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Obama Wars Title: Why Is Obama Acting So Weird? Why Is Obama Acting So Weird? Jennifer Rubin - 01.26.2010 - 8:00 AM There are two explanations (maybe more) for the White Houses eerie indifference to all the available evidence concerning their own shoddy performance and the publics reaction to the same, which has resulted in losses in Virginia, New Jersey, and Massachusetts and sent many Democrats fleeing from the 2010 races. There is the Out-to-Lunch explanation. Fred Barnes observes: Quote Months of polls on the president and his policies, the Virginia and New Jersey governors elections, then last weeks momentous Massachusetts Senate race all have sent the blunt message to Obama that, for now, hes lost. But Obama and his team insist on pretending its not true. This is a bad sign. One of the important tests of a president, especially a relatively new one like Obama, is how he deals with a serious setback. Does he respond rationally and realistically? In Obamas case, the answer is no. Sounds like the Democrats need to stage an intervention if the president is that immune to evidence. But maybe he does understand precisely whats going on and doesnt have the wherewithal to revisit his assumptions, get into the weeds of a new agenda, offend old allies on the Left, and morph as Bill Clinton did into an effective centrist. Maybe hed just rather hang it up in three years. In a bizarre interview, thats what it sounded like: President Barack Obama said that he would rather be a really good one-term president than have two mediocre terms. Well, the danger here is his being a really bad one-term president. But after only a year in office, it is, to put it mildly, an odd comment. Of all the times to avoid sounding remote, nonchalant, and snooty, this is it. Yet thats exactly how Obama sounded in an interview he must know will be widely picked over for clues as to the direction of his presidency. Even the New York Times concedes: Quote Mr. Obama is not the first president in trouble to frame the choice as sticking to his principles instead of worrying about his personal political fortunes.
But it is usually a measure of how much difficulty a president is facing when he starts talking about even the prospect of being a one-term president. The reasons for the presidents reaction to his self-made predicament defiance, anger, stubborn indifference are at some point unknowable. For the country and for his party, the reason is less important than the specter of a president who seems disconnected from the public and somewhat lost. Forget the tone for a moment whats the new agenda? A grab bag of small trinkets for the middle class? That sounds like a ripoff of Bill Clinton, which works well in good times but seems, again, out to lunch when unemployment is in double digits. A new populist fury that may spook the very businesses that must regain confidence and hire workers? Sounds rather self-defeating. A doubling-down on health care? Its not clear he has even bare majorities in Congress for Son of ObamaCare. Unfortunately, weve come to see that Obama doesnt shine in a crisis. Not in the aftermath of Irans June election and revolt. Not after Fort Hood. Not after the Christmas Day bombing. Not after his own political wipeout. It takes him multiple chances to sound serious and engaged. He doesnt relate on a visceral level with the public. It should no longer come as a surprise, but it is of concern. If he really does want a second term and wants to be more than a mediocre president, hes going to have to step it up. And quickly.
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Bottom line remains unemployment over 7% means a one term failed Presidency.
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