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But the Communist Party Chief pulled most of the important strings. They had a system where the same person could sometimes hold both roles, and we do not. But just because Barack Obama does not currently hold a position of leadership in the U.S. Senate does not establish that he does not provide leadership in the U.S. Senate. The stimulus plan that passed the U.S. Senate is not now referred to as Harry Reid's plan, it called the Obama stimulus program, and for sound reasons.
All Presidents have influence over the members of their own party in Congress, it just varies by degree from one President to another. Even Jimmy Carter had influence among Congressional Democrats. He was at the low end of that spectrum yet he still had enough pull in the Democratic Party to defeat Teddy Kennedy for the 1980 Democratic nomination. Obama's influence among Congressional Democrats today is substantial. He is at the furthest extreme away from being a lame duck President, he is still early in his first team with approval ratings that dwarf that of Congress, after having won the most resounding victory in a Presidential election since Ronald Reagan's second election.
Unlike Jimmy Carter Obama went out of his way to stock his administration with seasoned and powerful Congressional insiders from a Chief of Staff with strong House ties to a Vice President with strong Senate ties. Do you not think that Republicans in Congress were not strongly influenced by the Bush Administration agenda between 2000 and 2008? Why on earth would it be different for Democrats in that regard?
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