Friday, January 15, 2010

Charles Krauthammer on the fall of Obama

The Washington Post's Charles Krauthammer is the keenest documenatarian on the rise--and fall--of Barack Obama.

From his latest column:

It's inherently risky for any charismatic politician to legislate. To act is to choose and to choose is to disappoint the expectations of many who had poured their hopes into the empty vessel -- of which candidate Obama was the greatest representative in recent American political history.

Obama did not just act, however. He acted ideologically. To his credit, Obama didn't just come to Washington to be someone. Like Reagan, he came to Washington to do something -- to introduce a powerful social democratic stream into America's deeply and historically individualist polity.

Perhaps Obama thought he'd been sent to the White House to do just that. If so, he vastly over-read his mandate. His own electoral success -- twinned with handy victories and large majorities in both houses of Congress -- was a referendum on his predecessor's governance and the post-Lehman financial collapse. It was not an endorsement of European-style social democracy.

Hence the resistance. Hence the fall. The system may not always work, but it does take its revenge.

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1 comment:

Genevieve Netz said...

"The system may not always work, but it does take its revenge."

I pray that the revenge comes quickly. The election in Massachusetts would be a nice place for it to start.