Commentary

Obama’s good start

POSTED AT 10:55 PM ON Nov. 3, 2009 | PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (4)

Sitting in on a few IU College Democrats meetings, I have seen plenty of reminders that, since President Obama was elected one year ago today, many things haven’t changed.

Campus Democrats are preparing for a debate on health care against the IU College Republicans scheduled for Nov. 11 – months after Obama made his big summer push for reform.

Two weeks ago, the group had a lengthy discussion about global warming.

The group’s president, senior AnnElyse Gibbons, highlighted an old Paul Krugman column suggesting the conservative pushback against a cap-and-trade legislation was likely to be as fierce as the one against health care.

That cap-and-trade legislation, which cleared the floor of the House of Representatives last June, still faces an uncertain future in the Senate.

Obama made some big promises, and the man knew how to make a promise. If the students who packed into Assembly Hall two years ago to see Obama before the Indiana presidential primary were really as excited as they looked, I can only imagine how down some liberals are feeling now.

Not to mention how conservatives, who have unfairly attacked Obama as a wide-eyed radical, feel about the man.

Any sort of judgment about Obama’s presidency so far has to come with the understanding that the machinery of American government is cumbersome and slow. On the most important issue facing our country – stabilizing the economy – this president has done fairly well.

The government just announced that our economy grew for the first time in nearly a year, evidence that this recession is probably over.

Obama deserves plenty of credit for this turnaround. He stuck with the politically unpopular bank-bailouts started under his predecessor and he helped push through a stimulus about as fast as $787 billion has ever been spent.

A recent tariff on Chinese tires was disappointing, but a quick trip across the border to assure Canadians about the North American Free Trade Agreement and pressure from Obama on Democrats to keep the crudest forms of protectionism out of the stimulus helped avoid a slump in world trade.

There have been some mistakes.

Obama should have put even more pressure on congressional Democrats to prevent the stimulus from turning into the grab bag for personal projects that much of the bill was. Trying to rescue GM and Chrysler has, predictably, led to a situation where political pressure is making it harder for both companies to restructure.

Still, Obama has done more to help an economic turnaround than hurt it.

Now he will have to take a tougher stand on the many issues he has put off.

There was a lengthy discussion about “don’t ask, don’t tell” during the last IU College Democrats meeting. On a white board at the front of the room the numbers of those discharged simply for being openly gay were listed year by year. This continues to happen because of a policy most Americans, even self-identified conservatives, oppose.

Obama is off to a good start, but he still has a lot of work to do.

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Posted by Katie at 9:1 AM on Nov 05, 2009 | Report this comment

Learn the facts about the cap and trade legislation at www.dontcapandtradeourjobsIN.com

Posted by mandyAmanda at 1:23 PM on Nov 04, 2009 | Report this comment

The GOP needs a lot of work, but Obama is way worse. I hope he gets kicked out of office. He is a very bad President. Bush was better I think.

Posted by POR Economy at 11:8 AM on Nov 04, 2009 | Report this comment

The Pelosi-Obama-Reid (POR) economy kicked in during the latter part of June 2007, when its Congressional architects — Nancy Pelosi, Barack Obama, and Harry Reid — decided that starving the economy of energy by refusing to allow more offshore drilling in the face of $4 gas prices was a winning political position. Pelosi claimed that because we couldn’t totally “drill our way out of this,” we shouldn’t increase drilling at all. Reid put an exclamation point on Pelosi’s stubbornness by insisting that fossil fuels are “making us sick.” Well, they only thing sickened by their policies was the US Economy. FDR tried massive public works programs during the Depression. All he did is prolong it for seven years. Japan tried government stimulus for 10 years running in the 1990s. It only resulted in “the lost decade.” What Pelosi, Obama, and Reid should do is expand the tax cut element of the stimulus plan to include all incomes, ditch almost all of the alleged “investments,” open up oil and gas exploration, and, eventually, watch the royalty money pour in. I know; that’s way too much to “hope” for.

Posted by Bob at 5:52 AM on Nov 04, 2009 | Report this comment

The GOP needs to redefine what it is about. Fiscal conservatism, individual liberties, protect societal norms and promote commerace. Quit trying to smooze the liberal base of the democrats. We want a nation were our effort is compensated by it's value not reallocated to those who's effort is only on election day every 4 years.


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