Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Posted October 14, 2008 | 12:08 PM (EST)

The Fear of a President Obama

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


It was a tense and riveting moment at the recent McCain campaign rally in Minnesota when a flustered and livid participant shouted at Republican presidential contender John McCain that he was scared of an Obama presidency. The man is not alone in his professed terror of an Obama White House. Even before McCain and Palin's brief mudsling at Obama, legions of McCain backers quietly grumbled that an Obama White House would be a disaster. Their fear is that Obama is too liberal, even radical, too young, too willing to appease foreign foes, and too much a Democratic Party shill, and for some, his race. As the prospect of an Obama White House looms larger, the skepticism, worry, and fear of those like the man who expressed his fear at the McCain rally will grow. But the fear would be there even if race and all Obama's other alleged liabilities weren't there.

Obama's raised the expectation bar sky high, maybe too high. He will be expected to immediately deliver on his promise to clamp down on Wall Street, implement affordable health care, wind down the war in Iraq, and to make good on his promises to give tax cuts to virtually everyone, while not raising taxes. With the treasury awash in debt, and more debt piling up, this is the riskiest promise of all. It's one that voters will remember.

There are other red flags that flutter in the political breeze and pose danger warnings to a president Obama. There's the curse of a first term president who takes power from an incumbent of the opposite party. The partisan attacks, character knocks, policy second guessing, and resistance against Clinton and Bush were relentless their first months in office. Millions of voters simply did not except their election and gave them no grace period to find their Oval Office legs.
The inexperience tag that Hillary Clinton and McCain slapped on Obama during the campaign will be dredged up and pointed to to explain any misstep or failing. The inexperience tag is a politically perilous one for a good reason.

Many voters expect American presidents to hit the ground running. They are unwilling to make a leap of faith that an untested candidate can smoothly and effortlessly handle crisis situations that inevitably arise. The reality is that inexperienced presidents often make poor crisis managers. They have gotten the country into costly and unpopular wars and brush fire conflicts. They alienate foreign friends and allies. They bungle the economy. And their administrations more times than not are riddled with corruption and cronyism. The disastrous proof is the administration of the man that Obama would replace.

Bush's foreign and domestic policy bumbles and ineptitude doesn't mean that Obama will implode under fire. Yet, the expectation, maybe even hope, of many will be that Obama who took office with a paper thin resume on national and international issues will fail.

Obama's most fervent boosters namely African-Americans and liberal Democrats passionately hopped on the Obama bandwagon because they believed that he could quickly undo the damage of the Bush years. His subsequent reversal on FISA, his rejection of public financing, his tout of the death penalty for child rape, his backpedal from his pledge to sit down for talks with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and his retreat to a glacially slow, vaguely laid out timetable for a phased withdrawal from Iraq drew some mild gasps from the faithful.

But even when uttering his best shake up the Washington establishment stump rhetoric, Obama never made any promise to make big sweeping changes. He could not have won the presidency without engaging in the traditional deal making, political horse trading, and policy spins to corporate donors and Beltway insiders.

During the campaign, Obama was virtually silent during the campaign on issues such as racial profiling, affirmative action, housing and job discrimination, the racial disparities in prison sentencing, and the HIV/AIDS epidemic, failing inner city schools, ending the racially-marred drug sentencing policy, and his Supreme Court appointments.

Yet, many blacks will expect him to make these issues top priorities. They'll be disappointed when he doesn't in his first days, and realistically he couldn't if he wanted to.

As president he will be pulled and tugged at by corporate and defense industry lobbyists, the oil and nuclear power industry, government regulators, environmental watchdog groups, conservative family values groups, moderate and conservative GOP senators and house members, foreign diplomats and leaders. They all have their priorities and agendas and all will vie to get White House support for their pet legislation, or to kill or cripple legislation that threatens their interests.

As the most closely watched president in American history, he will have little wiggle room to make mistakes. And a lot of that will be based on the fear of many of his presidency.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book is The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House (Middle Passage Press, February 2008).

 
Comments
4
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:

On Day 1, Obama signs an executive order to halt all foreclosures for six months, orders Congress to start impeachment hearings, in order to ascertain the damage. While America is occupied with that little activity, he'll be busy reviewing all the presidential signing statements, the laws passed, and resolving issues like Iraq, North Korea, the middle east crisis. On Day 2, Obama signs a small stack of executive orders to get jobs creation programs moving.

So, what's all this about taking a long time to undo the damage of the last 8 years?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 10/14/2008
photo

Hutch,

It seems to me that you're anticipating the past. What makes Obama such an attractive prospect for president is his ability to respectfully acknowledge the way things have been done in the past, and then advising the people that it's important that we take a different approach.

He's also a superb communicator. During this election, both primary and general election opponents have criticized Obama as having only one talent"the ability to give a speech. But what they"ve failed to realize is that a president"s most valuable asset, next to good judgment, is his ability to communicate with the people.

Thus, a president Obama is going to address the nation and emphasize the importance of seeing the big picture. He"s going to assure the people that their pet issues will be addressed in due course, but what"s most important at this time is that we pull together to get the nation back on a manageable course. Then while the nation is consumed in that effort, he"ll be quietly working to heal the more pronounced division within the country. Once that takes place, and the nation becomes accustomed to working together, the demands of special interest groups will become less strident. They"ll begin to understand that they don"t have to be disruptive to get his attention.

Whiled McCain"s philosophy is fight, fight, fight! ,Obama"s philosophy is think, think, think. Obama understands that the level of civility in a society is set at the is set at the top.

Wattree

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 10/14/2008


Thanks to Mr Earl Ofari Hutchinson for excellent article. It is prudent, measured and poised.

I am optimistic, although I also consider that for Obama it is impossible to satisfy all people and give pleasure and happiness to everybody. Much less in a few months or years.

Obama will make mistakes but he is young and he is cerebral, rational, professorial, learned, cultivated, educated, a tolerant gentleman. And not a fool to be bullied.

Those are the qualities that correct the course of the ship if necessary.

I have thought a lot on this topic of The Future President of the USA.

Obama will win by a Big Landslide, .... and Bigger than Obama will be the Obama Coalition, because it will stay after Obama and his ( hopefully ) eight years..

The Coalition includes Blacks, Hispanics, Asians, Multiracials, Young Whites, Moderate Evangelicals, the Catholics, Italinas, Irish, Polish, etc .... And do not forget the Educated White, the most Moderate and Tolerant Whites. White Women can be

The Demographic Forces that shape the USA will help Obama and his "succesors" or political heirs.

Youth is going to be mostly non White in 2 or 3 decades. And the White Population will not grow fast enough for replacement in 40 years or so. This is according to the US Census Bureau.

http://milenials.blogspot.com/

http://tossUpStates.blogspot.com/

Vicente Duque

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 10/14/2008

Fear got us 8 years of nothing but lies and deceit. People need to really wake up and smell the coffee or roses or whatever they want to smell, cuz this is too damn important to sit by and let the same mess happen again. Great post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 10/14/2008
Comments are closed for this entry

You must be logged in to reply to this comment. Log in  or  Connect