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Susan Estrich
25 May 2012
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23 May 2012
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"He finally said something," the man in the elevator said to no one in particular as he turned away from the little screen that entertains us with traffic, weather and news as we ride up and down between floors.

I figured "he" was President Obama, but I got to my floor too quickly to see for sure.

As it turned out, what he said "as commander in chief and on behalf of a grateful nation" was "welcome home."

Obama marked the official end to the United States military mission in Iraq on Wednesday with soldiers returning to Fort Bragg, N.C. — purely by coincidence, a potential battleground state in the upcoming election.

In the old days, North Carolina was the sucker punch in Democratic politics. You'd go to the Research Triangle and think, "This is a state Democrats could win," and then invest money and lose and remind yourself that North Carolina was the state that sent the legendary Jesse Helms to the Senate five times. Helms was a guy famous for injecting race — actually racism — into politics. He was the sponsor of the "White Hands" ad in 1990, which vilified his opponent for his support of affirmative action.

But North Carolina is different these days. Helms is gone (he died four months before the 2008 election), and Obama was at his campaign-style best in welcoming home the troops. He walked the line between praising the troops without praising a war he opposed and promised to end; between celebrating the great battles without mentioning the weapons of mass destruction that we were fighting about and never found. To borrow a Bill Clinton staple, he felt the pain of those in the crowd: "There have been missed birthday parties and graduations. There are bills to pay and jobs that have to be juggled with picking up the kids.

For every soldier that goes on patrol, there are the husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, sons and daughters praying that they come back."

While Republicans are enmeshed in an increasingly nasty battle among those who hope to replace the president, Obama — in his trips outside of Washington — is showing flashes of the style and substance that excited both the party and the nation in the last campaign. Having told the other troops — the activists who will be his own ground force in 2012 — that we will have to "grind" out this campaign, the president on these occasions manages to give hope, even for a moment, that the election could be more than that.

My old friend Paul Tully, the late political organizer who taught a generation of us how to do politics, used to have what he called a "48-hour rule." He tried, and mostly succeeded, never to spend more than 48 hours in Washington, because he knew how easy it was to lose touch with what mattered once you dove into the political swamp.

When I watch and listen to Obama on the stump, I remember Tully's 48-hour rule. If only a president could govern from somewhere else. If only this president could hold on to his message, his spirit, his optimism, his ebullience — all of the things that were on display at Fort Bragg — while he grinds it out in Washington. At a time when the country so desperately needs that sense of hope and optimism, it often seems — particularly in those awful, hostile, intensely political press conferences — that the president has lost his.

Watching him in Fort Bragg, it almost seemed possible that the president could get back his soul. In leaving Washington, in pressing into the crowd, in praising the troops and reaching out to them, there were moments when it seemed like the troops were not the only ones who were coming home. So was President Obama.

Welcome home, Mr. President. Here's hoping that Obama, like the returning troops, finds his way back.

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

7 Comments | Post Comment
Obama is fantastic as a campaigner, but piss poor at being a President. His ideology is Marxism (anti-capitalism and spread the wealth) and he's not going to change.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Early
Fri Dec 16, 2011 5:34 AM
Ms Estrich, you seem to be pleased that at an historic, human moment, the President was only capable of rising to the level of a politician. Regardless of the occasion, he apparenty is only capable of one motivation -- the political. Does he have to be so blatant about it?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Motley Wisdom
Fri Dec 16, 2011 5:46 AM
Never fall in love with a politician. It makes you say silly things, and you will inevitably be disappointed.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Ron Pavellas
Fri Dec 16, 2011 6:47 AM
Susan Estrich makes sense!!
Comment: #4
Posted by: papa
Fri Dec 16, 2011 10:42 AM
I was disappointed that the end of the IRAQ war came with little celebration. We should have at least scheduled a military parade in Washington to honor our troops. How tough would that have been.??? These men and women and their families did an incredible job. Something more than a speech by the president at Fort Bragg should have been in order.
I am glad that our military is now out of that country. It no longer make them (and us) the target of extremists and terrorists. Ron Paul is very correct on that. There is nothing wrong with being isolationists , especially when we can't afford military adventurism and interventionism. Soon the Iranians and Iraqis will be fighting each other again and all will be back to normal in the Arab world. I just hope we get our troops out of Pakistan and Afghanistan soon as well. Bring them home and build some training centers on our Texas and Arizona borders and stop the huge military spending that is lining the pockets of fat cats in this country. I think we are tired of their constant propaganda that the sky is falling. Lets bring our military personell home to the hroes welcome they deserve.
President Obama has proposed a jobs bill that specifically targets our military veterans. That bill was blocked by the Republicans in the House.....That is shameful. I cannot believe that the same crowd that was so quick to send these guys off to war, can now slap them in the face.
Comment: #5
Posted by: robert lipka
Fri Dec 16, 2011 6:16 PM


while he grinds it out in Washington?????? The guy is NEVER there and if he is, he is for sale to the highest bidder.
He has been a disaster from the very start.
Comment: #6
Posted by: suzanne
Sun Dec 18, 2011 8:41 PM
"If only a president could govern from somewhere else." Firstly a president does not govern. Last time I checked the Constitution there were supposed to be three co equal branches of Government. That said, the wanna be dictator that presently occupies the Whitehouse, like Estrich, seems not to understand that. To the extent that this POS president governs would that he would govern someone else from somewhere else, in fact anywhere else. Here's hoping, the next time that Obama leaves for abroad to trash America, that he chooses never to come back.
Comment: #7
Posted by: joseph wright
Tue Dec 20, 2011 6:26 AM
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