Dick
Morris...
Obama
Faces Angst on the Left
By Dick Morris & Eileen McGann
Published on DickMorris.com on June
28, 2011
President
Obama’s decision to begin to
withdraw from Afghanistan reflects a deepening rift between his
Administration
and his former sycophants on the left.
On a score of issues, the liberal community
has begun to tire of their
president.
Indeed,
at the Netroots Conference,
liberal activists convened a panel on “What To Do If The President Is
Just Not
That Into You.” And
liberals are getting
the feeling that he is not.
From
Al Gore comes the criticism that
Obama has not informed the nation about the scientific evidence which
he sees
as proving that man-induced climate change is upon us and for not
taking bold
enough steps to address the issue.
From
Democratic Senators comes the
warning not to cut too deeply into government spending in the debt
limit
negotiations and a demand that he listen to their appeals for even more
spending.
From
the gay community comes anger at
Obama’s refusal to endorse gay marriage despite his ongoing,
self-confessed
“evolution” on the subject.
From
ultra-liberal Congressman Dennis
Kucinich comes the charge that his intervention in Libya is outside the
permitted scope of the war powers act.
From
former Interior Secretary Bruce
Babbitt comes an attack on Obama’s land use policies, accusing him of
too
easily allowing access and development on public land.
From
the far left comes consternation
at Obama’s refusal to close Gitmo and even criticism over shooting an
“unarmed”
bin Laden.
And
from the National Association of
Latino Elected Officials (NALEO) comes anger at Obama’s refusal to
attend their
annual convention for the third year in a row despite his campaign vow
to come
back after he won the election. Beneath
their pique is, of course, real discontent over his failure to push for
immigration reform even when he had sixty votes in the Senate and his
stepped
up “silent raids” on employers of illegal immigrants.
Obama
needs the strong and
enthusiastic support of a solidly united left.
He needs the turnout and he requires that they
remain loyal even as he
moves to the center to appease conservative and moderate voters. But he is not getting it.
Nor
is his decision to withdraw so
slowly from Afghanistan likely to do much to endear him to the liberals. While he makes a big show
of withdrawing more
rapidly than his generals wanted, that’s a straw man.
In reality, he is going to keep the surge
troops in Afghanistan until Election Day as he pulls them out slowly
between
now and then. His
announcement of a
pullout of ten thousand troops - out of a hundred thousand - by the end
of the
summer will not impress the left.
Behind
the discontent of the liberals
is, of course, disappointment and frustration with the economy. The continuing high levels
of unemployment
and the president’s seeming cluelessness in the face of a coming double
dip
recession - accompanied by inflation this time - erode his image as an
income
redistributor. Liberals
realize that
under Obama there has not only been no closure of the gap between the
rich and
the poor but the recession has brought a further widening.
Obama’s
victory was clinched by a virtual
doubling in the turnout of young people in 2008.
Unless he comes near that level this time, he
is in for great difficulty.
And
the soundings from the Latino and
left communities indicate that he’s got a long, long way to go.
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