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Leadership, Obama Style, and the Looming Losses in 2010: Pretty Speeches, Compromised Values, and the Quest for the Lowest Common Denominator    Drew Westen Psychologist and neuroscientist at Emory University  in HuPo

As the president's job performance numbers and ratings on his handling of virtually every domestic issue have fallen below 50 percent, the Democratic base has become demoralized, and Independents have gone from his source of strength to his Achilles Heel, it's time to reflect on why. The conventional wisdom from the White House is those "pesky leftists" -- those bloggers and Vermont Governors and Senators who keep wanting real health reform, real financial reform, immigration reform not preceded by a year or two of raids that leave children without parents, and all the other changes we were supposed to believe in.

Somehow the president has managed to turn a base of new and progressive voters he himself energized like no one else could in 2008 into the likely stay-at-home voters of 2010, souring an entire generation of young people to the political process. It isn't hard for them to see that the winners seem to be the same no matter who the voters select (Wall Street, big oil, big Pharma, the insurance industry). In fact, the president's leadership style, combined with the Democratic Congress's penchant for making its sausage in public and producing new and usually more tasteless recipes every day, has had a very high toll far from the left: smack in the center of the political spectrum.

What's costing the president and courting danger for Democrats in 2010 isn't a question of left or right, because the president has accomplished the remarkable feat of both demoralizing the base and completely turning off voters in the center. If this were an ideological issue, that would not be the case. He would be holding either the middle or the left, not losing both.

What's costing the president are three things: a laissez faire style of leadership that appears weak and removed to everyday Americans, a failure to articulate and defend any coherent ideological position on virtually anything, and a widespread perception that he cares more about special interests like bank, credit card, oil and coal, and health and pharmaceutical companies than he does about the people they are shafting.

The problem is not that his record is being distorted. It's that all three have more than a grain of truth. And I say this not as one of those pesky "leftists." I say this as someone who has spent much of the last three years studying what moves voters in the middle, the Undecideds who will hear whichever side speaks to them with moral clarity.


Obama has accomplished the feat of presiding over an administration that is as hapless and maladroit at handling the tasks of governing as it was brilliant at campaigning. Surely Biden could do better were he to get rid of the economic and political policy people and bring in new of his own.  But I dream from within the nightmare.

As the Dutch said while fighting the Spanish: "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
by ARGeezer (ARGeezer a in a circle eurotrib daught com) on Tue Dec 22nd, 2009 at 01:16:42 AM EST
[ Parent ]
ARGeezer:
were he to get rid of the economic and political policy people and bring in new of his own

joe never-met-a-credit-card-company-he-didn't-love biden?

for real?

~"When an inner situation is not made conscious, it appears outside as fate." Karl Jung~

by melo (melometa4(at)gmail.com) on Tue Dec 22nd, 2009 at 05:10:31 AM EST
[ Parent ]
In my estimate the difference between Joe Biden and Barack Obama is that Joe feels a twinge of guilt when he accepts money from financial corporations and chafes against the resulting constraints. Obama believes that this is the way things ought to work--all part of the Rawlsian Consensus he so prizes. Same with Afganistan. The clue for me was the report that Obama was "serene" after making the decision to send more troops. I think Obama believes he is doing the right thing. Biden knows that he has had to do a lot of bad things but hopes that he can come out net positive in the end.

As the Dutch said while fighting the Spanish: "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
by ARGeezer (ARGeezer a in a circle eurotrib daught com) on Tue Dec 22nd, 2009 at 11:07:03 AM EST
[ Parent ]
interesting reflection...

that would explain the joe's gaffes, and o-man's unflappability.

~"When an inner situation is not made conscious, it appears outside as fate." Karl Jung~

by melo (melometa4(at)gmail.com) on Tue Dec 22nd, 2009 at 03:19:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]
An interesting analysis. Thank you

keep to the Fen Causeway
by Helen (lareinagal at yahoo dot co dot uk) on Tue Dec 22nd, 2009 at 05:24:14 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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