Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Way
I spent a news-free two days, so reading the papers this Monday morning got me fairly riled up. Saturday we did a charity dinner and spent all day in prep and cooking, and Sunday when we got up to go to San Francisco for the Rhone Rangers Grand Wine Tasting, it had snowed and froze my satellite dish, so I was disconnected from the world for wine tasting and general gallivanting in San Francisco. I thought I had left the country in good hands for the weekend, but what a fool I was. Monday when I got up in SF, got my coffee and sausage muffin at Starbucks, my trusty Kindle had downloaded the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the San Francisco Chronicle and I realized the nation was once again adrift. So I will do my patriotic duty to get this thing back on course.
Let’s start with the Republicans and their distraction tactics to do nothing about our problems. Senator Susan Collins, the “moderate” Republican from Maine was “concerned” about the deficit. She said in regard to deficit spending in the proposed Obama budget, “It brings our debt levels to an unprecedented level that is not sustainable. It poses a threat to the basic health of our economy.” There are two misplaced ideas here. First is that this level of debt is not any more than we ran during WWII (as a percent of GDP), which by the way, we borrowed from our own citizens. And the second one is that our economy is already on life support. Spending has dried up. What exactly does Senator Collins propose? Reduce spending and unemploy millions more? Ignore our problems and they will get better on their own as businesses fail and our infrastructure collapses?
Monday, E.J. Dionne wrote a column in the Washington Post (Obama versus the Dodgers) pointing out this tactic of ignoring presenting your own solutions and kicking the can down the road by claiming the Obama administration has overreached with too many issues and must focus on the economy. As he makes clear, this is nothing but a tactic to not discuss or debate the way forward for education, health care, or energy. Then the Republicans like to criticize everything that is occurring, but offering no coherent alternatives. That is because there aren’t any. This editorial encapsulates the complete Republican strategy, and what should concern most Americans is that it is a strategy with no plan other than to have the other side fail. You have to hand it to Republicans. I never thought a Lose-Lose strategy would ever see the light of day.
But let us not let the Obama administration off the hook. If the Obama administration has a fatal flaw, it may be that it doesn’t lead in the details and the devil is in the details. President Obama told us that he wanted the stimulus money spent wisely and for our future. But it is clear that the money is being spent for business as usual projects such as a toll highway near Houston Texas which could increase rural sprawl and be counter productive to reducing our carbon imprint or vehicle usage. This is just one of many projects that are going forward which will create jobs, but don’t match up to our long-term goals. In a related story on Monday, the Obama administration sent out its spokespersons to get out the message that the 90% tax on bonuses that came out of the lynch mob House was flawed, but would wait to see what the Senate will come up with to handle this bonus situation.
Both of these examples demonstrate, in my view, a flaw in the Obama approach. He is trying to establish wide guidelines and then let the political process play out to arrive at a way forward. The trouble is, the politicos just can’t stop doing business as usual and they need adult supervision.
One of the reasons that George Bush was able to lead so many people down the wrong path was because he was firm about where we were going and gave people confidence in his leadership, however misguided. President Obama needs to borrow a page from George and start laying the path forward in more specific detail and start fighting for the important things that have to get done, or as Frank Rich pointed out in his column on Sunday (Has a Katrina Moment Arrived?), he has to take charge.
We have this moment in our history when we are at a critical crossroad. The Republicans are doing everything possible to stymie any progress other than trying maintain the staus quo. This is no more evident than this morning in the hearings on AIG where the Republicans somehow tried to tie the bonus management to government provided health care. It is time to stand up and fight for the way forward, not wait for some compromised half-step that won’t get us there. This is the critical moment whether we either step forward, or always be relegated to an also ran. We need a leader who will project the way forward, be specific in his plan and then fight for it.
It starts with correcting the abuses of torture and murder we committed, as we became a nation of war criminals by investigating and prosecuting those that committed these atrocities. We have to get our house in order and this would shut-up Vice President Cheney and his claims of making us safe. It must continue with a vision for our future and instead of accommodating Republican do-nothingism as bipartisanship, takes it on directly and discredits it. We need a national plan for energy, education, transportation, and our economy. Leaving it up to the states or Congress to sort out will not get us there. The nation is waiting for you President Obama. Do not let this opportunity get away while you play nice.
Leave a comment