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Bill Daley

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For a while there, I was worried that Barack Obama might actually be content to be a one-term president so long as he could say he accomplished what he set out to do.

I'm not worried anymore. Not after Thursday's announcement that William Daley will be the new chief of staff.

Liberals are reportedly not happy with the selection. They view Daley, who has flat-out said that Democrats win from the center and is a board member of the moderate "Third Way" think tank, as too conservative and too closely tied to Wall Street and the business community. Not me. For those of us more interested in winning than in labels, who know that being right and losing gets you nothing, Daley is the perfect choice.

I first met Daley back during the 1984 campaign, when — as teenagers, of course — we sat together on the Mondale campaign plane. Here are three things you need to know about Bill Daley. First, he is extraordinarily smart. Second, he was born into politics and understands it at every level of his being. Third, he is a good man, a man of principle, strong values and integrity. He commands respect and loyalty. He is a grownup with good judgment. He doesn't lose it. And he doesn't like losing.

In choosing Daley, Obama reached out to one of the most skilled, best connected and most experienced political operatives out there, a guy who knows how to run things and win campaigns — and who also knows how divisions and disunity can turn potentially winning campaigns into losing ones.

There are lots of things the Obama administration has done that I don't agree with, and probably just as many things they haven't done but (in my book) should have.

When I talk to friends and former students in the administration, I have no problem mentioning such concerns.

But Obama is not only my president because I'm an American, but also because I'm a Democrat. And if Obama is to win re-election (no small feat; Bill Clinton is the only Democrat to win re-election since FDR), he can only do it by leading a party that is both united and positioned to win the votes of a majority of Americans.

"We must acknowledge that the left's agenda has not won the support of a majority of Americans — and, based on that recognition, we must steer a more moderate course," Daley said last year in joining the board of the Third Way. He is from the old school of politics that allows you to be friends with your opponents, to have a drink together at the end of the day, to try to find ways toward compromise and common ground.

That's hard to hear if you're a liberal who worked your heart out to elect Obama because you believed he would pursue precisely that agenda (and to a large extent has). But it's music if you look at last November's election results as a reflection of public disgust with partisanship gone wild and public concern about big government being out of control.

The reason Clinton was re-elected in 1996 was because he made essential changes in his approach to governing after the disastrous 1994 midterm. Triangulation is a fancy way of saying the president moved back to the middle, positioning himself as the check on the Gingrich Republicans. And it worked.

The question since November has been whether this president is willing to make his own set of essential changes after the disastrous 2010 midterms. The choice of Bill Daley not only suggests that he is, but means that he will.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
47 years have passed Susan since LBJ started the Great Society to eliminate proverty, equal out education, jobs and so forth. Now after trillions of dollars have been spent in these concerns - where exactly are we now? We still have massive dependency on the federal government for support because they have found a gravey train to feed on forever - the American working taxpayers. Obama's plan is to further these out so that the Democrat Party owns the soul of all the voters by reminding them time and time again that their benefits are coming from the Democrat Party. Sad so sad to have to purchase votes.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Gene44
Fri Jan 7, 2011 10:51 AM
Dear Susan,
I hope you are right about Bill Daley. It is no longer about saving or repealing Obama's presidency, it is about saving the country. One thing I would correct you on, is: In 1994 when Bill Clinton was forced to move to the center, he owes the huge success of his subsequent policies, not on being "the check on the Gingrich Republicans". He usurped the republicans agenda, Newt Gingrich's Contract With America. Welfare Reform, Tax deductions, Balancing the Budget, these were all the Republican's ideas that Clinton cleverly co-opted. The country did well under Clinton, despite his character, legal and ethical flaws, because he was forced to govern using conservative principles. Liberalism does not work. Never has. Never will. Carter, Clinton's first 2 years in office, and now Obama. How many times do we have to go through this? This time, I believe we are in danger of going over the cliff, though. While I don't agree with you on many things, I always read your column. You are a rare voice of reason, civility and honesty from the left. A class act.
Comment: #2
Posted by: AmazonGrace
Sat Jan 8, 2011 10:21 AM
t he thiks he knows.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Meir Menes
Sat Jan 8, 2011 1:16 PM
He is a product of one of the most corrupt political machines in the history of the country but somehow he's now Mother Teresa?
Comment: #4
Posted by: David Kidd
Sun Jan 9, 2011 4:00 PM
Obama is Obama. His Marxist ideology will not change no matter who is his Chief of Staff. Susan seems to think that winning is most important for preserving the ideology. WOW!
Comment: #5
Posted by: Early
Mon Jan 10, 2011 8:07 AM
WE kicked the Republicans out of Congress in 2006 and 2008 not because we wanted bipartisanship, but because we wanted leadership. We voted for change, not for Obama to kowtow to the Republicans and negotiate away what the majority of Americans wanted, only to be kicked in the teeth by the Republicans, anyway.

Now he brings in Bill Daley to do more of the same?

Going the "third way" LOST the Congress in 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2002, and 2004, and cost the White House in 2000 and 2004. It was when they started running as Democrats against the failed Republican policies and resistance that have kept LBJ's Great Society programs from succeeding to their fullest extent that they started winning. Now they are going back to their old losing ways, and look what they have accomplished: They lost the House again.

Republicans might claim credit for the success of the Clinton Administration and the prosperity that came with it, but I would point out it was the same Republican Congress that helped the Bush Administration destroy the economy.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Tom Blanton
Mon Jan 10, 2011 3:59 PM
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