Memo to presidential bashers of the progressive persuasion: Chill.
A verbal assault from the Left recalls what Lyndon Johnson would snarl to quiet his critics, “I’m the only president you’ve got.” Yet LBJ had no cable news or Internet to amplify the noise, and his aggressive personality was 180 degrees from that of Barack Obama.
In the wake of November 2nd, the White House is under siege with a blame game from former backers to balance Tea Party venom: If only Obama had done this, if only…i.e., Michael Moore smugly telling Bill Maher that the President should have pushed for single-payer health care in a real world where Congress butchered even the feeble bill that passed.
To top it all off, two Democratic pollsters now opine that “Obama should announce immediately that he will not be a candidate for reelection in 2012.
“If the president goes down the reelection road, we are guaranteed two years of political gridlock at a time when we can ill afford it. But by explicitly saying he will be a one-term president, Obama can deliver on his central campaign promise of 2008, draining the poison from our culture of polarization and ending the resentment and division that have eroded our national identity and common purpose.”
Brilliant. By becoming a lame duck, the President will magically purify the political air and bring the country together.
In this atmosphere, it may be time to form a Committee to Defend the President so he can keep functioning for the next two years in his imperfect way despite his so-called friends as well as his enemies.
A New York Times editorial advises the triumphant GOP to “Try Something Hard: Governing.” That should be addressed to terrified Democratic officeholders and purist progressive pundits as well.
If President Obama wants guidance for this hard time, he can look past LBJ to Harry Truman, who ran for reelection in 1948 against a “Do Nothing Congress” and won.