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Global Crises Overshadow Obama's Economic Message

Obama Economic Message

JULIE PACE   11/27/10 01:34 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Foreign policy challenges are intruding on President Barack Obama's promise to focus on the economy after the Democrats' election debacle and threatening to knock the White House off message altogether.

The escalation of tensions between North and South Korea this past week capped a postelection period that included two presidential trips abroad, discussions about America's future in Afghanistan and a debate in Washington over Senate ratification of a nuclear treaty with Russia.

The risk for Obama is that the capital and energy spent on a foreign crisis can undermine the perception that he's working on the public's top priority: finding jobs at home for Americans.

White House officials say the international focus hasn't diminished the amount of time Obama spends working on the economy. Aides acknowledge that events abroad can make it more difficult to spotlight Obama's economic message – one of an economy on a slow but steady march toward recovery, and a president aware that his political future rests on his ability to speed that recovery.

Take Obama's trip to Kokomo, Ind., last Tuesday, his first domestic trip since the Nov. 2 elections.

By the time Obama arrived at a Chrysler plant to promote the revival of the U.S. auto industry, attention had turned to how the White House would respond to North Korea's artillery attack against a South Korean island.

"You learn quickly as president that there are events that happen like North Korea that you have to address as they happen, not how you would plan for them to happen," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

Obama aides say they see opportunities for the president's economic message to break through, starting with a bipartisan meeting with lawmakers this Tuesday. The top issue will be what to do about the Bush-era tax cuts set to expire at year's end. Obama also plans to take a few more domestic trips through the end of the year to discuss the economy.

White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer said he doesn't believe the public is looking for the president to take an all-or-nothing approach to the economy.

"The American people understand that we have both domestic and international issues that have to be dealt with," Pfeiffer said. "The public expects that's what he's doing."

The recent burst of activity on the foreign policy front comes after an election that saw international issues seldom discussed, and a year that saw Obama spend just three days abroad, having traveled to the Czech Republic and Afghanistan in April.

Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary for President George W. Bush, said it's too soon to tell whether a November filled with foreign policy following an election focused on the economy will hurt the current administration. But he said the ease with which world events can trump an administration's agenda is "a vivid reminder of how much more complicated and multifaceted governing is than campaigning."

While incidents such as North Korea's attack on South Korea were out of the administration's control, some of the shift toward foreign policy has been of the White House's making, most notably Obama's 10-day, four-country trip to Asia. Officials hoped Obama could use his popularity abroad to improve his standing following his self-proclaimed "shellacking" in the vote this month.

Former presidents have used a similar playbook, in part because political opponents at home traditionally refrain from criticizing the commander in chief while he's representing the U.S. on foreign soil.

But Obama's trip to Asia produced mixed results at best. While he made progress toward the U.S. gaining a foothold in emerging economies such as India and Indonesia, he failed to secure a highly sought-after free trade agreement with South Korea and couldn't rally wide-ranging international support for action against China's currency manipulation.

Darrell West, vice president and director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution, said Obama could have better kept the focus on the U.S. economy when he was overseas if he had delivered on some of those objectives.

"It's OK to send the president abroad if he brings back agreements that are good for the U.S.," he said. "The president's problem was that he wasn't able to bring back the good news he had hoped."

The White House was more pleased with the results of the recent NATO summit in Portugal, where Obama was seen as playing a pivotal role in the alliance securing agreements on the Afghanistan war and missile defense. Obama also received overwhelming international support for Senate ratification of a new arms control treaty with Russia.

Yet that treaty has proved to be another example of foreign policy threatening to trump Obama's message on the economy. Despite the White House's insistence that the lame-duck session of Congress would focus on initiatives to help the recovery, much of the conversation in Washington now is about whether lawmakers will hand Obama a victory on an issue he says is vital to the future of the U.S. relationship with Russia.

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WASHINGTON — Foreign policy challenges are intruding on President Barack Obama's promise to focus on the economy after the Democrats' election debacle and threatening to knock the White House of...
WASHINGTON — Foreign policy challenges are intruding on President Barack Obama's promise to focus on the economy after the Democrats' election debacle and threatening to knock the White House of...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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DRaymond 07:14 PM on 11/27/2010
The myth here is that it takes a lot of 'work' to do something politically, as if Obama can only 'work' on this or 'work' on that. Most of the 'work' is done by staff and the foreign policy staff is not the same as the domestic policy staff. Or that there is a limit on the quantity of 'message' available. That the message is this or the message is that. With a 24/7 news media both broadcast and online there  Read More...
08:45 PM on 11/30/2010
the global economy is playing games with the 'win' being dragging the US so far down the ladder it will never recover. this is in line with the progressive goal as well.

declining global relevance the molasses of 'social justice' = our new reality.
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Peter Combs
Amused by the illogical..no, NOT a Republican
11:35 AM on 11/30/2010
At some point everyone will recognize Obama is a fumbler...from A to Z. He went to Asia TWICE with nothing in place that was promising, the idea he seems to have is his mere presence is enough to move deals, it isn't. Now he is focussed on jobs here after funding banks at under 1% who've sent the money abroad to build investments around the world for the last 18 months. So now he's trying to fight the very competition he helped increase with OUR money.

His utter lack of understanding consequences is starting to rival GW's.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wee weed up
11:49 AM on 11/29/2010
Obama has an economic message? What embrace poverty?
08:35 AM on 11/29/2010
So the President gets distracted from a singular focus on jobs (which apparently he should be focussing on 24/7--doing what, I am not sure) by such frivolities as a nuclear missile-rattling North Korea, wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, and a nuclear weapons treaty with our old friend Russia, while the Republicans get distracted by stopping women from having abortions, getting more guns out there in the public, keeping gays in check, further restricting stem-cell research, and finding ways to give rich people more money (which is, after all, for our own good).
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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08:26 AM on 11/29/2010
Hey, let's meet some of the nice folks who voted Obama into office. Watch the vid all the way through okay, you wouldn't want to miss anything.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMcBUV9LPGQ&feature=player_embedded
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Peter Combs
Amused by the illogical..no, NOT a Republican
11:57 AM on 11/30/2010
that about sums it all up.....just shows racial profiling is no way to vote...
08:14 AM on 11/29/2010
Obama should propose a dollar an hour minimum wage hike every year,and an $800 billion stimulus before the Repubs take the House back.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wee weed up
11:47 AM on 11/29/2010
dumb idea
07:51 AM on 11/29/2010
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05:31 AM on 11/29/2010
You can't be an empire and a democracy too. The Brits realized this after World War II. Our foreign policy needs to change drastically if we want to save our country.
SamEasy
You really don`t want to know.
04:13 AM on 11/29/2010
Many countries are in financial dire straits becasue they bought the garbage/fraudulent derivatives that were spawned by wall street criminals. But the US government should have a right to defend itself when they refused to regulate the financial sector even though they were warned of the impending crash that would result from failing to investigate the 'Black Box' that existed on Wall Street.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rY6KAdN4Qn0
01:40 AM on 11/29/2010
Obama bailed out GM so that GM could build MORE factories in communist China. That's a fact. Obama is helping GM to ship off jobs to China.

And right now Microsoft is using federal H-1B work visas to avoid hiring Americans in America. And Obama and the Democrats fully support H-1B. If it helps corporate profits but hurts working Americans then cool.

I just find it amazing that anyone still thinks the Democrats are on working American's side. You would have to work hard to avoid the facts. You would have to really be dedicated to ignoring the policies the Democrat's favor and their impact on workers: NAFTA, free trade with China, H-1B, and banking deregulation were all supported by Democrats (most of these were signed into law by Bill Clinton).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
msbeal
Let no neo-con lie go unchallenged
02:50 AM on 11/29/2010
Are you accusing the American government of having sold this country out to the powerful rich multinational corporations??

Duh.

The truly astonishing part to me is how the rich powerful multinationals were able to intitiate a street movement, the teabaggers, to beg for more of same. These lemmings are asking the piper to pick up the beat.
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Peter Combs
Amused by the illogical..no, NOT a Republican
11:59 AM on 11/30/2010
China bought 500 Million Shares of GM's IPO...totalling 15 Billion DOllars.....they are apparently hedging their bets on lending to the USA.
12:47 AM on 11/29/2010
Don't mess with Joe!! How much more BS will we take?
11:15 AM on 11/29/2010
About two more years.
12:35 AM on 11/29/2010
Got to wonder about peace talks.
Wonder if we offered both sides some new free f22's..
If that might get everyone's attention.
Got to stop giving things away ...
How about some empty homes, we havwe a lot of them
11:58 PM on 11/28/2010
POOL---11% unemployment===my guess june mho
11:55 PM on 11/28/2010
Mr Chips goes to washington---not bad imo
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
phillyangel74
an enlightened and united America
10:59 PM on 11/28/2010
Wow, it seems to be alot of low information Fox/Drudge haters trolling tonight.
11:56 PM on 11/28/2010
Chris Mathews says hi !!