Opinion

[Print]  [Email]        

The coming campaign: Obama will sell himself as deficit hawk. Really.

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
11/13/09 11:15 AM EST

The word went out among Washington politicos yesterday: Barack Obama is about to become very, very tough on federal spending.

I was talking to a Democratic strategist yesterday (our talks are always on a no-name-used basis). He is a supporter of health care reform -- he prefers the Baucus bill at the moment -- but told me that, immediately after winning the health care battle, Obama needs to take a radically different course.

"As soon as health care reform is over, he needs to pivot hard to becoming a deficit and spending hawk and a jobs creator," the strategist told me. "He should say, 'We did the stimulus because the world would have collapsed if we didn't. We did health care because it's something that needed to be done for working families and will reduce the deficit by $100 billion over the next ten years. And now, we're going to become absolute tyrants on spending, and that means I'm going to be vetoing things.'"

I asked whether Obama, after presiding over the stimulus, the bailouts, the big Democratic budget, the House cap-and-trade vote, health care reform, and finally, a tripling of the already-high federal deficit, could plausibly position himself as a spending hawk. "Their principle failure is that they have allowed themselves to be defined as government interventioners and huge spenders," the strategist told me. "If he becomes the great expander of government and the great increaser of spending, he's going to get destroyed in 2012."

But Obama already is the great expander of government and the great increaser of spending, I said. There's a factual basis for his image. How can he change that? "He's got the bully pulpit," the Democrat said. "When he opens his mouth, everybody writes it. He needs to open his mouth on this and frame it and define it until it's holy writ."

Put aside whether that is actually possible. Looking around today, it appears there have been several conversations like mine in recent days. In a new column, the New York Times' David Brooks, who is a pretty reliable source of White House spin, writes, "Obama remains the most talented political figure of the age. After health care passes, he will pivot and pick some fights with his own party over spending. He’ll solidify his standing with independents, and if the economy recovers, he could go into his re-election with as much momentum as Ronald Reagan enjoyed in 1984."

At the Politico, there's a story headlined, "After spending binge, White House says it will focus on deficits." In that story, an unnamed Democratic official says, "Democrats have to reassure voters we are not being reckless. The White House knows this and that's why we'll be hearing a lot about reducing the deficit early next year. Democrats owned this issue for the past four years and cannot afford to cede it to Republicans now."

All this talk is obviously the result of a near-panic in the White House over the mass migration of independent voters away from the Democratic party. Somehow -- who knows how? ---- those independents have gotten the idea that the president and Democratic leaders in Congress support policies that lead to extensive government intervention in the economy and very high deficits. The White House sees the potential for big Democratic losses in 2010, which would make the second half of the president's term much more difficult. So now -- well, not actually now, but after passing the massive national health care bill -- they have resolved to attempt to convince those independents that they're not seeing what they're seeing. There's no way to say whether the White House will succeed at this task, but that is the campaign that's coming.
 




beltway confidential

In response to the attention we gave him for his old column on how Washington has "anemic winters" because of global warming, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tells NRO's Robert...

By a vote of 52 to 33, the Obama administration nominee to the National Labor Relations Board, Craig Becker, just failed to get the 60 votes needed for his nomination to proceed...

The highest form of flattery! Robert, declare yourself! (ap photo) Beltway Confidential knows a crush when she sees one. How else to explain the relentless mocking and...

You're beautiful, Chuck Todd. I mean that. (ap photo) On a day when many White House reporters (ahem) stayed away from the White House for snow or early-deadline...






To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

ladybug

Nov 13, 2009

Will BHO wear the facade of deficit hawk as the Wizard of Oz wore the facade of a giant, wise being?

Seems like some sleight of hand will be necessary to mask the staggering debt load BHO is continuing to assume, in the name of the people of the US, if he is going to expound on deficit reduction.

 

Resolute

Nov 13, 2009

Seeing Pres. Obama trying to remake himself into "deficit hawk" is going to be about as viable as a morbidly obese 500 lb fat lady putting on a thong bikini and strutting about the beach like as though she's now a Sports Illustrated swimsuit model.

 

The Real Hugo Chavez

Nov 13, 2009

While this strategy may be viewed by irrational skeptics as coming 25 years too late to be effective, my colleague and your president is convinced that since the Orwellian "1984- Lies are truth and Truth is a Lie" card has not been played before in RealPolitic, it will seem fresh and true to the media and the voters. If someone as great and grand as Mr. O says he's become a true deficit hawk, and asserts that those trillions down the tube on recent programs were in fact wasted because of criticism from Fox News or skeptics that were inadvertently left to roam free during this critical period of mind control, then he and his so-called "brain-trust" will easily remain in control. With full support from NEA and SEIU, there will be no opposition once the broad concept of loyal opposition is violently destroyed... as it must be to make this dog hunt...

 

john

Nov 13, 2009

When obama's name is mentioned the word Phony comes to mind.

 

PJ

Nov 13, 2009

Democrats, in their mercifully infrequent sojourns in the WH, are always stunned to learn that Americans are not as stupid as they believed they were.

 

pdxpunk

Nov 13, 2009

Well, democrats and the media in general are absolute idiots so I am sure they will buy it.

 

markit8dude

Nov 13, 2009

Dollars to donuts the folks on the beltway will STILL give themselves a raise..

 

Jaydee

Nov 13, 2009

So he's going to become a "tyrant on spending" immediately after signing into law the most open-ended entitlement in the history of western civilization? The fat swimsuit model analogy above is very fitting.

 

Guy Jones

Nov 14, 2009

This is interesting. Trillion dollar deficits are projected for the next couple of years. The deficit is projected to never dip below $600 billion or so for the next decade. The national debt is $12 trillion and rising. Now, after pushing TARP, Cash for Clunkers, and Obamacare, Obama talks fiscal restraint and prudence? Pardon me if I'm skeptical. Actions speak louder than words.

 

Guy Jones

Nov 14, 2009

Obama sees the writing on the wall. This is about political self-interest and self-preservation. He knows he is finished in 2012 if he continues to tax and spend at the rate he has been doing. So he pays lip service to reigning in spending. The man is a hustler, plain and simple. He knows what people want to hear. Can he reign in a Democratic Congress addicted to spending? The answer plaily is no. Congress controls the purse strings, not the Executive branch.

 

asder

Jan 2, 2010

Thanks for your useful info, I think it's a good topic
çizgi film
kayu çizgi filmini izle
çizgi film izle

 


Post a comment


Email:
(This will not be displayed or shared. Privacy Policy)

Your Name:

Comment:




Local

Another snowball fight planned for Dupont Circle

The Official Dupont Circle Snowball Fight facebook fanpage has over 6,000 fans now, and it looks as if snowed in DC'ers will return for another battle. Full story

Politics

GOP winning war over Miranda rights for terrorists

Even as the administration defends its decision to grant accused Detroit bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab the right to remain silent, the president himself is hinting that things might be done differently in the future. Full story

Local

D.C. region braces for up to 20 more inches of snow

The National Weather Service has the entire D.C. metro area, from Prince William County north, under a winter storm warning for 10 to 20 inches of snow. Forecasters have had their eyes on this storm for days, but the projected snow totals were bumped up late Monday. Full story