Joe wrote this morning about a Washington Post piece today proclaiming that had Obama only listened to Rahm, the President wouldn't be in the pickle he's in today. Joe discussed the political implications of the President's Chief of Staff mounting a campaign in the media to blame his boss for having poor judgment. I want to discuss another part of the article, this one dealing with health care reform.
First, the snippet, then why I think this kind of messaging is dangerous:
When health-care reform became the administration's focus, Emanuel's public persona was that of a partisan field marshal. But before Obama and his advisers settled on a policy of expansive scope, Emanuel back in August suggested a smaller bill that would be easier to pass, according to another administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
When the larger measure stalled, Emanuel harangued Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and later argued to Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) to strike the public option from the legislation to expedite passage, the source said. Reid insisted on putting it in.
"One thing that has frustrated Rahm," said Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. (D-Pa.), "is how the Senate works."
As health-care negotiations inched along at the end of last year, Emanuel grew impatient about addressing national joblessness concerns. One Democratic senator who wanted to pivot to unemployment said Emanuel shared his thinking. " 'I understand, I understand. We have to get to jobs,' " the senator, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations, recalled Emanuel commiserating. In a meeting with the president and chief of staff, the senator stated his case, but Obama decided the priority was seeing health-care reform through.
"It was the president's call," said the senator, who added that Emanuel showed no trace of objection. "A play was called, and he was running the play."
There are several problems with this story line:
1. If true, it's appalling that by August the White House still hadn't decided what it even wanted out of health care reform. The President should have had a plan from day one, and during the campaign he told us, repeatedly, that he did.
2. Why was Rahm suggesting passage of a smaller, easier bill in August? The President hadn't yet started fighting for the bill, any bill, at this point. Remember, in August the White House was
still, inexplicably, leaving things up to Max Baucus and the "gang of six" to work out a bipartisan deal, rather than having the President engage. And, as noted above, the White House hadn't even settled on what they wanted out of the bill. Yet, they were already discussing throwing in the towel and settling for something less than what they promised, when they hadn't even as of yet unleashed the President to actually fight for anything?
3. "One thing that has frustrated Rahm," said Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. (D-Pa.), "is how the Senate works."
You're the White House chief of staff and you didn't realize how the Senate works? It's your job. If it's too difficult to work within the known confines of our democratic system of government, then quit and let someone else take over. But whining about how the Senate "frustrated" you, as an excuse for why nothing got down? Why didn't Rahm unleash the President if he was so frustrated that things weren't getting done? For that matter, what did the President do last year to push health care reform. He gave some speeches. What else? Seriously, name what he did. You can't think of much, can you, beside the joint session of Congress speech.
4. "As health-care negotiations inched along at the end of last year, Emanuel grew impatient about addressing national joblessness concerns."
Cute. We learned earlier in the article, as Joe wrote this morning, that it was Rahm who sided with efforts for a smaller-than-necessary stimulus. The reason the nation needed our government to do more about joblessness after passage of the stimulus was because the White House, under Rahm, didn't even try to pass the larger stimulus plan that all the experts, including their own chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, said they needed to pass in order to avert another Great Depression and 10%+ unemployment. Instead, Rahm was "responsive" to Olympia Snowe's bid to cut the stimulus back even further. Yet, just a few months later, Rahm is complaining that we should cave on the President's health care reform promises because we need to address the very joblessness that has remained unaddressed because of Rahm's earlier cave on the stimulus.
Precious.
5. If the article is correct, and Rahm is the ignored genius in the White House, then someone else is to blame for the colossal mess that we are currently in. So who is Rahm blaming? It's got be one of a select group of people: Obama; Axelrod; Gibbs, Jarrett, or possibly Messina. Who else could it be? If Rahm isn't to blame, then who is to blame?
And finally, the danger posed by this kind of revisionism. Look, the White House, and Democrats in Congress, screwed up royally. We the people handed them a super-majority in Congress, control of the White House (and a sizable victory in the electoral college and in raw numbers), insanely high approval ratings, an utterly destroyed and demoralized GOP, and a nation yearning for (and promised) historic change.
What did we get?
In a little over a year, the President is despised by a sizable minority of the public, Democrats are about to lose control of the Congress, health care reform has been gutted (still isn't finished, and the President is compromising again tomorrow), and promises on immigration, climate change, gay rights and most other major issue areas are nowhere to be seen. All that in just 14 months.
We are not in this sorry state simply because no one listened to the boy genius whispering in the President's ear. And we are certainly not in this mess because the President didn't compromise enough. We are in this predicament because Democrats, including the President himself, refuse to fight. Until Democrats in Congress grow a spine, and until the President realizes that he is more than a figurehead whose sole job is to give moving speeches about things he's never going to do, history is going to repeat itself. The Democrats will remain weak, the President will remain aloof (and irrelevant), and the Republicans will continue to define the debate until they are controlling House, the Senate and the White House. And then, God help us.
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