Thursday, July 30, 2009

Obama's legislative shortcomings coming home to roost

One of the best reasons not to have voted for Barack Obama last fall was that he hadn't accomplished much as a legislator while in Springfield and Washington.

To quote Obama's former pastor, "America's chickens, have come home to roost. Michael Barone tells us why:

We knew that day that Obama was good at aura, at generating enthusiasm for the prospect of hope and change. His inspiring speeches -- the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner in Des Moines, the race speech in Philadelphia, the countless rallies in primary and caucus and target states -- helped him capture the Democratic nomination and then win the presidency by the biggest percentage margin in 20 years.

But it turns out that Obama is not so good at argument. Inspiration is one thing, persuasion another. He created the impression on the campaign trail that he was familiar with major issues and readily ticked off his positions on them. But he has not proved so good at legislating.

One reason perhaps is that he has had little practice. He served as a legislator for a dozen years before becoming president, but was only rarely an active one. He spent one of his eight years as an Illinois state senator running unsuccessfully for Congress and two of them running successfully for U.S. senator. He spent two of his years in the U.S. Senate running for president. During all of his seven non-campaign years as a legislator, he was in the minority party.

In other words, he's never done much work putting legislation together -- especially legislation that channels vast flows of money and affects the workings of parts of the economy that deeply affect people's lives. This lack of experience is starting to show. On the major legislation considered this year -- the stimulus, cap-and-trade, health care -- the Obama White House has done little or nothing to set down markers, to provide guidance, to establish boundaries and no-go areas.

The bills with Obama's name on them that were enacted in the Illinois state Senate were largely the work of others, they and were pushed through by the ethically-challenged Emil Jones, then that body's president.

Related posts:

About Obama's state legislature "accomplishments"

Obama's state legislative record--he got a lot of help

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