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THE MUSINGS OF A TRADITIONAL SOUTHERN DEMOCRAT

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Location: Douglas, Coffee Co., The Other Georgia, United States

Sid in his law office where he sits when meeting with clients. Observant eyes will notice the statuette of one of Sid's favorite Democrats.

Saturday, August 06, 2011

Obama’s role in debt talks scrutinized

From The Washington Post:

The White House was knee-deep in budget negotiations with Republican lawmakers one May afternoon when Senate Democrats boarded buses for a short ride down Pennsylvania Avenue for a face-to-face session with President Obama.

Seated in an auditorium, the senators pressed Obama on their key concern as talks heated up over raising the nation’s debt ceiling: How would he stand up to tea party Republicans?

To the dismay of many in the audience, Obama conceded that he probably couldn’t — and probably wouldn’t — push too hard because he was unwilling to risk a U.S. government default.

“I have no choice,” the president said, according to one participant.

Citing a faction of House conservatives dead-set on opposing any compromise, Obama said he was not “going to stand here and pretend to you that I can just look the other way” if hardball negotiations lead to an economic crisis, according to another person in the room.

Obama is a relative newcomer to the kind of tough negotiating with Republicans that will define the remainder of his term. It’s not a role he faced as a legislator, and during his first two years in office, he scored victories in a Democratic-controlled Congress. In the past nine months, though, Obama has found himself engineering three major budget deals with Republicans.

Obama surprised some of the senators in the room that May day with the answer he gave at the outset of the latest of those negotiations. They suddenly realized that their bottom line, at least in this case, was much different from the one being laid out by the president leading their charge.

For many, it was also an early and revealing glimpse of what they think was an overly cautious negotiating style that they would watch unfold — at times with horror — over the next several weeks. Some thought that Obama, who had already embraced some of the cuts Republicans demanded, had given up too much too soon.

“One side is enormously aggressive in pushing an agenda, and the other is saying, ‘Let’s all get along,’” said Sen. Bernard Sanders, a Vermont independent who caucuses with Democrats and was one of the lawmakers questioning Obama in May. “So who do you think is going to win?”

[The rest of the article is worth your time.]

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