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Monday, August 30, 2010
Obama's Capital ProblemThe federal treasury is not the only institution in Washington with a capital problem. The resident in chief of 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue seems more likely today to get a warmer reception on Mark Levin's radio show, than he would in the most
competitive congressional districts throughout the country. President Obama's political popularity, as seen in
the most recent polls and surveys, combined with his inability to connect with voters deepest concerns and daily struggles,
once a major strength of his, has made him a second rate surrogate as his party dispatches desperately needed assistance out
on the campaign trail. Incidentally, this has been an issue for him since last years electoral failures for Democrats in New
Jersey, Virginia and Massachusetts. The cumulative weight of three major factors are behind the president's precipitous
fall in popularity, and virtual impotence as a campaigner. The most forceful charges made against him during the campaign
in 2008 were; that he was a radical-leftist, ill-experienced narcissist. Those attacks didn't work then, but are playing
out on the national stage now. These narratives have been substantiated by concrete examples of his actions as President,
and voters are coming to the same conclusion; that all three charges are true. The president's record on stimulus
spending, healthcare, cap and trade, card check, automotive bailouts, and tax policy bolster the charge by his critics that
at heart, President Obama favors state-based (meaning government) vs free-market oriented solutions to our economic challenges.
His attitude toward wealth and who should have it, reinforce his active preference for the same western European socialism
that most of Western Europe is rejecting today. Simply put, he believes government is the answer and the individual
is the impediment. That doesn't sound like the American way to me. On leadership, the president seems ill-equipped
and even awkward in his role as well, president. The ineptitude of his handling on issues related to the treat of terrorism
to our national security, the legislative battle over healthcare reform, the management of the BP oil spill and now in this
most recent national conversation centered around a mosque at ground zero reinforce his lack of executive leadership experience
prior to serving in the White House. If he wasn't so consumed with his own sense of self-worth, an argument could be
made that Obama was better configured for a more parliamentary style of government, where he was more the first among equals
rather than a chief executive. Though the stories of Obama as a narcissist precede his presidency, it is only
on this stage that we really see the hubris he possessed that could have led an unaccomplished, half-term Senator to think
he could be the "leader of the free-world." What started out as an asset; Obama as the cool, confident and charismatic
transformational figure that was going to bring us hope and change, has now become the parody of man consumed with his teleprompter,
the sound of his own voice and "whose butt he has to kick" to get what he wants. Look for the
Democrats to continue to use the president to raise money. Ironically, that is the one thing he still seems to do well and
the only area where congressional Democrats have demonstrated superiority. It will unlikely effect the outcome of these
midterm elections, but may keep the president away from Washington long enough to prevent him from doing anymore damage.
9:52 pm edt
Monday, August 23, 2010
If you want a preview of Nov 2nd, watch happens on these two datesSeptember 3rd and
October 8th may present the best insight on what’s going to happen on November 2nd with better
accuracy than any tracking poll or focus group. These are the days that the Department of Labor will report
the newest job numbers, and there is absolutely no doubt that they will reinforce the already melancholy outlook for the US
economy. GDP growth is anemic, consumer spending is stagnant, and job creation, especially in the private
sector, is in a sort of paralysis. These
variables already spell doom for the Democratic Party in the midterm, and President Obama’s poor approval ratings, the
lowest in his tenure, already indicate a nation fatigued by the lack of progress on the economic front. The
loss of the House by the Democrats seems to have already crossed the threshold from possible to likely to inevitable.
What remain unknown are the margin of the victory and the fate of the Senate.
Though it is mathematically more difficult for Republicans to win the Senate, the data released on the aforementioned
dates could solidly shift the political landscape to change a likely 40+ net gain in the House to over 60 seats and a “close
but no cigar” outcome in the Senate, into a Scott Brown victory on steroids. The magnitude of jobs and the economy on voter’s attitude and behavior can not be exaggerated.
Short of another terrorist attack, no other event will impact the midterm elections more than what happens on these
two dates. We’ll be watching.
11:38 pm edt
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