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Obama should
Not Seek
Re-Election
in 2012
WASHINGTON
(By
Douglas E.
Schoen and
Patrick H.
Caddell,
Washington
Post)
November 13,
2010
― President
Obama must
decide now
how he wants
to govern in
the two
years
leading up
to the 2012
presidential
election.
In recent
days, he has
offered
differing
visions of
how he might
approach the
country's
problems. At
one point,
he spoke of
the need for
"mid-course
corrections."
At another,
he expressed
a desire to
take ideas
from both
sides of the
aisle. And
before this
month's
midterm
elections,
he said he
believed
that the
next two
years would
involve
"hand-to-hand
combat" with
Republicans,
whom he also
referred to
as
"enemies."
It is clear
that the
president is
still trying
to reach a
resolution
in his own
mind as to
what he
should do
and how he
should do
it.
This is a
critical
moment for
the country.
From the
faltering
economy to
the
burdensome
deficit to
our foreign
policy
struggles,
America is
suffering a
widespread
sense of
crisis and
anxiety
about the
future.
Under these
circumstances,
Obama has
the
opportunity
to seize the
high ground
and the
imagination
of the
nation once
again, and
to galvanize
the public
for the hard
decisions
that must be
made. The
only way he
can do so,
though, is
by putting
national
interests
ahead of
personal or
political
ones.
To that end,
we believe
Obama should
announce
immediately
that he will
not be a
candidate
for
reelection
in 2012.
If the
president
goes down
the
reelection
road, we are
guaranteed
two years of
political
gridlock at
a time when
we can ill
afford it.
But by
explicitly
saying he
will be a
one-term
president,
Obama can
deliver on
his central
campaign
promise of
2008,
draining the
poison from
our culture
of
polarization
and ending
the
resentment
and division
that have
eroded our
national
identity and
common
purpose.
We do not
come to this
conclusion
lightly. But
it is clear,
we believe,
that the
president
has largely
lost the
consent of
the
governed.
The midterm
elections
were
effectively
a referendum
on the Obama
presidency.
And even if
it was not
an
endorsement
of a
Republican
vision for
America, the
drubbing the
Democrats
took was
certainly a
vote of no
confidence
in Obama and
his party.
The
president
has almost
no
credibility
left with
Republicans
and little
with
independents.
The best way
for him to
address both
our national
challenges
and the
serious
threats to
his
credibility
and stature
is to make
clear that,
for the next
two years,
he will
focus
exclusively
on the
problems we
face as
Americans,
rather than
the politics
of the
moment - or
of the 2012
campaign.
Quite
simply,
given our
political
divisions
and economic
problems,
governing
and
campaigning
have become
incompatible.
Obama can
and should
dispense
with the
pollsters,
the
advisers,
the
consultants
and the
strategists
who dissect
all
decisions
and
judgments in
terms of
their impact
on the
president's
political
prospects.
Obama
himself once
said to
Diane
Sawyer: "I'd
rather be a
really good
one-term
president
than a
mediocre
two-term
president."
He now has
the chance
to deliver
on that
idea.
In the 2008
presidential
campaign,
Obama spoke
repeatedly
of his
desire to
end the
red-state-blue-state
divisions in
America and
to change
the way
Washington
works. This
was a
central
reason he
was elected;
such
aspirations
struck a
deep chord
with the
polarized
electorate.
Obama can
restore the
promise of
the election
by forging a
government
of national
unity,
welcoming
business
leaders,
Republicans
and
independents
into the
fold. But if
he is to
bring
Democrats
and
Republicans
together,
the
president
cannot be
seen as an
advocate of
a particular
party, but
as somebody
who stands
above
politics,
seeking to
forge
consensus.
And yes, the
United
States will
need nothing
short of
consensus if
we are to
reduce the
deficit and
get spending
under
control, to
name but one
issue.
Forgoing
another term
would not
render Obama
a lame duck.
Paradoxically,
it would
grant him
much greater
leverage
with
Republicans
and would
make it
harder for
opponents
such as
Senate
Minority
Leader Mitch
McConnell
(R-Ky.) -
who has
flatly
asserted
that his
highest
priority is
to make
Obama a
one-term
president -
to be
uncooperative.
And for
Democrats
such as
current
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi
(Calif.) -
who has said
that
entitlement
reform is
dead on
arrival -
the
president's
new posture
would make
it much
harder to be
inflexible.
Given the
influence of
special
interests on
the
Democratic
Party, Obama
would be
much more
effective as
a figure who
could remain
above the
political
fray.
Challenges
such as
boosting
economic
growth and
reducing the
deficit are
easier to
tackle if
you're not
constantly
worrying
about the
reactions of
senior
citizens,
lobbyists
and unions.
Moreover, if
the
president
were to
demonstrate
a clear
degree of
bipartisanship,
it would
force the
Republicans
to meet him
halfway. If
they didn't,
they would
look
intransigent,
as the GOP
did in 1995
and 1996,
when Bill
Clinton
first
advocated a
balanced
budget.
Obama could
then go to
the
Democrats
for tough
cuts to
entitlements
and look to
the
Republicans
for
difficult
cuts on
defense.
On foreign
policy,
Obama could
better make
hard
decisions
about Iran,
North Korea
and
Afghanistan
based on
what is
reasonable
and
responsible
for the
United
States,
without the
political
constraints
of a looming
election. He
would be
able to deal
with a
Democratic
constituency
that wants
to get out
of
Afghanistan
immediately
and a
Republican
constituency
that is
committed to
the war,
forging a
course that
responds not
to the
electoral
calendar but
to the facts
on the
ground.
If the
president
adopts our
suggestion,
both sides
will be
forced to
compromise.
The
alternative,
we fear,
will put the
nation at
greater
risk. While
we believe
that Obama
can be
reelected,
to do so he
will have to
embark on a
scorched-earth
campaign of
the type
that
President
George W.
Bush ran in
the 2002
midterms and
the 2004
presidential
election,
which
divided
Americans in
ways that
still plague
us.
Obama owes
his election
in large
measure to
the fact
that he
rejected
this
approach
during his
historic
campaign.
Indeed, we
were among
those
millions of
Democrats,
Republicans
and
independents
who were
genuinely
moved by his
rhetoric and
purpose.
Now, the
only way he
can make
real
progress is
to return to
those values
and to say
that for the
good of the
country, he
will not be
a candidate
in 2012.
Should the
president do
that, he -
and the
country -
would face
virtually no
bad
outcomes.
The
worst-case
scenario for
Obama? In
January
2013, he
walks away
from the
White House
having been
transformative
in two ways:
as the first
black
president,
yes, but
also as a
man who
governed in
a manner
unmatched by
any modern
leader. He
will have
reconciled
the nation,
continued
the economic
recovery,
gained a
measure of
control over
the fiscal
problems
that
threaten our
future, and
forged
critical
solutions to
our
international
challenges.
He will, at
last, be the
figure
globally he
has sought
to be, and
will almost
certainly
leave a
better
regarded
president
than he is
today.
History will
look upon
him kindly -
and so will
the public.
It is no
secret that
we have been
openly
critical of
the
president in
recent days,
but we make
this
proposal
with the
deepest
sincerity
and hope for
him and for
the country.
We have both
advised
presidents
facing great
national
crises and
have seen
challenges
from inside
the Oval
Office. We
are
convinced
that if
Obama
immediately
declares his
intention
not to run
for
reelection,
he will be
able to
unite the
country,
provide
national and
international
leadership,
escape the
hold of the
left,
isolate the
right and
achieve
results that
would be
otherwise
unachievable. |
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