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For Obama, Politics Always Trumps Governing

Comment

Do we have a president or a perpetual candidate? It's not an entirely unfair question.

Even as Barack Obama was warning of the dreadful consequences of the budget sequester looming on March 1, he spent days away from Washington, apparently out of touch with Democratic as well as Republican congressional leaders.

In the meantime, Obama fans were lobbing verbal grenades at none other than The Washington Post's Bob Woodward.

His offense: He's continuing to make it clear, as he did in his book "The Price of Politics," that it was Obama's then-chief of staff and now Treasury Secretary Jack Lew who first proposed the dreaded sequester.

This inconvenient fact threatens to interfere with the ready-for-teleprompter narrative that the Republicans want to cut aid to preschoolers in order to save tax breaks for corporate jets.

It appears that Obama prefers delivering such messages to crowds of adoring supporters over actually governing.

His theory seemed to be that if he kicked his job approval rating up a few points, Republicans would agree to the revenue increases he is promoting, just as they agreed to a tax rate increase in the "fiscal cliff" showdown.

But his job rating continues to hover just above 50 percent. That's not nearly high enough to compel cooperation.

In addition, his campaign rhetoric undercuts his credibility with politicians of the opposite party and perhaps of his own.

It's not that these people resent being criticized. They understand that that is part of the game.

But the substance of the criticism suggests the president is not serious about public policy.

Take that old chestnut about corporate jets. The actual issue here is about depreciation — over how many years can a purchaser deduct the cost of a corporate jet?

Do you have to spread out the deduction over seven years? Or can you take it all in five?

No doubt, serious arguments can be made for one view or the other. As they can for the depreciation schedules of hundreds or thousands of products. Lawyers and lobbyists can make a living doing this.

But the bottom line is that the amount of revenue at stake is small, pathetically small next to trillion-dollar federal budget deficits.

Obama keeps talking about corporate jets because it tests well in polls.

And that's the reason, I think, he keeps talking about universal preschool, not just for disadvantaged children.

Polls show that large majorities of Americans would be willing to have more government money spent for preschool for disadvantaged children.

The impulse to help adorable but needy little kids is very strong.

Unfortunately, the evidence that preschool programs do any permanent good for such children is exceedingly weak.

Preschool advocates point to a 1960s program in Ypsilanti, Mich., and a 1970s North Carolina program called Abecedarian. Research showed those programs produced lasting gains in learning.

But no one has been able to replicate the success of these very small programs staffed by unusually dedicated people. Mass programs like Head Start staffed by more ordinary people don't work as well.

Kids in such programs seem to make no perceptible lasting gains. That's too bad, because disadvantaged kids need help.

So why is Obama emphasizing universal preschool, which would cost a lot more than preschool for the disadvantaged? The reason, I suspect, is that you would have to hire lots more credentialed teachers, which means you would get lots more teachers union members.

Teachers union leaders would love to see more dues money coming in, and to channel more to the Democratic Party.

To my suspicious eye, the preschool proposal doesn't make much sense as policy, but it makes a lot of sense as politics.

Demagoguery about preschool and corporate jets is not going to convince Republicans that Obama can be a reliable negotiating partner.

Instead, it reinforces the evidence that he never will be. This is the president who, in his grand bargain negotiations with Speaker John Boehner, agreed on $800 billion in more revenue — and then, in a phone call, told Boehner he wanted $1.2 trillion, instead.

And it's the president who first proposed the sequester, then promised it would never happen, and then denounced it when it seemed clear it would.

We need serious changes in public policy, as Obama's Simpson-Bowles Commission recommended. But this president doesn't seem much interested in that kind of governing.

Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;... Technically, and only so within a limited definition of the word democracy, are we a democracy.. We are supposed to be self governing of the government; and if many conflicting notions and interests continually at odds threatens our unity and success as a people; then clearly, and absolutely, the president and all in government should be playing politics to the best of their human ability...
In many senses Abraham Lincoln was a genius... He may have lost the Senate race to Douglas, but Lincoln painted him into a corner from which he could not be nominated or elected president by the South... Lincoln had the political sense to realize that if you are going for big game, you don't bother to shoot skunks... Lincoln the man made himself a master of law, and of the plane geometry essential to surveying; but he left his mark on this whole nation, and did what he himself considered impossible at the outset in ending slavery only because he mastered politics and the very strong willed men who made up his circle, his party, his cabinate, and his country...
No man by choice makes himself the master of another, and each person with skill enlists others with skill to join in achieving their common goals... Politics is the personality of any organization, and there is no form, and no organization without politics, and conflicts of personalities... Marriage is a metaphore for all forms because even the largest forms are all one on one, and all have their differences of opinion that must be honored... Everyone in the whole nation, even the whole world had an individual relationship with Mr. Lincoln... Everyone in America and in the world has an individual relationship with Mr. Obama, my self, or you... We may find it easier to relate to others through forms like our parties, but even there we have an individual relationship with each, and inside parties there is as much, if not more of politics than between the parties...
Our problem as a country is not just politics because politics is inevitable...We have principals that we try to stick with because we believe them true though we will not subject them to the scrutiny of reason... We do not have a common goal any more than a common path for reaching it... Survival as a people was once our goal, but even when we based our survival on the brutality of slavery it became apparant soon that no force in the world was powerful enough to break our hold on this land...Then we fought a great war to determine if the grounds we maintained for our own independence, of our qualitative humanity stood for all in this land, or whether we would have two class of human being or more, all with different rights specific to their class... We rejected a caste society, but we did not reject castes altogether, and some castes are enshrined in our constitution...We have our Brahmins and our Pariahs, and every caste in between, and it is this fact more than all others that necessitates the playing of National Politics...
Sir;... Majority rule is not democracy, but at best, is democratic... Because the people do not govern themselves there is no alternative but for government to rule them... This does not mean that the government, as we call it, is an absolute tyranny... The caste system prevents tyranny absolute; but it demands politics all the more...The government does not govern, or they would begin by governing themselves, and after, would govern our Brahmins...Representing castes, they play caste politics; but to ask Mr. Obama to not play politics is like asking a drowning man not to swim... What choice has he??? What choice had Lincoln except to play the very game that landed him in office??? People do as they must in the game of relationships, and if they would be a success in relationships- must have a mind for politics...
Thanks....Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon Mar 4, 2013 5:41 AM
Sir;... I would like to add that in judging by history, and with literature considered as history, the Ancient Greeks knew no distinction between politics and morality, and any question considered in the light of one subject would seek illumination in the other... People are supposed to be polite, and political -as qualities society demands from each... Our word Idiot comes from a Greek expression for those who held back from the politics of their day... With so much of the future riding on the present how can we in this day hold ourselves back from an expression of our sentiments... People in my father's generation did not have to give so much of their time to political thought, and it is too bad for us that they did not, for so much seems to have simply slid around haphazzardly...Government itself seemed to be one large meet and greet, with not much of anything getting done, and everyone collecting a supply of good will to use if it should become necessary...
If I can use only one example from my state, and from my life, -that great bridge connecting the North and the South of Michigan; clearly, the state government dropped the ball, and so did the federal government... The thing was built with private money because government would not tax the people for the right to call it their own... And while the bridge would clearly have served a public purpose, as it has, it will never be paid off, and revenues will forever go only to maintainance, and profits for a relative few... Where was the courage, and where was the vision???
Those representing the rich saw only that if a thing was worth doing in the public interest then private peoples should profit on it... This is where our national debt is going...
We may have less people in the military, but greater cost because now so much of it is done for profit... All the national debt is a reflection of the private greed of so many vultures who look at the body politic as only carrion too sick to resist, and not yet dead enough to be free of objection... So politics is not the problem except to the extent that it strays from morality, and that is always the problem behind every social problem...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Mar 5, 2013 5:45 AM
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