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Though I'm an avowed defender of Rahm Emanuel's
performance as chief of staff, I'd be calling for his head if he were calling these shots. This critique only makes sense if you think about the presidency in terms of poll numbers rather than problems. Health-care reform, for instance, is inches from passage. If not for Scott Brown's unexpected victory in Massachusetts, it would have passed weeks ago. We'd be on our way to implementing a bill that would cover 30 million Americans, completely reform the insurance market, make a serious start on cost control, end the days when sick people couldn't get health insurance, and create a new coverage infrastructure that could absorb the flood of refugees from the dying employer-based system. That deserves some weight in this discussion.
Whether health-care reform passes, what's undeniably clear is that it
could have passed. When you make a bet, some risk is acceptable. In fact, it's inevitable. As any poker player knows, the fact that you lost a hand doesn't mean you bet wrong. And so it is for health-care reform. If this bill had suffered the fate of Clinton's bill and never even made it to the floor, you could argue that it was a strategic miscalculation from the start. But we're talking about historic legislation that has, for the first time ever, passed both houses of Congress. That's not a strategic miscalculation. It's a tactical triumph. And insofar as Emanuel has, at times, been opposed to persevering on this effort, he's been wrong.
As for jobs, it's evidence of what a strange place Washington is that people think the country's economic anxiety could be alleviated if the president and his party just said the word "jobs" more often. The jobs issue is trouble for the Democrats because unemployment is nearly in the double digits. Unless they have a way to bring it down -- and, as of yet, they've not been willing to consider any secondary legislation of that size, or any pressure on the Federal Reserve -- the jobs issue will continue being a problem for Democrats. Only in Washington could anyone possibly believe that unemployment is properly a question of political communication rather than people not receiving a paycheck.
I'll stay out of the Guantanamo debate because I haven't been following it. But on the areas that I know well, the defense of Rahm favored by some Washington Democrats is evidence of everything that is wrong with Washington: It prizes politics rather than policy, and seems interested in the problems Americans are facing only insofar as those problems show up in the president's poll numbers. In this telling, the measure of Obama's success is not how much good he does for the country but how much good he does for congressional reelection campaigns. No wonder people hate this city.