You hear
it everywhere. Democrats are disappointed in the president. Independents
have soured even more. Republicans have worked themselves up into an
apocalyptic fervor. And, yes, this is not exactly unusual.
A
president in the last year of his first term will always get attacked
mercilessly by his partisan opponents, and also, often, by the feistier
members of his base. And when unemployment is at remarkably high levels,
and with the national debt setting records, the criticism will—and
should be—even fiercer. But this time, with this president, something
different has happened. It’s not that I don’t understand the critiques
of Barack Obama
from the enraged right and the demoralized left. It’s that I don’t even
recognize their description of Obama’s first term in any way. The
attacks from both the right and the left on the man and his policies
aren’t out of bounds. They’re simply—empirically—wrong.
A
caveat: I write this as an unabashed supporter of Obama from early 2007
on. I did so not as a liberal, but as a conservative-minded independent
appalled by the Bush
administration’s record of war, debt, spending, and torture. I did not
expect, or want, a messiah. I have one already, thank you very much. And
there have been many times when I have disagreed with decisions Obama
has made—to drop the Bowles-Simpson debt commission, to ignore the war
crimes of the recent past, and to launch a war in Libya
without Congress’s sanction, to cite three. But given the enormity of
what he inherited, and given what he explicitly promised, it remains
simply a fact that Obama has delivered in a way that the unhinged right
and purist left have yet to understand or absorb. Their short-term
outbursts have missed Obama’s long game—and why his reelection remains,
in my view, as essential for this country’s future as his original
election in 2008.
The
right’s core case is that Obama has governed as a radical leftist
attempting a “fundamental transformation” of the American way of life.
Mitt Romney accuses the president of making the recession worse, of
wanting to turn America into a European welfare state, of not believing
in opportunity or free enterprise, of having no understanding of the
real economy, and of apologizing for America and appeasing our enemies.
According to Romney, Obama is a mortal threat to “the soul” of America
and an empty suit who couldn’t run a business, let alone a country.
Leave
aside the internal incoherence—how could such an incompetent be a
threat to anyone? None of this is even faintly connected to reality—and
the record proves it. On the economy, the facts are these. When Obama
took office, the United States was losing around 750,000 jobs a month.
The last quarter of 2008 saw an annualized drop in growth approaching 9
percent. This was the most serious downturn since the 1930s, there was a
real chance of a systemic collapse of the entire global financial
system, and unemployment and debt—lagging indicators—were about to soar
even further. No fair person can blame Obama for the wreckage of the
next 12 months, as the financial crisis cut a swath through employment.
Economies take time to shift course.
But
Obama did several things at once: he continued the bank bailout begun
by George W. Bush, he initiated a bailout of the auto industry, and he
worked to pass a huge stimulus package of $787 billion.
All
these decisions deserve scrutiny. And in retrospect, they were far more
successful than anyone has yet fully given Obama the credit for. The
job collapse bottomed out at the beginning of 2010, as the stimulus took
effect. Since then, the U.S. has added 2.4 million jobs. That’s not
enough, but it’s far better than what Romney would have you believe, and
more than the net jobs created under the entire Bush administration. In
2011 alone, 1.9 million private-sector jobs were created, while a net
280,000 government jobs were lost. Overall government employment has
declined 2.6 percent over the past 3 years. (That compares with a drop
of 2.2 percent during the early years of the Reagan administration.) To
listen to current Republican rhetoric about Obama’s big-government
socialist ways, you would imagine that the reverse was true. It isn’t.
The
right claims the stimulus failed because it didn’t bring unemployment
down to 8 percent in its first year, as predicted by Obama’s transition
economic team. Instead, it peaked at 10.2 percent. But the 8 percent
prediction was made before Obama took office and was wrong solely
because it relied on statistics that guessed the economy was only
shrinking by around 4 percent, not 9. Remove that statistical
miscalculation (made by government and private-sector economists alike)
and the stimulus did exactly what it was supposed to do. It put a bottom
under the free fall. It is not an exaggeration to say it prevented a
spiral downward that could have led to the Second Great Depression.
You’d
think, listening to the Republican debates, that Obama has raised
taxes. Again, this is not true. Not only did he agree not to sunset the
Bush tax cuts for his entire first term, he has aggressively lowered
taxes on most Americans. A third of the stimulus was tax cuts, affecting
95 percent of taxpayers; he has cut the payroll tax, and recently had
to fight to keep it cut against Republican opposition. His spending
record is also far better than his predecessor’s. Under Bush, new
policies on taxes and spending cost the taxpayer a total of $5.07
trillion. Under Obama’s budgets both past and projected, he will have
added $1.4 trillion in two terms. Under Bush and the GOP, nondefense
discretionary spending grew by twice as much as under Obama. Again:
imagine Bush had been a Democrat and Obama a Republican. You could
easily make the case that Obama has been far more fiscally conservative
than his predecessor—except, of course, that Obama has had to govern
under the worst recession since the 1930s, and Bush, after the 2001
downturn, governed in a period of moderate growth. It takes work to
increase the debt in times of growth, as Bush did. It takes much more
work to constrain the debt in the deep recession Bush bequeathed Obama.
The
great conservative bugaboo, Obamacare, is also far more moderate than
its critics have claimed. The Congressional Budget Office has projected
it will reduce the deficit, not increase it dramatically, as Bush’s
unfunded Medicare Prescription Drug benefit did. It is based on the
individual mandate, an idea pioneered by the archconservative Heritage
Foundation, Newt Gingrich, and, of course, Mitt Romney, in the past. It
does not have a public option; it gives a huge new client base to the
drug and insurance companies; its health-insurance exchanges were also
pioneered by the right. It’s to the right of the Clintons’ monstrosity
in 1993, and remarkably similar to Nixon’s 1974 proposal. Its passage
did not preempt recovery efforts; it followed them. It needs improvement
in many ways, but the administration is open to further reform and has
agreed to allow states to experiment in different ways to achieve the
same result. It is not, as Romney insists, a one-model, top-down
prescription. Like Obama’s Race to the Top education initiative, it sets
standards, grants incentives, and then allows individual states to
experiment. Embedded in it are also a slew of cost-reduction pilot
schemes to slow health-care spending. Yes, it crosses the Rubicon of
universal access to private health care. But since federal law mandates
that hospitals accept all emergency-room cases requiring treatment
anyway, we already obey that socialist principle—but in the most
inefficient way possible. Making 44 million current free-riders pay into
the system is not fiscally reckless; it is fiscally prudent. It is,
dare I say it, conservative.
On
foreign policy, the right-wing critiques have been the most unhinged.
Romney accuses the president of apologizing for America, and others all
but accuse him of treason and appeasement. Instead, Obama reversed
Bush’s policy of ignoring Osama bin Laden, immediately setting a course
that eventually led to his capture and death. And when the moment for
decision came, the president overruled both his secretary of state and
vice president in ordering the riskiest—but most ambitious—plan on the
table. He even personally ordered the extra helicopters that saved the
mission. It was a triumph, not only in killing America’s primary global
enemy, but in getting a massive trove of intelligence to undermine al
Qaeda even further. If George Bush had taken out bin Laden, wiped out al
Qaeda’s leadership, and gathered a treasure trove of real intelligence
by a daring raid, he’d be on Mount Rushmore by now. But where Bush
talked tough and acted counterproductively, Obama has simply, quietly,
relentlessly decimated our real enemies, while winning the broader
propaganda war. Since he took office, al Qaeda’s popularity in the
Muslim world has plummeted.
Obama’s
foreign policy, like Dwight Eisenhower’s or George H.W. Bush’s, eschews
short-term political hits for long-term strategic advantage. It is
forged by someone interested in advancing American interests—not
asserting an ideology and enforcing it regardless of the consequences by
force of arms. By hanging back a little, by “leading from behind” in
Libya and elsewhere, Obama has made other countries actively seek
America’s help and reappreciate our role. As an antidote to the bad
feelings of the Iraq War, it has worked close to perfectly.
But
the right isn’t alone in getting Obama wrong. While the left is less
unhinged in its critique, it is just as likely to miss the screen for
the pixels. From the start, liberals projected onto Obama absurd notions
of what a president can actually do in a polarized country, where
anything requires 60 Senate votes even to stand a chance of making it
into law. They have described him as a hapless tool of Wall Street, a
continuation of Bush in civil liberties, a cloistered elitist unable to
grasp the populist moment that is his historic opportunity. They rail
against his attempts to reach a Grand Bargain on entitlement reform.
They decry his too-small stimulus, his too-weak financial reform, and
his too-cautious approach to gay civil rights. They despair that he
reacts to rabid Republican assaults with lofty appeals to unity and
compromise.
They
miss, it seems to me, two vital things. The first is the simple scale
of what has been accomplished on issues liberals say they care about. A
depression was averted. The bail-out of the auto industry
was—amazingly—successful. Even the bank bailouts have been repaid to a
great extent by a recovering banking sector. The Iraq War—the issue that
made Obama the nominee—has been ended on time and, vitally, with no
troops left behind. Defense is being cut steadily, even as Obama has
moved his own party away from a Pelosi-style reflexive defense of all
federal entitlements. Under Obama, support for marriage equality and
marijuana legalization has crested to record levels. Under Obama, a
crucial state, New York, made marriage equality for gays an irreversible
fact of American life. Gays now openly serve in the military, and the
Defense of Marriage Act is dying in the courts, undefended by the Obama
Justice Department. Vast government money has been poured into noncarbon
energy investments, via the stimulus. Fuel-emission standards have been
drastically increased. Torture was ended. Two moderately liberal women
replaced men on the Supreme Court. Oh, yes, and the liberal holy grail
that eluded Johnson and Carter and Clinton, nearly universal health
care, has been set into law. Politifact recently noted that of 508
specific promises, a third had been fulfilled and only two have not had
some action taken on them. To have done all this while simultaneously
battling an economic hurricane makes Obama about as honest a
follow-through artist as anyone can expect from a politician.
What
liberals have never understood about Obama is that he practices a
show-don’t-tell, long-game form of domestic politics. What matters to
him is what he can get done, not what he can immediately take credit
for. And so I railed against him for the better part of two years for
dragging his feet on gay issues. But what he was doing was getting his
Republican defense secretary and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs to
move before he did. The man who made the case for repeal of “don’t ask,
don’t tell” was, in the end, Adm. Mike Mullen. This took time—as did his
painstaking change in the rule barring HIV-positive immigrants and
tourists—but the slow and deliberate and unprovocative manner in which
it was accomplished made the changes more durable. Not for the first
time, I realized that to understand Obama, you have to take the long
view. Because he does.
Or
take the issue of the banks. Liberals have derided him as a captive of
Wall Street, of being railroaded by Larry Summers and Tim Geithner into a
too-passive response to the recklessness of the major U.S. banks. But
it’s worth recalling that at the start of 2009, any responsible
president’s priority would have been stabilization of the financial
system, not the exacting of revenge. Obama was not elected, despite
liberal fantasies, to be a left-wing crusader. He was elected as a
pragmatic, unifying reformist who would be more responsible than Bush.
And
what have we seen? A recurring pattern. To use the terms Obama first
employed in his inaugural address: the president begins by extending a
hand to his opponents; when they respond by raising a fist, he
demonstrates that they are the source of the problem; then, finally, he
moves to his preferred position of moderate liberalism and fights for it
without being effectively tarred as an ideologue or a divider. This
kind of strategy takes time. And it means there are long stretches when
Obama seems incapable of defending himself, or willing to let others to
define him, or simply weak. I remember those stretches during the
campaign against Hillary Clinton. I also remember whose strategy won out
in the end.
This
is where the left is truly deluded. By misunderstanding Obama’s
strategy and temperament and persistence, by grandstanding on one issue
after another, by projecting unrealistic fantasies onto a candidate who
never pledged a liberal revolution, they have failed to notice that from
the very beginning, Obama was playing a long game. He did this with his
own party over health-care reform. He has done it with the Republicans
over the debt. He has done it with the Israeli government over stopping
the settlements on the West Bank—and with the Iranian regime, by not
playing into their hands during the Green Revolution, even as they
gunned innocents down in the streets. Nothing in his first
term—including the complicated multiyear rollout of universal health
care—can be understood if you do not realize that Obama was always
planning for eight years, not four. And if he is reelected, he will have
won a battle more important than 2008: for it will be a mandate for an
eight-year shift away from the excesses of inequality, overreach abroad,
and reckless deficit spending of the last three decades. It will
recapitalize him to entrench what he has done already and make it
irreversible.
Yes,
Obama has waged a war based on a reading of executive power that many
civil libertarians, including myself, oppose. And he has signed into law
the indefinite detention of U.S. citizens without trial (even as he
pledged never to invoke this tyrannical power himself). But he has done
the most important thing of all: excising the cancer of torture from
military detention and military justice. If he is not reelected, that
cancer may well return. Indeed, many on the right appear eager for it to
return.
Sure,
Obama cannot regain the extraordinary promise of 2008. We’ve already
elected the nation’s first black president and replaced a tongue-tied
dauphin with a man of peerless eloquence. And he has certainly failed to
end Washington’s brutal ideological polarization, as he pledged to do.
But most Americans in polls rightly see him as less culpable for this
impasse than the GOP. Obama has steadfastly refrained from waging the
culture war, while the right has accused him of a “war against
religion.” He has offered to cut entitlements (and has already cut
Medicare), while the Republicans have refused to raise a single dollar
of net revenue from anyone. Even the most austerity-driven government in
Europe, the British Tories, are to the left of that. And it is this
Republican intransigence—from the 2009 declaration by Rush Limbaugh that
he wants Obama “to fail” to the Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell’s admission that his primary objective is denying Obama a
second term—that has been truly responsible for the deadlock. And the
only way out of that deadlock is an electoral rout of the GOP, since the
language of victory and defeat seems to be the only thing it
understands.
If
I sound biased, that’s because I am. Biased toward the actual record,
not the spin; biased toward a president who has conducted himself with
grace and calm under incredible pressure, who has had to manage crises
not seen since the Second World War and the Depression, and who as yet
has not had a single significant scandal to his name. “To see what is in
front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle,” George Orwell once
wrote. What I see in front of my nose is a president whose character,
record, and promise remain as grotesquely underappreciated now as they
were absurdly hyped in 2008. And I feel confident that sooner rather
than later, the American people will come to see his first term from the
same calm, sane perspective. And decide to finish what they started.
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Andrew Sullivan, former editor of The New Republic, weekly columnist for the Sunday Times of London, brought his hugely popular blog, The Dish, to the Daily Beast in 2011. He's the author of several books, including "Virtually Normal," "Love Undetectable," and "The Conservative Soul."
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.
Andrew Sullivan, former editor of The New Republic, weekly columnist for the Sunday Times of London, brought his hugely popular blog, The Dish, to the Daily Beast in 2011. He's the author of several books, including "Virtually Normal," "Love Undetectable," and "The Conservative Soul."
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.
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