iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Michael Russnow

Michael Russnow

Posted: January 20, 2010 05:56 AM

Re Brown's Victory, Message to Obama: Making Nice Doesn't Work, Time to Play Hardball!

What's Your Reaction:

It's the anniversary of Barack Obama's presidency, and for those who supported him there's a lot to be concerned. Whether we supported Obama in the primaries, Democrats and Independents in the General Election had the collective hope change for the better was coming. Most of us are still waiting.

It's not that the ideals were wrong or that attempts to fulfill them have yet to be made. That's not what bothers us. Accomplishing everything offered in speeches is rare, and certainly not in the first year. What's frustrating is Obama's approach, which has been remarkably apolitical considering that he came out of nowhere with a scant record in public life. How could a man who rolled over so many better known men and women with far better resumes in the primaries and General Election -- and took many of the same strategists with him to the White House -- have failed so much in the way he has?

This isn't an attack on Obama. I admire what he has said and what he says he'd like to do, whether about the wars in the Middle East, the environment, rescuing our depressed economy, gay rights and revamping our nation's health care system to put it in line with nations of the First World economies. However, I'm still waiting for significant progress in the attainment of these goals.

He talks a good game and there have been congressional bills drafted to match the rhetoric. And there have been some accomplishments. He definitely slowed the plummeting descent of our nation's finances and also the level of unemployment. That we haven't yet recovered is not entirely his fault. The mess he inherited over eight years of misrule naturally takes time to undo the damage.

However, he had a great weapon: formidable control of Congress, including a so-called filibuster majority in the Senate, when Joe Lieberman is willing to play ball. The margin in the House is even greater, as they don't have the same constraints to pass a bill as in the upper house. But with all the glad-handing and his aversion to twisting arms, the democracy he wrought has brought paralysis in the minds of the voters.

So, a lot of us are wondering what's the problem? The answer is we have a president who understands the politics of campaigning but not the politics of governing. Obama has spent the past year trying to create a Utopian world where everyone gets along, no matter the political stripe.

Hopefully he's begun to learn that's not how things are done. The GOP opposition has been mostly against him, no matter how affable he was to them, and they vote in lock step on most matters, fueled by Tea Party fanatics, who have proven Shakespeare's depiction of the masses was so right. Julius Caesar's the best example, wherein people can be swayed depending on oratory or events. Because of Obama's out and out failures or seemingly never ending negotiations to effect sought-after policies, mostly born out his fear of playing hardball, the public now views Obama as inept or considers his proposals outrageous and out of touch.

But really, what's outrageous and out of touch about health care reform so that every American has the right to take care of their respective families' welfare, irrespective of their relative wealth and employment status? It's a goal demonized by the right for years, even as most of them say they'd like to see improvements. That conservatives never seem to agree on what those improvements are continues the age-old problem that wealthy nations in Western Europe and Canada somehow seem to have overcome.

And now we are on the cusp of getting something -- not perfect, but it's a start. And we have seen by historical examples that great strides rarely happen. That progress advances by incremental steps, such as civil and equal rights, moving forward year by year, which wouldn't have happened at all were it not for constitutional amendments or federal legislation that caused the initial action.

Which brings us to the senate election in Massachusetts, a travesty that shouldn't have occurred. I don't blame Martha Coakley, the Democratic candidate who lost handily to little known state senator Scott Brown, as pundits on CNN, ABC, CBS and NBC have somewhat said. Yes, mistakes were made in her campaign, allowing Brown to express his outrage over the Democratic party's sense of "entitlement' over a senate seat held by a Kennedy brother for all but two of the last 55 years.

But Brown's election was achieved, after two Republican gubernatorial wins in Virginia and New Jersey, in a climate fueled by the public's dismay due to the perceived inaction by the Obama administration, because he didn't use the muscle engendered by the congressional numbers to get things done.

Whether you liked Bush and Cheney -- and I certainly didn't -- they knew how to carry through many of their important goals. They didn't care whether people liked them. They wanted to invade Iraq and skewed information to get congress to initially back them. When it came time to actually bomb Baghdad, it no longer mattered what many in congress or the public felt.

They also got their way on taxes, helping well-to-do friends and political supporters, and took their sweet time to do anything about the looming crisis in the banks and the plight of the increasing number of unemployed.

In short, Bush/Cheney knew how to get congressional votes, which is something Obama, for the most part, doesn't seem to know how to do. Instead, he makes deals that look shady, such as those with Ben Nelson (D-Nebraska) and Mary Landrieu (D-Louisiana) with regard to the watered down senate health care bill. Rather than using his presidency as a bully pulpit, twisting arms and threatening quietly behind the scenes to decimate any of their future pet projects, he let everyone walk over him.

Now's the time to stop. Scott Brown is the new senator. Nothing can be done, but there are remedies to keep health care afloat. Two scenarios have been raised. The first is to delay Brown's ascension as long as possible until the congressional caucus comes together to reconcile differences between the House and Senate bills. The other, and the one I'd recommend, is for Nancy Pelosi to get the House to pass the Senate bill, and deal later on with the sticky points some congressmen don't like, which apparently can be accomplished procedurally in the Senate and not be stymied by a filibuster vote.

The reason I don't vote for scenario one is that stalling Brown's certification looks sleazy and will make things worse. After all, he beat Coakley by five points. Scenario two, however, is legitimate. Just because Brown comes in doesn't entitle him to change the course of the Senate, just as a new Supreme Court justice couldn't immediately undo what has previously been voted upon.

It is vital for major health reform to pass. The public will see significant success achieved, and those who are fearful of the reform, colored by lies and misstatements by the Tea Party zealots, will be schooled properly by anchormen Brian Williams, Anderson Cooper, Katie Couric and Diane Sawyer, the Today Show and Meet The Press or newspapers like the New York Times and The Washington Post as to how it will affect them, well before November's mid-term elections.

As to possible congressional losses, who cares if the Senate can't get things done with 60 or even 59? Last I heard 50 was a majority with a vice president in the same party. Instead of whining, surely there are enough mainstream Democrats to get rid of filibustering entirely or reduce the number to, say, 55. Show the public strong, creative leadership and they'll fall back in line. It's not as if the Republicans have given them anything to root for.

As the economy improves, like it has been doing, unemployment will lessen and confidence will be restored. The bogeyman of health care reform that has plagued us since the Truman days will dissipate as people see they're not paying more and their personal choices will not be affected, unless it's their choice not to be insured -- and then too bad for them.

Obama has to follow Teddy Roosevelt's example -- "Speak softly and carry a big stick." The big stick doesn't have to literally be bellicose, and it would encourage many of his party faithful if he stuck to his original pledge to get us out of the Middle East. Our best presidents were those who've not been afraid to make even their friends fearful in order to achieve the greater accomplishment of getting what needs to be done.

Until Obama subscribes to such a modus operandi, his presidency and, sadly, our near term future for betterment may well be doomed.

Michael Russnow's website is www.ramproductionsinternational.com

 

Follow Michael Russnow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/kerrloy

 
 
  • Comments
  • 11
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Guitanguran
03:31 PM on 01/20/2010
"How could a man who rolled over so many better known men and women with far better resumes in the primaries and General Election -- and took many of the same strategists with him to the White House -- have failed so much in the way he has?"

I. Running is not the same as governing.

II. Repeating nebulous platitudes of "Hope & Change" is not the same as dealing with specific issues.

III. Pretending you're a moderate is not the same as going full tilt toward a
"progressive/socialist/marxist/government is the solution to all our problems" way of governing.
photo
Falafel
The Most Liberal Labrador Who Ever Lived
01:45 PM on 01/20/2010
You're spot on. As Jon Stewart so cleverly pointed out the other night - "How did Bush push through all of his crap with only 50 Republican senators?"

The President just needs a dash of Tony Soprano - righties only respond to other bullies.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JimR
01:14 PM on 01/20/2010
Obama does not have control of Congress, that is only an illusion. Once again, Democrats show why they can't be trusted to run Congress. No matter how big a majority they have, they set aside common goals and squabble amongst themselves, digging in until they feed their own special interests.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bethab
12:19 PM on 01/20/2010
"...will be schooled properly by anchormen Brian Williams, Anderson Cooper, Katie Couric and Diane Sawyer, the Today Show and Meet The Press or newspapers like the New York Times and The Washington Post"

Is this a joke? These are the same people who gave the birthers and the death-panelers a platform to discuss their absolute LIES! These are the people who allow republican operative to get away with saying that there was no domestic terrorist attack under Bush. The same people who equate Glenn Beck with Rachel Maddow because one is left leaning and the other right, even though one regularly lies and the other tells the truth. If these are the people we have to count on to educate the masses...I'm done!
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Michael Russnow
04:28 PM on 01/20/2010
They may allow the other side to talk -- even those with questionable viewpoints -- but in the main they cut through the bull and often reiterate time and again that what these folks are ranting about isn't true.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
09:25 AM on 01/20/2010
Really, slap them back. Don't sit there and take it. The American people like a man of ACTION.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LivingDebtFree
I bet you I can be less competitive than you.
07:35 AM on 01/20/2010
Haha. He lost me when he said "He definitely slowed the plummeting descent of our nation's finances and also the level of unemployment."

And why is it that every time I read an article about him it is about "Obama has a lot to go, but it isn't his fault. Its those nasty people he surrounded himself with"?

The buck stops at the Oval Office. It did for Bush. It does for Obama. The Republicans destroyed themselves when they held both houses and the Oval Office. The Democrats obviously didn't learn from them.

A plague upon both your houses.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Michael Russnow
04:31 PM on 01/20/2010
I never said it wasn't Obama's fault. Read the entire piece and see that I do blame Obama's misplaced confidence in the human spirit. However, I do wonder why those terrific politicos around him haven't clued him about what to do and what it takes to get the job done.
06:32 AM on 01/20/2010
Well at first I thought Obama was well falling behind on his promises, I was caught up in the media's expectation. then I thought about health care and his foreign policy, and how much further he came than anyone before,not to mention how the world has warmed up to us now - but what really changed my mind when it came to obama's first year was this article and the allegory it provided check it out

http://keironjackman.wordpress.com/2010/01/04/obama-the-builder-you-have-a-contract/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laura McBride
Journalist, rakes conservative muck, finds
06:18 AM on 01/20/2010
While I admit it is a little biased, the talk around my house for weeks has been along the lines of "Gee, Obama needs to get a little New York in him." Merely shorthand for knowing how to play hardball. One would have thought Chicago would have given him something of a grip on that. But apparently not. Apparently, Chicago has become way too nice. Truly, though, I think the ability to knock heads when heads need knocking is something learned on the streets of a big city. Maybe Mr. Obama's Granny protected him too much. Maybe he didn't have to figure a way to outsmart a couple of bullies on his way home from school. I don't think America can afford to wait for him to grow wise in the ways of the world. While I wouldn't suggest that Mr. Bush's lying ways were in any way acceptable, I would suggest that laying out some credible, workable and ethical sanctions for opponents to much-needed reforms is the least Mr. Obama needs to do. Unless, and I sincerely hope not, he has been bought and paid for.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
anachoret
Bake the hall in the candle of her brain
01:58 PM on 01/20/2010
If you want to know what New Democrats learn about the streets of big cities, it is that you should ignore them and the people who actually plan on representing them, like Larry Agran tried in 1992. And if you can't ignore them, arrest them.

http://wapedia.mobi/en/Larry_Agran#3.