows? You may pick up more subscribers than you lose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 AM on 04/25/2009
- rf-hawaii I'm a Fan of rf-hawaii 27 fans permalink

Republicans learned long ago how to manipulate the press. And the press seems to like it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 AM on 04/25/2009
- Ginger5 I'm a Fan of Ginger5 3 fans permalink

obama is Tiger on steroids

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 AM on 04/25/2009
- fuelrod I'm a Fan of fuelrod 3 fans permalink

I think Brooks is Gay, There is nothing wrong with that, just admit it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 AM on 04/25/2009
- jdw1981 I'm a Fan of jdw1981 44 fans permalink
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He's right about one thing: Obama is not a "centrist". He's a conservative. Not in the "NeoCon" sense of the word, because he's not out to start wars in the name of "democracy". But in the Reagan sense of the word, with trickle-down economics being the core of his economic plan. So if you voted for Obama, you didn't vote for JFK, or FDR, or Clinton. You voted for Ronald Reagan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 AM on 04/25/2009

No, we voted for Barack Obama!!! He's a little bit of everything (liberal, centrists, conservative). He governs based on what makes sense, what's best for the Country. He doesn't appear to govern based on labels. That's what I love about him. He tries not to politicize his actions. A lot of Politicians can learn a lot from him!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 AM on 04/25/2009
- vonPinto I'm a Fan of vonPinto 44 fans permalink
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Very good point. In summary, Pres. Obama is a PRAGMATIST. He sees the world as it is and tries to work with it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 AM on 04/25/2009
- fuelrod I'm a Fan of fuelrod 3 fans permalink

No reagan could govern with a dem congress, Obama could never govern with a GOP congress.

Reagan got everybody on board. Obama can only convince the dems..

Obama is a divider, remember the Reagan democrats, they loved him,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 AM on 04/25/2009

The Republican's non-support of Obama is not at all based in rationality. It's strictly political. It's the Republican's lame strategy for trying to regain power.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 AM on 04/25/2009
- cered I'm a Fan of cered 6 fans permalink

Oh, we all remember teh Reagan democrats. :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 AM on 04/25/2009
- damebee I'm a Fan of damebee 14 fans permalink

Reagan was a Kitchen Table pick to give the republicans what they wanted free wheel, on the economy, we all knew why he was chosen, he spoke well and lulled the country into beliveing all was well while he decimated Unions, free choice and by the way what the Rebublicans could not foresee but what they covered up was he was at the begining of Alzeimers, worked for them

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 AM on 04/25/2009
- Mij13 I'm a Fan of Mij13 76 fans permalink
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The Repubs just can't get over the fact that they lost, not just the election, but a lot of ground. They will never be as strong again, and it is because they supported Bush/Cheney. But they need to grow up and face facts, and start doing their jobs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 AM on 04/25/2009
- rf-hawaii I'm a Fan of rf-hawaii 27 fans permalink

The Republican of today is a new creature entirely. A thorough extremist.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 AM on 04/25/2009
- KillBillV2 I'm a Fan of KillBillV2 91 fans permalink
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Uh...no. What are you talking about? Are you talking about the republicans who voted for Obama or are you talking about most of the people who voted for Obama? Because most of the people who voted for Obama would have voted for JFK, FDR, and Clinton.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 AM on 04/25/2009
- cbeenthere I'm a Fan of cbeenthere 4 fans permalink

The poster wants us to believe Reagan was JFK and Clinton and FDR. Silly notion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:40 AM on 04/25/2009
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Ridiculous!
Reagan was the anti-government (as silly and hypocritical as that IS - remember he actually grew Government under his rule), anti-Unions, trickle down guy.

Obama is for main street, government that works efficiently and effectively (size does not matter), and pro Unions.

Your analysis (if one can call it that) is extremely poor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 AM on 04/25/2009
- StephenJK I'm a Fan of StephenJK 25 fans permalink
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"Obama is for WALL street."

There ya go. Fix't it for ya. We all make mistakes.

And this...

"and pro Unions"

Really? Is that why he is willing to let one of the largest Unions in the United States become so small as to be nearly non-existent? All the while the white collars on Wall Street get a good coddling?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 AM on 04/25/2009
- Ghost803 I'm a Fan of Ghost803 8 fans permalink

In his autobiography, he seemed to endorse the Keynesian view. With focus on government spending in infrastructure, and R&D.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 AM on 04/25/2009

ooooh, mr. president, I love you

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 AM on 04/25/2009

Imagine Brooks cooing 'Happy Birthday, Mister President...'!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 AM on 04/25/2009
- Jakealoper I'm a Fan of Jakealoper 9 fans permalink

Wasn't he the one who was mocking Palin, then when the common base started squealing about elitist, he attacked her critics as if somehow that made it easier to swallow her base stupidity? Brooks wants to have it both ways: He's the token con, someone with a brain and some suave but still manly enough to have creds with all the rednex on the base

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 AM on 04/25/2009
- Tommygun264 I'm a Fan of Tommygun264 231 fans permalink
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I never thought I would read an article involving "seduction" and "David Brooks" that did not also include "a van parked next to a playground", "candy" and "keeping a special secret". The man gives me the creeps.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 AM on 04/25/2009
- KillBillV2 I'm a Fan of KillBillV2 91 fans permalink
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Why? Is he a pedo or something?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 AM on 04/25/2009
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David is who he is...................... the last 95 days have been wery hard on him.
It's ok David................ you can breath now

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 AM on 04/25/2009
- S1m0n I'm a Fan of S1m0n 103 fans permalink
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Sycophants are all alike: Obama 'seduced' you by having power.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 04/25/2009
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power...

...over the subconscious mind...

yes we can... yes we can... yes we can...

blah

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 AM on 04/25/2009
- cered I'm a Fan of cered 6 fans permalink

Those that wish for power, destroy all.
Those that accept power, create all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 AM on 04/25/2009
- adamsmith3 I'm a Fan of adamsmith3 17 fans permalink

Brooks likes the Obama White House in a very superficial way. He likes the intellectual atmosphere of the debates to produce policy, the professorial tone, and just the idea that Obama seems like a thinking man, and certainly a well-read one. But, in terms of substance, of public policy, and the overall philosophy of the state's relation to the individual, there's no rational reason for him to be labeled an Obama supporter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 04/25/2009
- Freesia2 I'm a Fan of Freesia2 340 fans permalink

Funny.

I was able to pick David's Freudian slip "out of " the interview. His slip was definitely showing. I blushed. ;-)

Well, he definitely has a man crush on Obama. That's not unusual though. Obama has that effect on people, male or female. He's got an empathic quality and while he's a politician so it can't be altogether uncalculated, I do think it's often unconscious. I think he genuinely likes people and finds them interesting. He likes putting them at ease and studying them - unless they're boring. (I don't think he takes boredom very well. I always thought campaigning bored him stiff. He didn't want to bowl. And he just wanted to eat his waffle which made me laugh. I didn't blame him.) Anyway, Brooks is a smart guy in that he's a man who thinks about things - like Obama himself. He's probably not go too many people to talk to in the GOP these days - they're not exactly known for their smarts, the current infestation.

Oh and he should have said it was Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 AM on 04/25/2009
- clsez I'm a Fan of clsez 20 fans permalink
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After the Bush years, even people in podunk conservative enclaves knew the gig was up. Obama being the right foil captured the need of many for the US to be seen as, at the very least, smarter. BHO's name and lineage was not enough to derail that. The David Brooks and other thinking people of this nation, liberal, independent and conservative, hoped enough were converted to put him in office, oh but what a relief. Now including, Energy, Healthcare and Education reform, lets hope this desire for enlightened political thought and action stays awhile. I cannot bear to live in my remaining lifetime, another stifling nonesensical political period from Republicans like I have for the last 16 plus years, the Gringrich, Limbaugh, Delay era.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 AM on 04/25/2009

David Brooks is a very fair-minded commentator. We always try to catch Newshour on Friday nights to watch Brooks and Mark Shields--excellent discussions with Jim Lehrer. Tonight in making a judgment on Obama's first 100 days, Brooks was quite complimentary--he thinks this is a "very very competent White House" run by "very smart people." He has his concerns with what he thinks of as over-reach but he has been consistently fair and thoughtful and often very pro in his appraisals of the administration. He's a gentleman "from the other side," can't think of many others.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 AM on 04/25/2009
- Madmac I'm a Fan of Madmac 17 fans permalink
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Cue The Barry White Music.

Dim The Lights...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 AM on 04/25/2009

that's funny.

I love our President too!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:04 AM on 04/25/2009
- toggan I'm a Fan of toggan 18 fans permalink

ROFL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 04/25/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 169 fans permalink

Nothing is as important to Brooks as is his own precious innocence. He fell in love with George W. Bush for his manliness and even made his inability to speak coherently a virtue. He fell in love with McCain for his battle-hardened quality. It was then not hard then to transfer his hero worship to a man with the intellectual dexterity, vision, and charisma of Obama. Of course, the most important thing to Brooks is that in the end he must be disappointed by all these politicians. They must fail Brooks or then Brooks would have to admit he is not ultimately the smartest and most virtuous one in the room. Brooks does not even admit that all politicans must compromise and therefore must sacrifice something of their vision to get it through both chambers of Congress. Compromise and hero worship do not go hand in hand. So Brooks says he walked into a gathering of top administration officials and the president himself who were all vigorously debating his recent column. Unfortunately, David Brooks does not realize that the country could survive without his weekly columns and his hero worship must look for a new sacrificial lamb.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 AM on 04/25/2009
- StevieRae I'm a Fan of StevieRae 17 fans permalink
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As a long-time reader of Brooks, often frustrated and angry of his writings, his recognition of what type of leader we have in Obama is striking.

See the entire 31 minutes and get a fuller appreciation of Brooks' turn around.

Part of it is due to the fact that for the last 8 years, he had nothing to admire or respect and his writings reflected it. I'm pleased he recognizes our highly talented President.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 04/25/2009
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I think he's just embarrassed to admire someone he's supposed to detest. Maybe he's not really this hard like repub, but actually has a brain, and is afraid to admit it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:12 AM on 04/25/2009
- adamsmith3 I'm a Fan of adamsmith3 17 fans permalink

I think he respects Obama's style and thoughtfulness, but ultimately, not his view of the government's role in society. Or maybe he's just easily swayed by an attractive personality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 04/25/2009
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