President Obama doesn't suffer from amnesia, but apparently he hopes the public does.
In his latest in a series of interviews on "60 Minutes" on Dec. 11, the
president took positions that are the polar opposite of what he was saying as
recently as last spring.
One wishes all of those "fact-checkers" who point out supposed mistakes by
the Republican candidates were as committed to noting even worse flaws in the
president's promises.
In his interview with Steve Kroft, the president said he always believed that
reversing the culture in Washington "was gonna take more than one term." It's a
"long-term project," he said, "not a short-term project." And then he claimed
that during the 2008 campaign, he "didn't overpromise."
Really?
Speaking in Richmond, Va., on Oct. 22, 2008, Obama promised to put millions
of Americans back to work; he pledged "real change." Instead, the unemployment
rate is 8.6 percent. Or is it? Ed Luce of the Financial Times writes, "According
to government statistics, if the same number of people were seeking work today
as in 2007, the jobless rate would be 11 percent." Washington remains unchanged,
as dysfunctional and gridlocked as ever.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, since President Obama took
office, the nation has lost 1.9 million jobs, prompting Washington Post
fact-checker Glenn Kessler to write that if the economy does not turn around,
"Obama is on track to have the worst jobs record of any president in the modern
era."
In 2009, the president said on the "Today" show, "If I don't have this done
in three years, then there's going to be a one-term proposition." A few days
later in Florida, there was this, "I'm not going to make any excuses," said
Obama. "If stuff hasn't worked and people don't feel like I've led the country
in the right direction, then you'll have a new president."
The latest right-track, wrong-track poll conducted by Rasmussen Reports found
that only 17 percent of Americans believe the country is headed in the right
direction, while a whopping 75 percent think it's headed the wrong way.
On CBS, the president said the 2012 election is about his vision, but as CBS
News' Stephanie Condon reported last week, "Sixty-six percent of Americans say
they do not have a clear idea of what he wants to accomplish in a second term. …
Fewer than half of Democrats say they have a clear idea of what the president
wants to accomplish if re-elected." Don't we know? It's taxing "millionaires and
billionaires" so the government has more of our money to waste.
Is none of this Obama's fault? Can it all be blamed on Bush? Apparently, the
president has decided that playing the blame game is good campaign strategy.
The president blames Republicans for not allowing him to accomplish anything,
but says nothing about his own failure to get things done (other than the health
care bill, whose constitutionality the Supreme Court ultimately will decide)
when Democrats controlled Congress for the first two years of his
administration. And what about Senate Democrats who have rejected every House
bill seeking cuts in wasteful spending to bring the budget closer into balance?
Not a word.
Shall I continue? The president's housing programs received $50 billion from
Congress to help stem foreclosures on 9 million homeowners. As The Washington
Post reported in October, only $2.4 billion of that money has been allocated,
helping just 1.7 million people avoid foreclosure.
Imagine what Democrats and their acolytes in the media would say if a
Republican president had a similar track record. One doesn't have to imagine.
With a lower unemployment rate and less debt in the Bush administration,
Democrats were relentless in their attacks, promising improvements. Barack Obama
assured us he would make things better.
Democrats didn't improve anything and nothing has been made better. According
to President Obama's own standard, and contrary to what he said on "60 Minutes,"
he does not deserve a second term.
That he thinks he has earned re-election brings to mind the World English
Dictionary definition of "hubris": "Pride or arrogance; (in Greek tragedy) an
excess of ambition … ultimately causing the transgressor's ruin."
Email Cal Thomas at tmseditors@tribune.com.