tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16201378.post7421802491365067620..comments2023-12-28T18:17:11.191-05:00Comments on Gruntled Center: Why President Obama Will Be Re-ElectedGruntledhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14377809238377382438noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16201378.post-51715152567107405352012-01-07T10:00:37.788-05:002012-01-07T10:00:37.788-05:00I appreciate that the first two comments on the tw...I appreciate that the first two comments on the two-day valentine to President Obama have been thoughtful and not reactionary. I hope to follow in their example. <br /><br />Although I enthusiastically voted for the President in the last election--this fall I will vote for him while holding my nose. (unless, by some miracle, John Huntsman becomes the Republican nominee). <br /><br />I tend to agree with Mac when assessing the President’s bipartisanship—and I measure it by how much a president gets things done in a bipartisan manner—not by how much the President talks about compromise. Looking back on the 1990s, President Clinton and Speaker Gingrich tried then (and continue to try) to take credit for the same positive things. Economic growth, balanced budgets, welfare reform, and budget surpluses are recognized by almost everyone as good news and they were accomplished by a Democratic president and a Republican congress—that’s bipartisanship. <br /><br />Under President Bush there were also plenty of bipartisan accomplishments, although in retrospect, many Democrats (including me) don’t feel very good about them. The Bush tax cuts, the war in Iraq, the Patriot Act, and No Child Left Behind all became law with significant Democratic support. <br /><br />In the end though, bipartisan or not, I think that the best predictors of whether President Obama or President Romney address the nation next January will be the unemployment rates in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, and Nevada.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16201378.post-89048624290820393392012-01-06T16:17:26.232-05:002012-01-06T16:17:26.232-05:00I disagree with your praises for the President. I...I disagree with your praises for the President. I think he has been the second least successful president in my lifetime, one that stretches from Truman. I chalk part of that up to the fact that he was the least politically prepared president to take office in our history.<br /><br />He did not use the power of the office to drag the center away from the lunatic fringes of their respective parties--the TP on the right and the Pelosis on the left. <br /><br />LBJ would have called John and Harry over for drinks and a good ol' Texas whuppin and gotten the job done.<br /><br />President Obama knows how to run FOR president; he just doesn't know how to BE president.<br /><br />With control of both houses, and a filibuster-proof Senate, it still took him two years to get a health care bill passed that a majority (or a very large minority)of Americans don't want. And it is NOT universal health care--there are still millions of Americans who will not be covered.<br /><br />Being a partisan myself, I know how difficult it is to try to look at your own guy with a degree of neutrality. I may have demonstrated that here, but when you wrote "He has also been relentlessly bi-partisan, working with any Republicans who were willing to help," I had to choke. I suggest that he was willing to do so only if they rolled over and did what he --or rather, Nancy and her buddies--wanted. <br /><br />That being said, you may well be right about the effect of internal strife in the Republican Party. I am afraid that a Republican Party that still hasn't figured out just who it is and what it stands for may hand the job to the President for another four years.<br /><br />In the 19th Century, there was a popular slogan that has been attributed to a number of different sources. "God looks out for little children, drunks, idiots, and the United States of America." I pray that He is still looking because the next four years are going to be tough. <br /><br />Ultimately, this election mirrors the election of 1860. A bitterly divided electorate is going to the polls. The results of the 1860 election led to violence. I don't see that happening today, but the anger and angst are similar and will be expressed in some way or another, and we had better be ready for that. Sadly, there are no Abe Lincolns in sight in either party.Machttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02067844122370343813noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16201378.post-53393977421085648352012-01-06T14:18:40.689-05:002012-01-06T14:18:40.689-05:00For the most part I agree, but I think your analys...For the most part I agree, but I think your analysis of the 2012 electoral impact of Obamacare is off. In 2012 it will either be a slight negative for Obama or neutral. In the long run it will be positive for the democrats, but it is still polling negatively and I don't think anything will happen to change that until after 2014 when more of the laws provisions kick in. I see it as being close to neutral though...most of those who are strongly opposed to it were never going to vote for Obama anyway.<br /><br />I agree that if the economy continues to grow slowly without any setback Obama should easily win re-election. But I suppose I am not as optimistic about the situation in Europe as you are, so I am only comfortable with and if/then claim about the economy and the 2012 election.Nate Kratzerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15849224250357011564noreply@blogger.com