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Obama the Moderate President

It has been very interesting watching American political discourse after Obama’s inauguration from the comforts of the United Kingdom. I think that its just beginning to sink in to most people in America that Obama is not the mythical superhero that he portrayed himself to be during the Decision 2008 election assault course, but he is in fact (shock horror) a politician.

Let me add that I believe he is a very good politician, but you wouldn’t have known it listening to US cable chatter and ideological blogs. The fact that both sides of the isle have something against this man draws me to make the conclusion that there is something odd about Obama.

The Republicans have been beating the long warn fear drum on issues such as national security (“Obama will let terrorists into you’re neighbourhood”), social issues (“Obama will kill you’re babies”), religious issues (“Obama is a closet muslim”) and patriotism (“Why does he apologise for America so much”).
What the republicans forget is that right about now, almost six months into his presidency, Obama has not strayed too far from the ideological ‘conservative’ values on security such as using military force sparingly, using all diplomatic options available to you and defending your self when necessary. Obama has managed to revive America’s diplomatic arm with incredible ease that I am left to ask the question, what did Condi Rice actually do during her time as Secretary of State?
I also believe that Obama’s Cairo speech has done more for America’s security than anything the previous two occupants of the Oval Office ever accomplished. You could make the argument that the speech encouraged the young people of Iran to gather in great numbers and vote in their own national elections with enormous pride. You have to ask yourself the question; would we be seeing the extraordinary scenes in Iran if Obama did not give that speech? A speech which many ‘conservatives’ deem un-American because of its positive tone towards the Islamic people who came to represent the enemy during the past eight years.

It is also interesting that Obama has drawn such harsh criticism from his own flank of the party. There are some who accuse Obama of being too centrist and not liberal enough (the irony is too much for me to handle sometimes).
This is a president who has passed legislation for fair pay (Ledbetter), healthcare for children and has put into action the closing down of Gitmo. Let’s also not forget that he has managed to pass an astronomical stimulus bill (a bill which I thought the Republicans had every right to scrutinise) and has a real chance passing a historical healthcare bill. Did I mention that he has only been in office six months?
It is also said that Obama wants to tackle energy reform, immigration reform and education reform all in his first term, so I understand why he is keeping away from the hot button, divisive social issues which disabled the first Clinton term.
I find just as incredibly short sighted that many liberal activists have started to sharpen their knives for Obama after only six months. Liberal blogs who mocked the right claiming that conservative voters have almost become single issue activists can be accused of the very same crime today. The left have lost sight of the long game and have reverted to the short sighted political gains which have guided republicans to their downfall today.

As I said in the introduction, Obama truly seems like a breath of fresh air. A change if you will.
But a leopard is a leopard and Obama is a politician. He may not be the ideological yang to the Conservative Reagan Ying but he is an extremely fascinating public figure, not because of his much publicised life story, or the historical nature of his presidency but I truly believe that he could be the first moderate president America has had since George Herbert Walker Bush. Only time will tell whether his moderate nature is a gift or a curse.

  • vwcat
    Obama never portrayed himself as a super hero. Others did but, he did not. Those who actually listened to what he was saying during the campaign are not surprised by the president he is.
    Obama is doing what he said he would do and is behaving as the center left politician who rejects hard core ideology as he always has been.
    He never said he was about ideology. Actually, as my senator, we in Illinois knew this. He is basically someone who leans left but, if something sounds like it will work and it comes from a republican, hey, he will use it.
    this is what most of his supporters expected and know about the guy.
    He is of a school similar to Kennedy and Truman. Progressive on domestic issues but, centrist on foreign affairs. But, most of all, a very practical and pragmatic guy. I argued this to fellow democrats way back in the beginning of the campaign season of 2007.
    The fact that the right is going off the rails over this guy and tries to make him out to be some ultra radical leftist is simply hillarious to us.
  • vwcat
    Sorry about double post.
    I also have been highly disappointed in my fellow liberals. the fact that they expect and demand that Obama fix everything within a week and that he has not done so within 6 months, including curing cancer and ending world poverty is so unrealistic and selfish.
    Plus, they demand and stomp their feet because they expect him to put their pet issue, single issue, at the top of his list over the economy and wars and other much more pressing matters and crisis.
    Not only do they show their hypocrisy when they only care about their pet, single issue over all else when they attacked the right for this, but, they show an incredibly self absorbed and childish temper in demanding their issue be the most important.
    Also the foot stomping and rejection of Obama and trashing the man because he cannot do the impossible and do it alone. Fixing the multiple crisis that Bush left to him to fix and do so overnight.
    All I see from both sides are an immaturity that is stunning.
    The right is braying about all sorts of silliness while behaving like spoiled 10 year olds.
    the right is demanding their issue be addressed before all else and that all the broken things be fixed right away and in time for dinner.
  • Father_Time
    I am very happy to agree with you Dalitso. I think our new President is a bit under rated in general by the media, "in general". However we all know that a President's power rests in congress voting for his bills. Now days that means that his party is in power in sufficient numbers. Unfortunately it also means that the unelected power over the American government, the Lobby, must either agree or their money and influence effectively suppressed by popular opinion, (which rarely occurs), to get those bills passed.

    The President was elected on a very liberal platform. I expect and believe I am getting a liberal political push by the President. If by pulling back on social liberalism is the compromise to gain congressional votes on REAL healthcare reform, real energy/ecology reform, and, getting out of Iraq, then I am happy. After that, I would hope that he could pull out a surprise Lobby Reform package to give the individual voter more influence. Hopefully these will include solid regulation on business and specifically the financial industries since it is obvious that they cannot self regulate with integrity. I do not believe the current lobby powerhouse politics reflects what or forefathers intended in the Constitution with regard to “Redress of Government”.

    If my opinion seems a little to liberal for a moderate, please consider how far to the right government has gone in the past eight years. While considering, don’t forget to factor in the sad state our country is in because of that right wing leadership. My suggestion, is that our right wing is incompetently to far to the right for our nation’s good, and, must reform itself in the moderate direction.
  • Leonidas
    Deleted for double post.
  • Leonidas
    Moderate? not at all except on a very few issues..

    In general he has been very far left on economic matters, stimulas, nationalization of businesses, cap and trade, etc.

    On presidential power he has been very authoritarian and not much different from George Bush. Fisa, indefinate detention, blocking detainee abuse photos, rendition, etc.

    Next time you think of Obama as a moderate read this

    http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/06/...

    If you still think Obama is a moderate, I guess you think Bush and Cheney were too.

    I've seen very little in the way of meoderation. I would much have preferred a more moderate President like John McCain or Hilliary Clinton in office. I am not pleased with this administrations actions thus far with the sole exception of foreign policy.
  • DLS
    "In general he has been very far left on economic matters, stimulas, nationalization of businesses, cap and trade, etc."

    I would say "well left" but not "very far left." Certainly he is no more a moderate than this Web site is.

    What complicates things is how much he has lib Dems do the dirtier (farther-left) work for him and how much it really is their doing. In the past (unless it has been staged, i.e,. faked) he has had to keep the more ambitious and too-extreme left Dems in Congress in line. (He really needs to _muzzle_ the lib Dems in Congress, if he wants to win mainstream appeal and retain its respect.)
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