Tag Archives: Obama Administration

President Obama’s Friendships With World Leaders

I am not one of those who believes that we will see a much more persuasive U.S. foreign policy merely by having Barack Obama buddy up to other world leaders. Nation-states make their decisions primarily and overwhelmingly via a cold-eyed examination of their long term strategic interests, and irrespective of the President’s personal relationships with other world leaders, the countries those leaders lead will decide to ally–or not ally–with the United States on various issues by looking at factors that have nothing whatsoever to do with personal relationships with the President of the United States.

Who’s In? Who’s Out? Who Cares?

At this point, it really doesn’t matter whether Rahm Emanuel will go, or David Axelrod, or Valerie Jarrett, or Robert Gibbs, or some combination of the four. What really matters is the fact that “No Drama Obama” is now anything but.

It’s Not Rain, It’s Not Snow, And It’s Not Sleet . . .

But finances may cause the U.S. Postal Service to end Saturday deliveries. Over at his blog, Eric Zorn facetiously argues that we ought to get all of our mail on Saturdays, with every other day being mail-free. Of course, that argument is ridiculous, but perhaps only just barely ridiculous; it is difficult to imagine a monopoly as useless and value-less as the one that the Postal Service currently “enjoys.”

Government Estimates Ridiculously Wrong. Things Worse Than Originally Thought. Film At Eleven.

Remind me once again why I was supposed to think that government could effectively administer a public option for health care. As we can see, it can’t even competently manage its own finances:

A new congressional report released Friday says the United States’ long-term fiscal woes are even worse than predicted by President Barack Obama’s grim budget submission last month.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office predicts that Obama’s budget plans would generate deficits over the upcoming decade that would total $9.8 trillion. That’s $1.2 trillion more than predicted by the administration.

The agency says its future-year predictions of tax revenues are more pessimistic than the administration’s. That’s because CBO projects slightly slower economic growth than the White House.

Of Epic Fails And The KSM Trial

The mother of all walk-backs:

President Obama’s advisers are nearing a recommendation that Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the self-proclaimed mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, be prosecuted in a military tribunal, administration officials said, a step that would reverse Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.’s plan to try him in civilian court in New York City.

The president’s advisers feel increasingly hemmed in by bipartisan opposition to a federal trial in New York and demands, mainly from Republicans, that Mohammed and his accused co-conspirators remain under military jurisdiction, officials said. While Obama has favored trying some alleged terrorists in civilian courts as a symbol of U.S. commitment to the rule of law, critics have said military tribunals are the appropriate venue for those accused of attacking the United States.

Yes, Yes, A Week’s A Long Time In Politics, Etc. . . .

But that doesn’t mean we can’t take note of the developing trend lines:

Embattled incumbents with ethics problems. Allegations of sexual harassment leading to a competitive open seat. Dems have seen this movie before — only last time, it happened to the other guys.

Now, a beleaguered Dem majority has to hope their party can withstand a building wave that favors the GOP, and that effort isn’t made any easier by countless, and mounting, self-inflicted errors.

The Ultimate Insider

It may indeed “make sense” for Barack Obama to pose as an outside-the-Beltway type of figure, as Ron Fournier indicates, but anyone who buys the idea of the President of the United States being some kind of a leader of the revolt against an establishment–especially an establishment that has his own party control both chambers of Congress–deserves to get swindled at the polls.

Obama Overhyped

I am late to this, but while the President is certainly a smart man, perhaps hosannas to his intelligence ought to be tempered by the fact that his current health care reform stance is in many ways diametrically opposed to the stance that he took during the election campaign, and that one of the anecdotes he used to advance his current arguments concerning health care reform revealed a less-than-intelligent side to the President.

The CBO: Not Playing It Straight With Stimulus Estimates

Peter Suderman’s article on why we cannot trust CBO estimates concerning the value of the stimulus is a must-read:

Here’s what the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) most recent report on the matter estimates the stimulus’ effects were in the fourth quarter of 2009: Thanks to the stimulus, America is somewhere between 1 and 2.1 million jobs richer than it would have been with no government intervention. Federal dollars have fattened up our GDP as well, adding somewhere between 1.5 and 3.5 percent to the GDP.

Naturally, the Obama administration is keen to take credit. And in touting the CBO’s stimulus figures, the White House repeatedly employed the phrase “created or saved.” After widespread eye-rolling at such an obvious rhetorical gimmick—not to mention significant evidence that many of the jobs it was claiming credit for were not, in fact, created or saved—the administration altered its lingo and started referring to jobs “funded.” But this too is not as accurate as it could be, at least in the context of the CBO’s reports; a better phrase might have been “created or saved or estimated or assumed.”

So, It’s Reconciliation Then

President Obama all but hinted today that he is prepared to go the reconciliation route to get health care reform. As I have argued before, this is not a proper use of the reconciliation procedure. Megan McArdle and others have pointed out that reconciliation is designed to bring revenues in line with budgetary outlays, to reconcile, in other words. It is not meant to push forth new social programs. Thus, while tax increases and cuts can be pushed through via the reconciliation process, health care reform clearly cannot. Yes, health care packages have been pushed through via the reconciliation process in the past, but this effort has less to do with bringing revenues in line with outlays, and more to do with circumventing the fact that Democrats no longer have a 60 vote majority in the Senate.

Of course, it is worth noting that once upon a time, Barack Obama agreed that transformative change of the type embodied by his health care reform package, could not possibly go through except via a supermajority:

How times have changed.

Heckuva Job (Diplomacy Edition)

So, the Brits and the Argentinians are squabbling about the Falklands again (ah, the days of my youth are revisited!). American policy has long been to support the Brits, or at least, to do nothing that would undermine the Brits. The Argentinians want talks over the Falklands, while the Brits say that there is nothing whatsoever to talk about.

So, what does Secretary of State Clinton do? Why, she supports talks.

Comme d’Habitude

I guess that no one will be surprised to read this:

Iranian security forces have detained film director Jafar Panahi, winner of many international awards, an opposition website said on Tuesday.

Panahi was held at his home together with his wife Mahnaz Mohammadi, daughter and 15 guests on Monday evening, opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi’s website Kaleme said.

Panahi’s home was searched and some of his belongings seized, it added.

The director supported Mousavi in last year’s disputed presidential election, which plunged the Islamic Republic into months of political turmoil.

- March 21, 2010 -

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