Where's Obama? The president is often strangely absent from the most important debates

Published:

Obama's 'Where's Waldo?' presidency

 

Ruth Marcus

Washington Post
Wednesday, March 2, 2011; 12:00 AM

 

For a man who won office talking about change we can believe in, Barack Obama can be a strangely passive president. There are a startling number of occasions in which the president has been missing in action - unwilling, reluctant or late to weigh in on the issue of the moment. He is, too often, more reactive than inspirational, more cautious than forceful.

Each of these instances can be explained on its own terms, as matters of legislative strategy, geopolitical calculation or political prudence.

He didn't want to get mired in legislative details during the health-care debate for fear of repeating the Clinton administration's prescriptive, take-ours-or-leave-it approach. He doesn't want to go first on proposing entitlement reform because history teaches that this is not the best route to a deal. He didn't want to say anything too tough about Libya for fear of endangering Americans trapped there. He didn't want to weigh in on the labor battle in Wisconsin because, well, it's a swing state.

Yet the dots connect to form an unsettling portrait of a "Where's Waldo?" presidency: You frequently have to squint to find the White House amid the larger landscape.

This tough assessment from someone who generally shares the president's ideological perspective may be hard to square with the conservative portrait of Obama as the rapacious perpetrator of a big-government agenda. If the president is being simultaneously accused of overreaching ambition and gutless fight-ducking, maybe he's doing something right.

Maybe, or else Obama has at times managed to do both simultaneously. On health care, for instance, he took on a big fight without being able to articulate a clear message or being willing to set out any but the broadest policy prescriptions. Lawmakers, not to mention the public, were left guessing about what, exactly, the administration wanted to see in the measure and where it would draw red lines.

That was not an isolated case. Where, for example, is the president on the verge of a potential government shutdown - if not this week, then a few weeks from now?

Aside from a short statement from the Office of Management and Budget threatening a presidential veto of the House version of the funding measure, the White House - much to the frustration of some congressional Democrats - has been unclear in public and private about what cuts would and would not be acceptable.

By contrast, a few weeks before the shutdown in 1995, Clinton administration aides had dispatched Cabinet members and other high-ranking officials to spread the message that cuts in education, health care and housing would harm families and children. Obama seems more the passive bystander to negotiations between the House and Senate than the chief executive leading his party.

He performs best on a stage that permits the grandest sweep. He rises to the big occasion, from his inspiring introduction to the public in his 2004 Demoncratic convention speed to his healing words in the aftermath of the Tucson shootings.  The president has faltered, though, when called on to translate that rhetoric to more granular levels of specificity: What change, exactly, does he want people to believe in? How, even more exactly, does he propose to get there? "Winning the future" doesn't quite do it.

My biggest beef is with the president's slipperiness on fiscal matters. Obama has said he agrees with some of his fiscal commission's recommendations and disagrees with others. Which ones does he disagree with? I asked this question the other day of Austan Goolsbee, the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers.

Here's what I got: "The view espoused by some of the . . . commission that we ought to do Social Security 100 percent off of benefit cuts for sure he doesn't agree with." But of course, the plan that 11 of the commission members endorsed did nothing of the sort.

I was unfair to Goolsbee because I asked him a question he didn't have the leeway to answer. You can't blame the aide for ducking when the boss fudges.

Where's Obama? No matter how hard you look, sometimes he's impossible to find.

Entry #4,044

Comments

Avatar JAP69 -
#1
Same place he was when he was a state senator and a U.S. senator.
Avatar louise black -
#2
I might ask where the he-- is that,once again you haters should shut up! As for this Ruth Marcus why is she so concerned about the President's where about didn't hear a peep out of her about Bush where about.In a way I will be happy for his second term to be over so these haters and bigot can go back in the closet.
Avatar MADDOG10 -
#3
Louise says;
" I might ask where the he-- is that,once again you haters should shut up! As for this Ruth Marcus why is she so concerned about the President's where about didn't hear a peep out of her about Bush where about.In a way I will be happy for his second term to be over so these haters and bigot can go back in the closet. "
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Because other presidents were where they should have been, trying to take care of business instead of going on multitudes of vacations.
I, along with 3/4's of this country can't wait for him to get out of here, and I might add you along with Him...!
Everyone is a hater and a bigot in your eye's and feeble mind Lady, but you forgot to tell everyone that you are the biggest racist in these discussions... Have yourself a good day...!
Avatar louise black -
#4
I 'm not going anywhere , I do believe my people was here before yours it would be permissible that you go. I guess you wasn't on the scene when Bush took more vacation than work especially in his first 6 month of his Presidency.Oh! you lie there isn't 3/4's of this country waiting for him to leave,you wish. One word for you or I might say eight words: SEE YOU RIGHT BACK HERE NOV. 4 2012 YEH!
Avatar MADDOG10 -
#5
And then you woke up to reality...!

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