I
couldn�t believe the headlines in a recent issue of the Los Angeles
Times which asked whether President Obama had responsibility
for the oil spill on the Louisiana, Mississippi coastline.�� Of
course, as President, he has a responsibility to see that it is
cleaned up, first by the resources of BP, the company that made
the mess, but ultimately by the US Government.� But at this stage
of the crisis, the article felt decidedly like there was some culpability
of Obama for not having had his Minerals Management Service regulate
oil drilling more vigorously.� This doesn�t wash, because it�s like
blaming the Obama administration for not being able to see into
the future, but it is consistent with the way in which he has been
viewed increasingly.�
The
Obama administration has increasingly found it difficult to claim
that it inherited a mammoth set of problems that they have tried
to fix by applying federal resources to them.�� That is the issue
about oil drilling.�� Remember the Republican mantra, �drill baby
drill� and oil executives being secretly shifted into the White
House to help Vice President Chaney set energy policy?�
This
was especially evident in the attempt to characterize the recent
elections as a referendum on the Obama administration, but it was
thwarted because the Republicans failed to nationalize the election
sufficiently, so that it turned out to be a referendum on the Tea
Party instead.� Nevertheless, Obama was referred to nearly as a
pariah, someone whom candidates should have been reluctant to campaign
with because of the faulty view that the Health Care act was unpopular
with the American people.� Strikingly, in this way, they made an
incorrect parallel to similar feelings many Republican candidates
had toward George Bush in the last year of his administration.�
But
is it was not realistic for Democrats to respond to the pariah painting
of Obama when he has passed historic legislation with Democratic
majorities in both Houses of Congress that will benefit millions
of people.� What happened is that the media overplayed the Tea Party
phenomenon, blowing up the anti-Obama sentiments of a relatively
small segment of the electorate and proposing that Obama�s association
with Democratic candidates would have a negative effect. In a May
23rd article, the dean of political journalists, David Broder of
The Washington Post characterized the Obama administration
this way: ��the fundamental tension in the political system is becoming
clear.� A liberal government is struggling to impose its agenda
on an electorate increasingly responsive to an activist conservative
movement operating inside the Republican party.�� He should know
better; maybe he does.
The
problem with being President of the United States is that ultimately
the big problems will land in your lap and so, whether or not Obama
inherited a horrendous set of problems, they eventually will become
his the longer they go unresolved.�� The difficulty here is trying
determine whether this happens naturally or whether people are placing
things in his lap in a blame circus designed to complicate his governance
and eventually bring him down. ��The degree of the Obama blame game
is indeed withering, almost everything is found to have� been related
to some fault of the manner in which it was handled by his administration.�
One
of the most amazing things is the references � by people who should
know better -- to Obama as almost a singular decision maker who
is inexperienced and mistake prone, ignoring the fact that he deliberately
brought into his own close company in the White House and into Cabinet
agencies experienced people who have a major role in running the
government.
The
Obama administration must now know as a result of the fight over
health care is that it is not enough to do something good for the
American people and have it speak for itself.� Why the Republican
minority has been able, time and again, to define the actions of
the administration is not a puzzle, the Obama administration � and
the Democratic party in general -- is horrible at message discipline.��
Republicans all sing from the same hymn book while Democrats are
all over the map and even supporters are often left confused about
what the various spokespersons are attempting to communicate and
how what they say attacks their opponents successfully.�
Democrats
have to get better at message competition because I don�t expect
the blame game to let up any time soon.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Dr. Ron Walters,
PhD is a Political Analyst, Author and Professor Emeritus of
the University of Maryland, College Park. His latest
book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press). Click here to
contact Dr. Walters. |