One Year
Out: The Fall
by
Charles Krauthammer
TownHall.com
WASHINGTON -- What went wrong? A year ago, he was king of the world. Now
President Obama's approval rating, according to CBS, has dropped to 46 percent
-- and his disapproval rating is the highest ever recorded by Gallup at the
beginning of an (elected) president's second year.
A year ago, he was leader of a liberal ascendancy that would last 40 years
(James Carville). A year ago, conservatism was dead (Sam Tanenhaus). Now the
race to fill Ted Kennedy's Senate seat in bluest of blue Massachusetts is
surprisingly close, with a virtually unknown state senator bursting on the scene
by turning the election into a mini-referendum on Obama and his agenda, most
particularly health care reform.
A year ago, Obama was the most charismatic politician on earth. Today the
thrill is gone, the doubts growing -- even among erstwhile believers.
Liberals try to attribute Obama's political decline to matters of style. He's
too cool, detached, uninvolved. He's not tough, angry or aggressive enough with
opponents. He's contracted out too much of his agenda to Congress.
These stylistic and tactical complaints may be true, but they miss the major
point: The reason for today's vast discontent, presaged by spontaneous national
Tea Party opposition, is not that Obama is too cool or compliant but that he's
too left.
It's not about style; it's about substance. About which Obama has been
admirably candid. This out-of-nowhere, least-known of presidents dropped the
veil most dramatically in the single most important political event of 2009, his
Feb. 24 first address to Congress. With remarkable political honesty and
courage, Obama unveiled the most radical (in American terms) ideological agenda
since the New Deal: the fundamental restructuring of three pillars of American
society -- health care, education and energy.
Then began the descent -- when, more amazingly still, Obama devoted himself
to turning these statist visions into legislative reality. First energy, with
cap-and-trade, an unprecedented federal intrusion into American industry and
commerce. It got through the House, with its Democratic majority and Supreme
Soviet-style rules. But it will never get out of the Senate.
Then, the keystone: a health care revolution in which the federal government
will regulate in crushing detail one-sixth of the U.S. economy. By essentially
abolishing medical underwriting (actuarially based risk assessment) and
replacing it with government fiat, Obamacare turns the health insurance
companies into utilities, their every significant move dictated by government
regulators. The public option was a sideshow. As many on the right have long
been arguing, and as the more astute on the left (such as The New Yorker's James
Surowiecki) understand, Obamacare is government health care by proxy,
single-payer through a facade of nominally "private" insurers.
At first, health care reform was sustained politically by Obama's own
popularity. But then gravity took hold, and Obamacare's profound unpopularity
dragged him down with it. After 29 speeches and a fortune in squandered
political capital, it still will not sell.
The health care drive is the most important reason Obama has sunk to 46
percent. But this reflects something larger. In the end, what matters is not the
persona but the agenda. In a country where politics is fought between the
40-yard lines, Obama has insisted on pushing hard for the 30. And the American
people -- disorganized and unled but nonetheless agitated and mobilized -- have
put up a stout defense somewhere just left of midfield.
Ideas matter. Legislative proposals matter. Slick campaigns and dazzling
speeches can work for a while, but the magic always wears off.
It's inherently risky for any charismatic politician to legislate. To act is
to choose and to choose is to disappoint the expectations of many who had poured
their hopes into the empty vessel -- of which candidate Obama was the greatest
representative in recent American political history.
Obama did not just act, however. He acted ideologically. To his credit, Obama
didn't just come to Washington to be someone. Like Reagan, he came to Washington
to do something -- to introduce a powerful social democratic stream into
America's deeply and historically individualist polity.
Perhaps Obama thought he'd been sent to the White House to do just that. If
so, he vastly over-read his mandate. His own electoral success -- twinned with
handy victories and large majorities in both houses of Congress -- was a
referendum on his predecessor's governance and the post-Lehman financial
collapse. It was not an endorsement of European-style social democracy.
Hence the resistance. Hence the fall. The system may not always work, but it
does take its revenge.
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