Obama Is Seen as Frustrating His Own Party - As I have always noted, his lack of being engaged is beyond anything I have ever witnessed. No wonder he leads from behind.
From The New York Times:
WASHINGTON — The meeting in the Oval Office in late June was called to give President Obama and the four top members of Congress a chance to discuss the unraveling situation in Iraq.
WASHINGTON — The meeting in the Oval Office in late June was called to give President Obama and the four top members of Congress a chance to discuss the unraveling situation in Iraq.
But Harry
Reid, the Senate majority leader, wanted to press another point.
With Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader,
sitting a few feet away, Mr. Reid complained that Senate Republicans were
spitefully blocking the confirmation of dozens of Mr. Obama’s nominees to serve
as ambassadors. He expected that the president would back him up and urge Mr.
McConnell to relent.
Mr. Obama quickly dismissed the matter.
“You and Mitch work it out,” Mr. Obama said
coolly, cutting off any discussion.
Mr. Reid seethed quietly for the rest of the
meeting, according to four separate accounts provided by people who spoke with
him about it. After his return to the Capitol that afternoon, Mr. Reid told
other senators and his staff members that he was astonished by how disengaged
the president seemed. After all, these were Mr. Obama’s own ambassadors who were
being blocked by Mr. McConnell, and Secretary of State John Kerry had been
arguing for months that getting them installed was an urgent necessity for the
administration.
But the impression the president left with Mr.
Reid was clear: Capitol Hill is not my problem.
To Democrats in Congress who have worked with
Mr. Obama, the indifference conveyed to Mr. Reid, one of the president’s most
indispensable supporters, was frustratingly familiar. In one sense, Mr. Obama’s
response was a reminder of what made him such an appealing figure in the first
place: his almost innate aversion to the partisan squabbles that have left
Americans so jaded and disgruntled with their political system. But nearly six
years into his term, with his popularity at the lowest of his presidency, Mr.
Obama appears remarkably distant from his own party on Capitol Hill, with his
long neglect of would-be allies catching up to him.
In interviews, nearly two dozen Democratic
lawmakers and senior congressional aides suggested that Mr. Obama’s approach has
left him with few loyalists to effectively manage the issues erupting abroad and
at home and could imperil his efforts to leave a legacy in his final stretch in
office.
Grumbling by lawmakers about a president is
nothing unusual. But what is striking now is the way prominent Democrats’ views
of Mr. Obama’s shortcomings are spilling out into public, and how resigned many
seem that the relationship will never improve. In private meetings, Mr. Reid’s
chief of staff, David Krone, has voiced regular dismay to lawmakers and top
aides about White House operations and competency across a range of issues,
according to several Democrats on Capitol Hill.
“Maybe if something isn’t working, you’d say,
‘What can I do better?’ ” said Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West
Virginia, expressing dismay that the president seemed to have little interest in
taking a warmer approach with Democrats. “Maybe we wanted something different.
But it kind of is what it is.”
Asked to characterize his relationship with
the president, Mr. Manchin, a centrist Democrat who has often been a bridge
builder in the Senate, said: “It’s fairly nonexistent. There’s not much of a
relationship.”
Few senators feel a personal connection to the
president.
“In order to work with people, you need to
establish the relationship first before you ask for something,” said Senator
Angus King of Maine, an independent member of the Democratic caucus. “And I
think one of the things the White House has not done well and the president has
not done well is the simple idea of establishing relationships before there is a
crisis.”
Senator Claire McCaskill, the Missouri
Democrat who was an early supporter of Mr. Obama’s presidential bid, said that
if her fellow Democrats were hoping for Mr. Obama to transform into a Lyndon B.
Johnson late in his second term, they should quit waiting.
“For him, eating his spinach is schmoozing
with elected officials,” she said. “This is not something that he loves. He
wasn’t that kind of senator.”
White House officials flatly reject the idea
that Mr. Obama has failed to build deep ties with Democrats on Capitol Hill.
“The president is fighting to get Democrats
elected and keep the Senate this fall because the stakes are too high for the
American people,” said Amy Brundage, the White House deputy communications
director. “We’re focused on making the case about Democrats’ commitment to
building on the progress we are seeing in the economy and growing the middle
class, and we will continue to work in close partnership with the Democratic
leadership throughout the fall.”
Regarding the meeting with Mr. Reid, White
House aides said that the senator had caught the president off guard by abruptly
shifting the conversation away from a sober discussion of the security threats
in Iraq. Later, Mr. Obama called Mr. McConnell to press him to clear the way for
more confirmations.
The aides also cite 18 meetings this year that
the president has held with groups of lawmakers, not including one-on-one phone
calls or meetings. They say administration advisers routinely consult Democrats
when crafting policy on climate change, the Affordable Care Act and the economy.
They point to four social events for Democrats
that the president hosted this year, and said Mr. Obama had extended 250
invitations to members of Congress for bill signings so far this year.
But in interviews, several Democrats said that
small talk at large, formal White House gatherings was not the kind of
relationship they had in mind.
“I can count them on both hands, and they’re
big,” said Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, referring to the number of
times he has been to the White House since he took office in 2011, and to the
size of the events. “It’s more the interaction that I think has been somewhat
lacking — the personal.”
Early in his presidency, Mr. Obama largely
outsourced his relations with congressional Democrats to Rahm Emanuel, his
hyper-energetic first chief of staff. In the meantime, some Democrats say, they
have just learned to accept the president’s solitary nature and move on.
Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the
No. 2 House Democrat, said that compared with Presidents Bill Clinton and George
W. Bush, Mr. Obama “is more self-contained, less gregarious.” He added: “Does it
somewhat take away from his spending more time with members of Congress and the
Senate and politics? Yes.” But, Mr. Hoyer said, “this president has reached out
as much as any president in my view, been open to compromise as much as any I’ve
observed.”
If there was an opportunity amid the
Washington paralysis for Mr. Obama to build relationships, it might have been
during his frequent golf games. But only twice in more than 180 rounds has the
president invited members of Congress to play with him, and only one Democratic
official — Senator Mark Udall of Colorado — has joined a presidential
foursome.
Democratic senators, for their part, do not
always show up at White House events. Twelve were invited to a St. Patrick’s Day
reception this year, for example, but only one showed up.
Aides tried to encourage Mr. Obama to broaden
his invitation list, to the White House and the links, but the idea went
nowhere.
Several people noted that Mr. Obama’s path to
the White House helped prevent the kind of close relationships that other
presidents forged with Democrats.
Unlike Mr. Clinton, who worked hard as a
candidate to court every Democrat he could — from county chairmen to the
socialite Pamela Harriman and Vernon Jordan, the superlawyer — Mr. Obama
presented himself as unencumbered by the kind of close ties to the Democratic
establishment that would mark him as a creature of Washington.
Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, who
said he had a “closer personal relationship with Mr. Obama than most” of his
colleagues, said that while he was satisfied that the president had tried to
reach out, Mr. Obama would never be a “creature of Washington” like Mr. Clinton.
“I don’t think that was ever in the cards, and I still don’t,” Mr. Durbin
said.
Another point of tension between Senate
Democrats and the White House has been the extent of the president’s
participation in the party’s effort to retain the Senate this fall. A group with
ties to Mr. Reid has established a “super
PAC” to compete with the efforts by the billionaire brothers Charles G. and
David H. Koch to tip control of the Senate to Republicans.
But the White House and Democrats have sparred
over conditions that the administration has put on the president’s
participation, and Mr. Obama has no appearances currently scheduled for the
group.
The back and forth is reminiscent of the 2008
campaign, when Mr. Obama and his aides made a decision that he would not appear
on stage side by side with Democratic lawmakers, given the low popularity of
Congress.
That thinking has continued in the White
House. Members of Congress are usually invited to Mr. Obama’s speeches, but they
sit in the audience. The result is that Democratic members are robbed of a
triumphant picture with the president that they can show their family members,
while the White House sacrifices the loyalty of a once grateful lawmaker.
“The White House has something in common with
the rest of America, and that is disdain for Congress,” Ms. McCaskill said. “It
is hard to blame them.”
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