Join the club. The thing is, if you watch the video, Steve, like many Democratic supporters of Obama, strikes me as conflicted. Worried, critical, then defensive of the President. It's what we saw with Republican support for Bush, even in the final years of his presidency. They didn't like what he was doing, how he was governing, but they also had a hard time saying it publicly. To paraphrase the old saying: You vote it, you buy it. It's hard to admit that the man you loved isn't what you thought he was.
And one small point. On gay rights, Steve talks about the President signing the Hate Crimes bill. Yes he did. But any Democratic president would have signed it. Did the President spend any political capital to get Hate Crimes passed? No. The bill had already passed the previous congress, and even beaten a GOP filibuster in the Senate. The President certainly gets credit for signing the bill, but that was hardly the difficult part.
The problem is that the White House very often seems to think that their job is to sign things. And to give speeches about how they'd like to sign things. They don't seem to understand that a large part of their job is actually working to get things passed in Congress, not just waiting for Congress to perhaps act, perhaps not. And actually, the problem is even more than that. I'm sure many in the White House believe that they actually DID do a lot to push health care reform. That they have done a lot to follow through on their gay rights promises, and lots of other campaign promises. That's because they confuse speeches with action.
It's as if there's a fundamental misunderstanding of the role, and power, of the presidency. And as much as people like to blame Rahm, it's not like he's holding Barack Obama hostage. In the end, the President decides what kind of presidency he wants. And the current occupant has decided to set his sights rather low.
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