August 10, 2010, 2:43 pm
White House Aides And The Principal-Agent ProblemA lot of commentary about the anti-left outburst by Robert Gibbs points out, correctly, that it was really dumb from a political perspective; criticism from the left is not a significant problem for Obama, while annoying the base is.
But I think people are missing an important point: what’s good for Obama is not necessarily good for his aides.
Think about it: Complaints that the administration should have pursued a bigger stimulus, or fought harder for the public option, or taken a different position on Afghanistan aren’t going to matter in the midterms. But they might hurt White House aides who argued against a bigger stimulus (to the point of not even passing the option on to the president), or argued against a harder push on health reform (perhaps even calling for retreat after Scott Brown), or have argued that continuation of Bush foreign policy is a political winner. The point is that the president might actually take those criticisms to heart, and rethink who he listens to.
Of course, aides aren’t supposed to put their own interests above those of the man they serve. And they probably aren’t doing that consciously. But still ….
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/10/white-house-aides-and-the-principal-agent-problem/