The Obsolescence of Barack Obama
The magic of 2008 can't be recreated, and good riddance to
it.
By Fouad Ajami
Not long ago Barack Obama, for those who were spellbound by him, had the
stylishness of JFK and the historic mission of FDR riding to the nation's
rescue. Now it is to Lyndon B. Johnson's unhappy presidency that Democratic
strategist Robert Shrum compares the stewardship of Mr. Obama. Johnson, wrote
Mr. Shrum in the Week magazine last month, never "sustained an emotional link
with the American people" and chose to escalate a war that "forced his
abdication as president."
A broken link with the public, and a war in Afghanistan he neither embraces
and sells to his party nor abandons—this is a time of puzzlement for President
Obama. His fall from political grace has been as swift as his rise a handful of
years ago. He had been hot political property in 2006 and, of course, in 2008.
But now he will campaign for his party's 2010 candidates from afar, holding fund
raisers but not hitting the campaign trail in most of the contested races. Those
mass rallies of Obama frenzy are surely of the past.
The vaunted Obama economic stimulus, at $862 billion, has failed. The
"progressives" want to double down, and were they to have their way, would have
pushed for a bigger stimulus still. But the American people are in open
rebellion against an economic strategy of public debt, higher taxes and unending
deficits. We're not all Keynesians, it turns out. The panic that propelled Mr.
Obama to the presidency has waned. There is deep concern, to be sure. But the
Obama strategy has lost the consent of the governed.
Mr. Obama could protest that his swift and sudden fall from grace is no fault
of his. He had been a blank slate, and the devotees had projected onto him their
hopes and dreams. His victory had not been the triumph of policies he had
enunciated in great detail. He had never run anything in his entire life. He had
a scant public record, but oddly this worked to his advantage. If he was going
to begin the world anew, it was better that he knew little about the machinery
of government.
He pronounced on the American condition with stark, unalloyed confidence. He
had little if any regard for precedents. He could be forgiven the thought that
America's faith in economic freedom had given way and that he had the popular
writ to move the nation toward a super-regulated command economy. An "economic
emergency" was upon us, and this would be the New New Deal.
There was no hesitation in the monumental changes Mr. Obama had in mind. The
logic was Jacobin, the authority deriving from a perceived mandate to recast
time-honored practices. It was veritably rule by emergency decrees. If public
opinion displayed no enthusiasm for the overhaul of the nation's health-care
system, the administration would push on. The public would adjust in due time.
The nation may be ill at ease with an immigration reform bill that would
provide some 12 million illegal immigrants a path toward citizenship, but the
administration would still insist on the primacy of its own judgment. It would
take Arizona to court, even though the public let it be known that it understood
Arizona's immigration law as an expression of that state's frustration with the
federal government's abdication of its responsibility over border security.
It was clear as daylight that there was a built-in contradiction between
opening the citizenship rolls to a vast flood of new petitioners and a political
economy of redistribution favored by the Obama administration. The choice was
stark: You could either "spread the wealth around" or open the gates for
legalizing millions of immigrants of lower skills. You could not do both.
It was canonical to this administration and its functionaries that they were
handed a broken nation, that it was theirs to repair, that it was theirs to tax
and reshape to their preferences. Yet there was, in 1980, after another landmark
election, a leader who had stepped forth in a time of "malaise" at home and
weakness abroad: Ronald Reagan. His program was different from Mr. Obama's. His
faith in the country was boundless. What he sought was to restore the nation's
faith in itself, in its political and economic vitality.
Big as Reagan's mandate was, in two elections, the man was never bigger than
his county. There was never narcissism or a bloated sense of personal destiny in
him. He gloried in the country, and drew sustenance from its heroic deeds and
its capacity for recovery. No political class rode with him to power anxious to
lay its hands on the nation's treasure, eager to supplant the forces of the
market with its own economic preferences.
To be sure, Reagan faltered midway through his second term—the
arms-for-hostages trade, the Iran-Contra affair, nearly wrecked his presidency.
But he recovered, the nation rallied around him and carried him across the
finish line, his bond with the electorate deep and true. He had two years left
of his stewardship, and his political recovery was so miraculous that he, and
his first mate, Secretary of State George P. Shultz, would seal the nation's
victory in the Cold War.
There is little evidence that the Obama presidency could yet find new
vindication, another lease on life. Mr. Obama will mark time, but henceforth he
will not define the national agenda. He will not be the repository of its hopes
and sentiments. The ambition that his would be a "transformational"
presidency—he rightly described Reagan's stewardship in these terms—is for
naught.
There remains the fact of his biography, a man's journey. Personality is
doubtless an obstacle to his recovery. The detachment of Mr. Obama need not be
dwelled upon at great length, so obvious it is now even to the pundits who had a
"tingling sensation" when they beheld him during his astonishing run for office.
Nor does Mr. Obama have the suppleness of Bill Clinton, who rose out of the
debris of his first two years in the presidency, dusted himself off, walked away
from his spouse's radical attempt to remake the country's health-delivery
system, and moved to the political center.
It is in the nature of charisma that it rises out of thin air, out of need
and distress, and then dissipates when the magic fails. The country has had its
fill with a scapegoating that knows no end from a president who had vowed to
break with recriminations and partisanship. The magic of 2008 can't be
recreated, and good riddance to it. Slowly, the nation has recovered its poise.
There is a widespread sense of unstated embarrassment that a political majority,
if only for a moment, fell for the promise of an untested redeemer—a belief
alien to the temperament of this so practical and sober a nation.
Mr. Ajami is a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.
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