RSS Feeds Feeds: Articles | Issues
Articles About TAP Subscribe Donate
TAPPED  |  Beat the Press

Remember Me
Forgot your password?

The symbol identifies content for paid subscribers only.


 



The group blog of The American Prospect

Obama's So Speedy, It Looks Like He's Hardly Moved.

brooks.jpgDavid Brooks has a column on the independents in the wake of Tuesday's election, deploying his usual technique of communing with them via stereotypes -- "They’re looking for a safe pair of hands." The piece is economically unserious and also follows the time-tested pundit model of demanding politicians follow public opinion when it suits Brooks' views but lauding as courageous those politicians who ignore it when it doesn't. Noam Scheiber does a good job taking Brooks to the woodshed, but I want to focus on one particular argument:
Right now, independent voters are astonishingly volatile. Democrats did poorly in elections on Tuesday partly because of disappointed liberals who think that President Obama is moving too slowly, but mostly because of anxious suburban independents who think he is moving too fast.

Brooks makes no attempt to justify the idea that Obama is moving too fast, in part because it's hard to find evidence that supports such a statement. Since the passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act last winter, the president hasn't convinced Congress to pass a major piece of legislation. That's not to say he hasn't done anything -- he has shepherded health-care reform through a long and thorough public debate, he has made numerous important executive-branch appointments and decisions, he has developed a budget that will cut the deficit in half in four years.

Of the major parts of his legislative agenda, though, he has yet to achieve ... any of them. True, congressional Republicans have been in the habit of saying things are moving too fast, but in comparison to what, they don't say. Nor do they offer any real alternatives for solving problems. If they don't like what the Democrats are offering, they can vote against their agenda, but requesting time to talk and then having nothing to say doesn't cut it. Meanwhile, I'm not the first to note, Republicans are demanding that Obama make immediate decisions on foreign-policy matters. It's hard to take them seriously.

In any case, I'd be very curious to hear what Brooks thinks Obama is doing so quickly that it alarms independents, and why he thinks that his fast action on these policies with which I'm unfamiliar is of greater concern to independents than, oh, the economy.

-- Tim Fernholz



COMMENTS

he has shepherded health care reform through a long and thorough public debate

If that's the way real shepherds worked, there would be many fewer sweaters and many more fat wolves.

"shepherded health care" Ha Ha.

Obama has been a huge disappointment in playing his cards close to the chest on health care legislation.

Also, hard to see that he has gone too fast on diminishing the imperial presidency

if you actually read what brooks says, and I'm no fan of Brooks', he doesn't say he thinks Obama is moving too fast.

So why does he have to present arguments that show he is?

When is the NYTimes going to put Brooks where he belongs, on the unemployment line?

Post a comment


Search TAPPED for:

Archives

About TAPPED

TAPPED, the Prospect's award-winning group blog, is a link-intensive collection of musings, ramblings, opinions and other assorted writing on the political developments of the day. See a list of our contributors.

| RSS | Twitter


Renew your print subscription or e-subscription.
Get an e-subscription for $14.95.
Give the gift of political insight. Send The American Prospect to a friend.
Change your email address or street address.
YES! I want to receive The American Prospect
— the essential source for progressive ideas.
Explore The American Prospect's award-winning investigative journalism and provocative essays in a free trial issue. Continue receiving The American Prospect at only $19.95 for a one-year subscription - a savings of 60% off the newsstand price!
First Name
Last Name
Address 1
Address 2
City
State
ZIP     
Email

Should you decide not to continue receiving the magazine after the initial free issue, simply write "cancel" on the invoice and you will not be billed.

© 2010 by The American Prospect, Inc.  |  Privacy Policy  |  Permissions and Reprints