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Obama Wars Title: Obama faces growing credibility crisis Obama faces growing credibility crisis By Edward Luce in Washington Published: July 13 2010 18:51 | Last updated: July 13 2010 18:51 Robert Gibbs, Barack Obamas chief spokesman, got into hot water this week for daring to speak the truth that the Democrats could lose control of the House of Representatives in November. But it could be even worse than that. Contrary to pretty much every projection until now, Democratic control of the Senate is also starting to coming into question. While Mr Obamas approval ratings have continued to fall, and now hover at dangerously close to 40 per cent according an ABC-Washington Post poll published on Tuesday, the fate of his former colleagues in the Senate looks even worse. EDITORS CHOICE Opinion: Hell no is not a platform for power - Jul-13In depth: The Obama presidency - May-23Obama attacked over business regulation - Jul-12Video: Donohue on business regulation - Jul-12Global Insight: US financial reform - Jul-12White House taps Lew for budget office - Jul-13In the past few days polls have shown Republican challengers taking the lead over previously safe Democratic incumbents, such as Barbara Boxer in California and Russ Feingold in Wisconsin. Indeed, given the uniformly negative direction in the numbers, it is now quite possible the Republicans could win the Senate seats formerly held by both President Obama in Illinois, and Joe Biden, vice-president, in Delaware. Add to that the continuing woes of Harry Reid, the Senate Democratic majority leader, in Nevada, where the Republican partys recent nomination of Sharron Angle, a far-right and highly eccentric Tea Party supporter, appear to have had no positive effect on Mr Reids prospects, and the Grand Old party has a good shot at taking control of both houses of Congress. Worse for Mr Obama, political scientists say that at this stage in the calendar, there is almost nothing he can do about it. If you ask me where the silver lining is for President Obama, I have to say I cannot see one, says Bill Galston, a former Clinton official, who has been predicting for months the Democrats could lose the House. Just as BPs failure to cap the well has been so damaging, Obamas failure to cap unemployment will be his undoing. There is nothing he can do to affect the jobless rate before November. The direction of the data could hardly be worse. According to Democracy Corps, a group headed by Stanley Greenberg, a liberal pollster who is a close friend of Rahm Emanuel, Mr Obamas chief of staff, a majority of US citizens see Mr Obama as too liberal. Astonishingly, 55 per cent of citizens think Mr Obama is a socialist against only 39 per cent who do not share that diagnosis. The same poll shows 48 per cent support for Republicans against just 42 per cent for Democrats. The numbers are eerily similar to 2006, except that it was George W. Bushs Republicans who were on the receiving end four years ago. The bottom line here is that Americans dont believe in President Obamas leadership, says Rob Shapiro, another former Clinton official and a supporter of Mr Obama. He has to find some way between now and November of demonstrating that he is a leader who can command confidence and, short of a 9/11 event or an Oklahoma City bombing, I cant think of how he could do that. In private, informal advisors to Mr Obama are almost as negative. According to one, the US publics loss of confidence in Mr Obamas leadership is a factor above and beyond their dissatisfaction over the state of the real economy, which continues to slow as last years $787bn stimulus starts to run dry. The adviser, who asked to remain anonymous, said the public did not know what Mr Obama really believed. Examples include his lukewarm support last year for a public option in the healthcare bill and his equally lukewarm support today for a Senate bill that would extend unemployment insurance and aid state governments to keep teachers in their jobs. In both cases, Mr Obama has offered only token, negotiable, support. I never thought I would say this, but even Im unsure what President Obama really believes, says the adviser. Instead of outsourcing decisions to Congress, he should spell out his bottom line. That is what leaders are for. Next week, Mr Obama is likely to sign a historic Wall Street re-regulation bill into law. Earlier this year he did the same for healthcare. But polls show the public either does not care, or even opposes these otherwise big reforms. The longer this goes on, the more it looks like Obama wasted his first year on healthcare, said the outside adviser. Its still the economy, stupid. Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.
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#1. To: Badeye (#0)
There's an old adage that is very instructive here: Those who can't do, teach. The Obama administration is filled with academics who have never run anything in their lives except their mouths. So of course everything he's done has been a miserable failure, because they don't know what they are doing. This is not ONLY the most ideologically leftist administration in America's history, it is also one of the most inept. Even Carter got a few things right (appointing Volker to stamp out inflation and partially deregulating interstate trucking).
Full agreement with everything you wrote here.
Obama's first all-by-his-lonesome budget, btw, calls for a $1.17 trillion deficit.
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