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Obama’s Double Bind

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Posted on Jun 6, 2010

By E.J. Dionne, Jr.

The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has created a double bind for the Obama administration. How it deals with a challenge even more complicated than it looks will determine the kind of summer the president has and the kind of election the Democrats will face this fall.

The obvious problem is how the administration can get ahead of a disaster that promises to be a running story for much of the year. White House aides admit that they mishandled the public side of the event even as they insist that from the moment the oil rig exploded, President Obama was deploying resources on a large scale and preparing for the worst possibilities. They say they got the statecraft right but the stagecraft wrong.

“Nobody can look at the response and say we were slow in doing what we were doing,” senior adviser David Axelrod said in an interview. He pointed to a “whole range of steps” Obama “took right from the beginning.” But he added: “We didn’t communicate it well.”

Axelrod offers a long list of facts and figures to back up his portrait of an administration on top of things. What’s not in doubt is that the Obama team’s failure to explain what it was doing, to have someone speaking authoritatively about its plans, and to engage the president more visibly early on, all helped feed a media narrative no leader wants to face—a public argument over whether his predicament more closely resembles Hurricane Katrina or the Iran hostage crisis.

But this is where the double bind comes in. The temptation now will be to react in a way that encourages a single-minded focus on the Gulf disaster. Some of this is inevitable: Having been slow to explain what they were doing, the president’s lieutenants have every interest in filling the airwaves with action and pronouncements that stress focus, determination and empathy.

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Yet the simple truth is that the most important issue facing the nation is not the oil spill, however horrific its effects will be, but the economy. And last Friday’s job numbers, while positive in theory, were nonetheless disappointing.

In May, the nation added 431,000 jobs, the largest monthly gain in over a decade, and the unemployment rate fell to 9.7 percent from 9.9 percent. But almost all of the job creation came from short-term hiring for the 2010 census. Private employers added only 41,000 jobs, below expectations and far below the 218,000 jobs added in April.

In a careful but candid assessment to the new figures, Christina Romer, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, noted that “the continued high level of unemployment and the slowdown in private sector job growth emphasize the need for continuing vigilance.” She underscored the urgency of “targeted actions to spur private sector job creation and prevent continued reductions in state and local government employment.”

Her comments pointed to another of the administration’s communications dilemmas. Because of polls showing rising concern about federal deficits, it has been harder and harder to muster support, even among Democrats, for further actions to boost a still sluggish recovery. Obama himself has spoken often of his passionate concern about the long-term deficit and appointed a commission whose very existence highlights the problem.

The trouble is that all of the president’s talk about red ink undercuts support for the short-term spending measures that even his most deficit-conscious advisers know the economy needs. It’s devilishly difficult to explain why deficits are good now and bad later. When a Democratic Congress has to pare back a job creation bill to get enough votes to pass it—and can’t find $23 billion to save the jobs of up to 300,000 teachers facing layoffs—advocates of further stimulus have to know they are losing the political argument.

Thus Obama’s test: He needs to establish that he is doing all he can to repair the damage in the Gulf even as he maintains his focus on the economy and persuades reluctant conservative Democrats that the job of ending the downturn is not yet done. However unfair the first impressions of Obama’s response to the oil spill may be, he can’t afford to let them stand. He also can’t afford to let oily waters engulf his priorities. 

It’s worth remembering that while the daily countdown on the Iran hostage crisis helped create a famous television show, it was an unruly economy that ultimately upended Jimmy Carter’s presidency.

E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com.
   
© 2010, Washington Post Writers Group


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By Ben Leet, June 9, 2010 at 11:55 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Three of ten U.S. workers are either out of work, can’t find enough work, or work full-time full-year at below poverty wages. (Check njfac.org for BLS statistics to verify) It’s about 31% of the workforce or 47 million adults. If only they would vote. In the 1930s government jobs were a godsend, but today we’ve been thoroughly indoctrinated against public jobs and public spending. Go to Drive for Decent Work, http://fullemployment.blogspot.com if you want some info about creating jobs. Obama’s economic team, C. Romer etc., talk (see above) about creating private sector jobs, not public ones. Voters have to respond. I’m disappointed with E.J. Dionne for not making a stronger case. 3 out of 10 - no work, not enough work, lousy wages. What does it take? I also have a blog, http://benL8.blogspot.com, to read about higher incomes for 80% of the workforce, etc..

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By TheBrix57, June 7, 2010 at 4:25 pm Link to this comment

The economy has been, or should have been, the main problem that President Obama set his sight upon from the day he took his oath. Instead, we have been treated to sideshow after sideshow after sideshow to take our minds off what really needed to be done.
If the economy was rolling along at a great clip, healthcare would have passed and not many would have noticed. Lending huge corporations billions of dollars to help them over a little bump and people would have said “sure”. That is only if the economy was doing great.
Problem is that we have been treated by the corporations with the government right behind them like we just don’t matter. The people suffered massive layoffs so the corporations could look good to their stockholders with the government standing around doing nothing. Then, when the unemployment claims rose so fast the government couldn’t handle them, they just pulled other government employees in. Government did nothing then to stop the hemorrhage of jobs being lost.
The people then had to sit around while the government gave corporations billions, had to watch while Healthcare played out, had to watch disasters unfold, both natural and man-made. Still, the government did little to nothing.
Now, when the political eye is finally turned to those voters, there is no money left in the coffers.

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tropicgirl's avatar

By tropicgirl, June 7, 2010 at 12:35 pm Link to this comment

Hey!!!!!!!!

There are NO TANKER SKIMMERS anywhere to be found. Something really “fishy”
here.

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By Anarcissie, June 7, 2010 at 9:24 am Link to this comment

So when is Mr. O going to be responsible for something?

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By sollipsist, June 7, 2010 at 8:04 am Link to this comment

The Gulf oil disaster is not Hurricane Katrina. Stop
saying that.

Hurricanes are uncontrollable natural forces. All we
can do is watch for them, endure them, and rebuild
when necessary.

Oil disasters are products of human negligence made
necessary by human greed.

I don’t have the heart to blame Obama (or even BP)
while I’m still making bi-weekly trips to the gas
pump.

I’m not defending BP, but I have yet to meet a single
person who doesn’t screw up or slack off at their work
once in a while.

The only difference is that a typo on a memo or a
stray onion ring in your fries won’t threaten the
lives of countless living things (human and
otherwise).

When the risk is that high, don’t take the chance.
Simple.

Instead of all of the impotent blame outrage, we could
channel our will into preventing this from happening
ever again.

But we won’t, because we’re lazy, stupid, and short-
sighted. Oh, sorry, I mean ‘pragmatic’. We’re just too
darn pragmatic to do anything but enable catastrophes
and then complain about how other people handle them.

Or, in Dionne’s case, to say that the catastrophe is
not the real issue anyways. First we have to make sure
that more people have jobs—ideally, making unnecessary consumer goods to boost the economy, and
commuting for the opportunity to buy and sell them.

Once that’s done, only then we can worry about all of
the disasters that occurred in the meantime.

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By Funmahol, June 6, 2010 at 11:59 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Yes definitely the problem is how administration can get ahead of a disaster.

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By mrfreeze, June 6, 2010 at 11:24 pm Link to this comment

Perhaps my crankiness is due to being up late and reading yet another piss-and-moan piece about President Obama: what he is or isn’t doing, what terrible things he’s handling or not handling….blah, blah, blah…........

Pardon me for saying this but: WTF was the Media doing for 8 years of GWB? If one-one-hundred-thousandth of the number of critical articles were broadcast by the Media during the de facto fascist regime of Bush, perhaps we wouldn’t be in the grim situation that faces us today.

I realize that some of you out there want to cry like babies and say “you’ve got to quit blaming Bush.” Too bad, I’m blaming Bush, I’m blaming the Media and I’m blaming US (you and me) for allowing our fellow Americans to allow some truly evil, venal and cynical people to destroy our country. Anyone who voted for Bush the first time needed their heads examined. Those who voted for him the 2nd time (go ahead and admit it…..lots of YOU did) deserve to watch the country go down the tubes.

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