Now for the Slaughter
On the road to Demon Pass, our leader encounters a Baier.
By Peggy Noonan WSJ.com
Excuse me, but it is embarrassing—really, embarrassing to our country—that
the president of the United States has again put off a state visit to Australia
and Indonesia because he's having trouble passing a piece of domestic
legislation he's been promising for a year will be passed next week. What an air
of chaos this signals to the world. And to do this to Australia of all
countries, a nation that has always had America's back and been America's
friend.
How bush league, how undisciplined, how kid's stuff.
You could see the startled looks on the faces of reporters as Press Secretary
Robert Gibbs, who had the grace to look embarrassed, made the announcement on
Thursday afternoon. The president "regrets the delay"—the trip is rescheduled
for June—but "passage of the health insurance reform is of paramount
importance." Indonesia must be glad to know it's not.
The reporters didn't even provoke or needle in their questions. They seemed
hushed. They looked like people who were absorbing the information that we all
seem to be absorbing, which is that the wheels seem to be coming off this thing,
the administration is wobbling—so early, so painfully and dangerously soon.
Thursday's decision followed the most revealing and important broadcast
interview of Barack Obama ever. It revealed his primary weakness in speaking of
health care, which is a tendency to dodge, obfuscate and mislead. He grows testy
when challenged. It revealed what the president doesn't want revealed, which is
that he doesn't want to reveal much about his plan. This furtiveness is not
helpful in a time of high public anxiety. At any rate, the interview was what
such interviews rarely are, a public service. That it occurred at a high-stakes
time, with so much on the line, only made it more electric.
I'm speaking of the interview Wednesday on Fox News Channel's "Special Report
With Bret Baier." Fox is owned by News Corp., which also owns this newspaper, so
one should probably take pains to demonstrate that one is attempting to speak
with disinterest and impartiality, in pursuit of which let me note that Glenn
Beck has long appeared to be insane.
That having been said, the Baier interview was something, and right from the
beginning. Mr. Baier's first question was whether the president supports the
so-called Slaughter rule, alternatively known as "deem and pass," which would
avoid a straight up-or-down House vote on the Senate bill. (Tunku Varadarajan in
the Daily Beast cleverly notes that it sounds like "demon pass," which it does.
Maybe that's the juncture we're at.) Mr. Obama, in his response, made the usual
case for ObamaCare. Mr. Baier pressed him. The president said, "The vote that's
taken in the House will be a vote for health-care reform." We shouldn't, he
added, concern ourselves with "the procedural issues."
Further in, Mr. Baier: "So you support the deem-and-pass rule?" From the
president, obfuscation. But he did mention something new: "They may have to
sequence the votes." The bill's opponents would be well advised to look into
that one.
Mr. Baier again: So you'll go deem-and-pass and you don't know exactly what
will be in the bill?
Mr. Obama's response: "By the time the vote has taken place, not only will I
know what's in it, you'll know what's in it, because it's going to be posted and
everybody's going to be able to evaluate it on the merits."
That's news in two ways. That it will be posted—one assumes the president
means on the Internet and not nailed to a telephone pole—should suggest it will
be posted for a while, more than a few hours or days. So American will finally
get a look at it. And the president was conceding that no, he doesn't know
what's in the bill right now. It is still amazing that one year into the debate
this could be true.
Mr. Baier pressed on the public's right to know what is in the bill. We have
been debating the bill for a year, the president responded: "The notion that
this has been not transparent, that people don't know what's in the bill,
everybody knows what's in the bill. I sat for seven hours with—."
Mr. Baier interrupts: "Mr. President, you couldn't tell me what the special
deals are that are in or not today."
Mr. Obama: "I just told you what was in and what was not in."
Mr. Baier: "Is Connecticut in?" He was referring to the blandishments—polite
word—meant to buy the votes of particular senators.
Mr. Obama: "Connecticut—what are you specifically referring to?"
Mr. Baier: "The $100 million for the hospital? Is Montana in for the asbestos
program? Is—you know, listen, there are people—this is real money, people are
worried about this stuff."
Mr. Obama: "And as I said before, this—the final provisions are going to be
posted for many days before this thing passes."
Mr. Baier pressed the president on his statement as a candidate for the
presidency that a 50-plus-one governing mentality is inherently divisive. "You
can't govern" that way, Sen. Obama had said. Is the president governing that way
now? Mr. Obama did not really answer.
Throughout, Mr. Baier pressed the president. Some thought this bordered on
impertinence. I did not. Mr. Obama now routinely filibusters in interviews. He
has his message, and he presses it forward smoothly, adroitly. He buries you in
words. Are you worried what failure of the bill will do to you? I'm worried
about what the status quo will do to the families that are uninsured . . .
Mr. Baier forced him off his well-worn grooves. He did it by stopping long
answers with short questions, by cutting off and redirecting. In this he was
like a low-speed bumper car. In the end the interview seemed to me a public
service because everyone in America right now wants to see the president forced
off his grooves and into candor on an issue that involves 17% of the economy.
Again, the stakes are high. So Mr. Baier's style seemed—this is admittedly
subjective—not rude but within the bounds, and not driven by the antic spirit
that sometimes overtakes reporters. He seemed to be trying to get new
information. He seemed to be attempting to better inform the public.
Presidents have a right to certain prerogatives, including the expectation of
a certain deference. He's the president, this is history. But we seem to have
come a long way since Ronald Reagan was regularly barked at by Sam Donaldson,
almost literally, and the president shrugged it off. The president—every
president—works for us. We don't work for him. We sometimes lose track of this,
or rather get the balance wrong. Respect is due and must be palpable, but now
and then you have to press, to either force them to be forthcoming or force them
to reveal that they won't be. Either way it's revealing.
And so it ends, with a health-care vote expected this weekend. I wonder at
what point the administration will realize it wasn't worth it—worth the discord,
worth the diminution in popularity and prestige, worth the deepening of the
great divide. What has been lost is so vivid, what has been gained so amorphous,
blurry and likely illusory. Memo to future presidents: Never stake your entire
survival on the painful passing of a bad bill. Never take the country down the
road to Demon Pass.
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