| BELIEVE it or
not, there are
Americans who have a
“very negative”
opinion of Barack
Obama (13 percent,
in the Wall Street
Journal/NBC News
poll). Some are
even angry at him
(10 percent,
New York Times/CBS
News). As the
First 100 Days
hoopla started to
jump the shark last
week, I tried, as an
experiment in
empathy, to see the
world through their
eyes.
It was difficult
at first, but
an interview
with the official
White House
photographer, Pete
Souza, on CNN,
pushed me over the
edge. Souza was
showing all those
beguiling
behind-the-scenes
pictures that,
though government
issued, were more or
less passed off as
journalism by
virtually every news
outlet in the land.
Inevitably we got
to The Dog. “I want
to show this picture
because I find this
to be a fascinating
picture,” said the
CNN anchor John
King, who found
almost every picture
fascinating. “The
president running
down the hall with
his new jogging
partner there, Bo.”
What, he asked
Souza, is it like
“to add this to the
diversity of your
work at the White
House?”
I’ll leave the
photographer’s
answer to your
imagination. But for
a second, anyway, I
could imagine what
it’s like to be
among the
Limbaugh-Cheney
deadenders who
loathe Obama. Those
who feel the whole
world is against
them. Those who
think the press
corps is in the
tank. Those so
sickened by the
fawning that they’d
throw a brick
through the
television screen if
the Bush-Cheney
economy had left
them with enough
money to buy a new
set.
But only for a
second. I confess to
being among the 81
percent (per
Wall Street
Journal/NBC) who
like the guy. And I
share the belief of
nearly two-thirds of
the American people
(per
every poll) that
he has made an
impressive start.
The new president is
largely doing what
he promised, and he
is doing it with the
focus, brainpower
and preternaturally
calm temperament
that kept his
campaign on track
even as the
political press
dismissed him as a
hope-mongering naif
next to the
supposedly far more
organized and more
moneyed Hillary.
That the same
crowd is over the
top now in its
praise says more
about the news
business than Obama.
The journalism
industry is fighting
for its life. Obama
is the one reliable
product that moves
the market for
newspapers,
magazines and
television. No
wonder so many
special sections,
special issues and
special cable
marathons have
alighted on the 100
Days.
All those great
report cards! Trying
to stand out in this
over-caffeinated
throng of
hagiographers, a
Time pundit
sprinkled his
evaluations with
A-pluses. One of
them was
for Michelle Obama,
whose
approval rating
is even higher than
her husband’s. Hard
to believe that just
a year ago some of
the same
commentators were
questioning her
pride in America,
and that Christopher
Hitchens,
writing in Slate,
was seriously
arguing that
her 1985 Princeton
thesis linked
her by association
to the views of
Stokely Carmichael
and Louis Farrakhan.
Of course the
high marks, mine
included, are all
ludicrously
provisional. It’s
too early to judge
the results of any
Obama policy. What
we do know is that
his leadership is
restoring the
country’s faith in
itself and the
future; the spike in
the number of
Americans who say
we’re on the “right
track” is
eye-popping. And,
for all the
politicians and
pundits who complain
that Obama is
attempting too much
at once, many of us
like the breadth of
his ambition. Doing
too much at the same
time, even at the
risk of failure, is
a core American
trait that built the
nation. It’s as
American as Benjamin
Franklin,
“Moby-Dick,” the New
Deal and a double
cheeseburger with
all the toppings.
We’ll see how
Obama’s vast plans
play out. We’ll see
what unexpected
nightmares, bigger
than the swine flu,
materialize on his
watch. The 100 Days
celebrations could
not fade soon
enough, because
neither he nor the
country should be
lulled into resting
easy. There are at
least two toxic
fiefdoms to keep the
president and us
awake at night:
Pakistan and Wall
Street. Both could
wreak further untold
catastrophe. Obama
has control over
neither, and in the
case of the
financial sector, he
is fielding a team
dominated by Robert
Rubin protégés whose
wisdom remains, to
put it generously,
unproven.
But if those are
the obvious hotspots
for this presidency,
there is also the
domestic political
culture to worry
about. The
Republican Party has
collapsed, and that
is not a good thing
for the country or
for Obama. We need
more than one
functioning party,
not just to ensure
checks and balances
and pitch in ideas
at a time of crisis,
but to temper this
president’s sporadic
bursts of
overconfidence and
triumphalist
stagecraft. No one
is perfect. We must
remember that there
is also an Obama who
gave us “You’re
likable enough,
Hillary,” a
faux presidential
seal and a
convention speech
delivered before
what Sarah Palin
rightly
mocked as
“Styrofoam Greek
columns” hauled out
of a “studio lot.”
That Obama needs
a serious
counterweight in the
political arena. But
the former party of
Lincoln and liberty
has now melted down
to a fundamentalist
core of aging, rural
Dixiecrats and
intrusive scolds —
as small as 20
percent of the
populace in the
latest polls. Its
position on the
American spectrum of
ideas is somewhere
between a doomsday
cult and
Scientology.
Arlen Specter’s
defection is the
least of the
Republicans’
problems, a lagging
indicator. Though
many characterize
his departure as a
“wake-up call” for
the party, it’s only
the most recent of
countless wake-up
calls the party has
slept through since
2006. That was the
year that Specter’s
Pennsylvania
Republican colleague
in the Senate, Rick
Santorum, lost his
seat
by a margin of more
than 17 percentage
points. Despite
that rout and many
more like it of
similar right-wing
candidates
throughout America,
the party’s
ideological litmus
test is more rigid
than ever. The G.O.P.
chairman,
Michael Steele,
and enforcers of
Republican political
correctness like
William Kristol
and the blogger
Michele Malkin
jeered Specter and
cheered his
departure. A
laughing Limbaugh
seconded e-mail from
listeners
commanding Specter
to “take McCain
with you — and his
daughter.”
You can’t blame
the president if he
is laughing, too. As
The Economist
recently certified,
the G.O.P. is now
officially in the
throes of “Obama
Derangement
Syndrome.” The same
conservative gang
that remained mum
when George W. Bush
praised Putin’s
“soul” and
held hands with
the Saudi ruler
Abdullah are now
condemning Obama for
shaking hands
with Hugo Chávez, “bowing”
to Abdullah,
relaxing Cuban
policy and
talking to hostile
governments.
Polls
show
overwhelming
majorities favoring
Obama’s positions.
But his critics have
locked themselves in
the padded cell of
an alternative
reality. Not long
before The Wall
Street Journal
informed its readers
that
81 percent of
Americans liked
Obama, Karl Rove
wrote in its
pages that “no
president in the
past 40 years has
done more to
polarize America so
much, so quickly.”
From derangement
it’s a small step to
madness. Last week,
the president of a
prime G.O.P.
auxiliary, the
Concerned Women for
America,
speculated that
the president’s
declaration of “a
state of emergency
about the flu was a
political thing” to
push through
Kathleen Sebelius’s
nomination as
secretary of health
and human services.
At those
tax-protesting “tea
parties” on April
15, signs and
speakers portrayed
Obama as a
“fascist,” a
“socialist,” a
terrorist and
Hitler. Republican
governors have
proposed rejecting
stimulus money for
their states (only
to fold after
constituents
rebelled) or, in the
notorious instance
of Rick Perry of
Texas,
toyed with secession
from the union.
But this is funny
only up to a point.
It was in 1937 — the
year after the
Democratic landslide
left the Republican
national ticket with
a total of eight
electoral votes
— that a hugely
empowered F.D.R.
made two of the
biggest mistakes of
his presidency. He
tried to
pack the Supreme
Court with
partisan allies and,
overconfidently
judging the economy
recovered,
retreated from the
New Deal by
instituting spending
cuts that prompted a
fresh economic
tailspin.
In the current
climate Obama
mustn’t drink his
own Kool-Aid. As the
100 Days rollout
reminded us, he
remains a master at
promoting and
controlling his and
his family’s image
for maximum effect,
down to each picture
of Bo. The Obama
White House has been
more adept and
broad-based than any
of its predecessors
at working the
media, whether
“Access Hollywood”
or ESPN, Leno or
YouTube, Us Weekly
or what remains of
newspapers. As
Angela Burt-Murray,
the editor of
Essence, a magazine
aimed at black
women,
recently told The
Los Angeles Times
after negotiating
access to the Obamas
for a photo spread,
“There’s definitely
a science to the way
they’re approaching
this.”
That’s why it was
alarming to learn
that
a White House
official had
authorized that
idiotic
public-relations
photo shoot for
Air Force One at the
Statue of Liberty.
We’ve just lived
through a hubristic
presidency that
delighted in staging
propagandistic
stunts to remake
reality — Friday was
the sixth
anniversary of
“Mission
Accomplished” — and
we don’t need
another. The real
Obama, unlike his
predecessor, is more
than strong enough
as he is, without
the steroids of
excessive stage
management. It will
be incumbent on him
now to remain
grounded when there
is so little
opposition, in the
political arena or
most anyplace else,
to challenge his
high-flying course.
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