|
I think one reason there's often a schism between people who still support Obama and people who've soured on him is because people in the first group tend to give him credit for doing general Democratic things, while people in the second group think those really ought to go without saying. The first group tends to compare him to Bush, while the second group compares him with Average Mainstream Democrat.
Take the Lily Ledbetter equal pay act, or SCHIP, as examples. The pro-Obama folks say, "Hey, look, he signed them, unlike when Bush was president!" The not-so-pro-Obama folks say, "Oh come on--any Democrat would have signed them. Even Joe Lieberman would have signed them."
The same I think could go for a lot of things--the stimulus, the Supreme Court nominees, and a lot of the routine decisions that presidents make. Any Democrat would have proposed a stimulus, and any Democrat would have appointed liberalish Supreme Court justices. On the other side, I think most Democrats would have kept more of the surveillance state than we might have hoped. While I'm unhappy with Obama's positions on wiretapping, state secrets, habeas corpus and the like, I'm not sure the average Democrat would have been better.
Instances Obama has done things differently might be these:
1. Bipartisanship. I think most Democrats who remember the 1990s and the years in which Republicans routinely called Democrats unpatriotic would not have spent so much time futilely trying to placate the GOP. This really led to crippling weaknesses in the stimulus and health insurance reform bills.
2. Auto bailouts. This took some courage and I'm not sure every Democrat would have done it. I think most probably would, given the sheer number of jobs at stake. I mean, we can maybe lose Chrysler, but GM?
3. Gay rights. Unfortunately, I think Obama is behind the curve on this, and farther behind than he has to be even if political calculations are the only consideration. At this point he risks being behind not just most Democrats, but a fair number of Republicans.
|