President Obama goes on
the attack, to Democrats’ delight
By David Nakamura and Paul Kane,
There
is a noticeably more aggressive, confrontational President Obama roaming the
country these days, selling his jobs plan and
attacking Republicans for standing in the way of progress by standing up only
for the rich.
In
Texas on Tuesday, the president went after a leading Republican by name:
“Yesterday the Republican majority leader in Congress, Eric Cantor, said that
right now he won’t even let this jobs bill
have a votein the House of Representatives,” Obama said. “I would
like Mr. Cantor to come here to Dallas and explain what exactly in this jobs
bill does he not believe in, what exactly he is opposed to. Does he not believe
in rebuilding America’s roads and bridges? Does he not believe in tax breaks
for small businesses or efforts to help our veterans?”
Will Obama’s new
aggressive strategy work?
The emergence of this more pugnacious Obama has heartened Democrats, especially the
most liberal ones, who spent the past few months dejected by what they saw as
the president’s unwillingness to engage his opponents in political combat.
“We
don’t see it as confrontation; we see it as leadership,” said Mary Kay Henry,
president of the Service Employees International Union. “We see the president
exerting strong leadership to make the case to the country that everything we
had to listen to during the debt debate was wrong.”
The
president’s problems, even within his own party, remain formidable; only 58
percent of Democrats in a new Washington Post-ABC News
poll believe that he will be reelected. Many supporters remain
skeptical of his tendency to seek compromise with Republicans, and recently he
angered some black supporters byurging them to stop complaining.
Still,
in recent weeks, Obama has begun to blunt some of the criticism among Democrats
that he is not up for the fight.
“The
guy is mad,” said Peter Fenn, a longtime Democratic strategist. “I’d be mad,
too. We went four months on the debt-ceiling nonsense. What positive result
came of that? Zip.”
The
new attack strategy is rooted in the political reality that Obama is 13 months
from Election Day and faces a tough road. The poll shows that 61 percent of
Americans disapprove of the way he is handling the economy.
Indeed,
the only good news for Obama relates to his jobs plan and his Republican
opposition. An even higher percentage of poll respondents, about 76 percent,
say they disapprove of the way Republicans in Congress are handling the
economy. Given that dubious advantage, the president may have few options other
than to attack.
Obama
used a Labor Day speech in Detroit to
launch his new offensive against the GOP opposition. With him on Air Force One
that day was Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), who gave Obama the text of a rousing
speech delivered by Harry S. Truman on Labor Day 1948, also in Detroit. Truman
was another deeply unpopular Democratic president in the midst of an economic
recession; he won another term in 1948 by attacking the Republicans, earning
the nickname “Give ’Em Hell Harry.”
A
month later, other parallels are emerging. Facing sharp criticism from
Democrats who say he capitulated to Republicans during the summer’s acrimonious
debt-ceiling negotiations, Obama has embarked on a nationwide barnstorming tour
to promote his plan to create jobs and try to reverse his ebbing political
fortunes.
Senior
administration officials said the president will continue his jobs tour through
year’s end in a calculated effort to force Republicans to negotiate or be
painted as a party unwilling to address the economic crisis.
The
president’s jobs plan is one remaining bright spot for him. A narrow majority
in the poll supports the package. Nearly six in 10 say Obama’s plan would help
improve the unemployment situation.
Video
President
Obama on Tuesday called out House Republican leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) for
saying Obama's jobs bill is dead on arrival in the House. (Oct. 4)
Obama
has begun to frame the 2012 contest as a referendum on values.
At a fundraiser in California late last month, he mocked Texas Gov. Rick Perry,
a leading contender for the GOP nomination, whose state has been ravaged by
drought and wildfires, for not believing in the science of climate change. And
in a speech on Saturday, Obama blasted the Republican presidential candidates
for failing to defend a gay American solider in Iraq who was booed while
asking a question via video during a GOP debate.
“We
don’t believe in a small America,” Obama told a crowd of 3,300 at the Human
Rights Campaign dinner in Washington. “We don’t believe . . . it’s okay for a stage full of political leaders —
one of whom could end up being the president of the United States — being
silent when an American soldier is booed. . . . You want to be commander in
chief? You can start by standing up for the men and women who wear the
uniform.”
Obama
drew a standing ovation that lasted longer than a minute, a remarkable
turnaround for a president who himself was booed during a fundraiser in New
York last spring when he said his views on same-sex marriage were still
evolving.
“President
Obama did an amazing job of thoroughly weaving together the narrative of his accomplishments
and the pivotal implications of having another person in that Oval Office,”
said Fred Sainz, a Human Rights Campaign spokesman.
The
president also has drawn a values contrast with Republicans over how to pay for
his jobs plan, which features a “Buffett rule” that would eliminate some tax
loopholes for people earning more than $200,000 a year. Republicans have
labeled Obama’s approach “class warfare,” a term the president has embraced —
with a twist.
“You’re
already hearing the Republicans in Congress dusting off the old talking
points,” Obama told New York donors two weeks ago. “You know what? If asking a
billionaire to pay the same rate as a plumber or a teacher makes me a warrior
for the middle class, I wear that charge as a badge of honor.”
Neera
Tanden, a former Obama administration official, said the president tried to
position himself as the “adult in the room” during the debt fight, remaining
above the partisan fray in hopes of striking a “grand bargain.” The strategy collapsed after
House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) balked under pressure from the tea party
and the White House agreed to cut spending by $900 billion without raising
taxes.
“If you
are the adult in the room as they move farther and farther right, you are not
pulling back against them,” said Tanden, now the chief operating officer at the
liberal Center for American Progress. “You have to come up with a strategy to
meet the times. . . . The most important thing for the president now is to
demonstrate leadership and vision. The stronger, feistier tone helps him do
that.”
Darlene
Ewing, chairman of the Dallas County Democratic Party, said that she was
“royally [upset] when Obama caved” on the Bush tax cuts.
“I was
really excited when he finally said, ‘Okay, that’s not the way it’s going to
be,’ ” Ewing said this week. “I understand if you don’t want to
add to the divisiveness. But it’s like mud-wrestling with a snake — you’re not
going to win.”
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