tool name

close
tool goes here

New Obama shows off political muscle and a willingness to fight

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – What do you do after hope and change have failed?

Published: Sept. 9, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDT
0 comments

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – What do you do after hope and change have failed?

This was the question Barack Obama needed to answer in accepting his party’s nomination for a second term Thursday night. Borne into office on the wings of those two words and their promise of a new “post partisan” nation, Obama saw that promise promptly swamped by Republicans who waged a fierce campaign of obstructionism.

Granted, this is not how Mitt Romney remembers it. At the GOP convention in Tampa, he spun a dewy-eyed fable about how Republicans were really, really rooting for the president to succeed but then, gosh darn, he up and disappointed them. But one need only recall Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell declaring it his party’s top priority to deny the president a second term to know what a fib that is. Contrary to wishing the president success, Rush Limbaugh, poet laureate of the GOP, said the exact opposite: “I hope he fails.”

So from the beginning, the GOP refused to do. Then, it used the resultant gridlock to blame the president for divisiveness and ineptitude. It was a cynical strategy of legislative malpractice that left Obama looking not unlike Peter Parker pre-spider bite, a hapless nebbish figuratively shoved into his locker, metaphorically robbed of his lunch money.

Thursday’s speech, then, was the coming-out party for the Obama 2.0 that has emerged over the last year, the one who no longer begs the GOP to play nice, the one who takes unilateral action, the one who stands up a little more readily for what he believes, and is not above the occasional cheap shot. It was not the best speech of the convention – Michelle Obama gave that. It was not the best argument for a second term. Bill Clinton made that. But it was a feisty, combative address – a metric of how the man who promised hope and change has, himself, been changed.

Obama needled the opposition at every turn and drew repeated lines in the sand: “I refuse to...” “I will not ...” Obama even implicitly rebuked the patron saint of Republicanism, Ronald Reagan (peace be unto him) who famously said, “Government is not the solution to the problem. Government is the problem.”

Replied the 44th president to the 40th: “We don’t think the government can solve all of our problems, but we don’t think the government is the source of all of our problems any more than our welfare recipients or corporations or unions or immigrants or gays or any other group we’re told to blame for our troubles.”

Still, Obama 2.0 was not completely dissimilar from the earlier version whose eloquent calls to higher, common ground once braced a division-weary electorate. He reframed John F. Kennedy’s enduring call to service (“Ask not what your country can do for you .?.?.”) and reminded his audience that being an American is more than chanting “USA! USA!” on cue or watching your stock portfolio rise.

“We also believe,” he said, “in something called citizenship, a word at the very heart of our founding, a word at the very essence of our democracy, the idea that this country only works when we accept certain obligations to one another and to future generations.”

Once upon a time, we might not have needed the reminder. That was before the GOP embraced a mantra which might be summed up as, “I’ve got mine.”

Weeks away from a particularly consequential election, one can’t help wishing Obama 1.0 had been vindicated, had been able to return us to the days when Republicans and Democrats still understood that there is a time to trade your party hat for your statesman hat.

But we must deal with the world as it is. And in that world, Obama seems to have found the only answer he could. What do you do after hope and change?

Stand and fight.

Leonard Pitts Jr. is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Miami Herald. Email him at lpitts@miamiherald.com. Pitts chats with readers every Wednesday from 10 to 11 a.m. on www.MiamiHerald.com.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

CONTESTS

Similar stories

  • Sens. Marco Rubio, Rand Paul deliver blistering rebuttals to Obama

    In English and Spanish, Republican Sen. Marco Rubio on Tuesday night delivered a scathing rebuke of President Barack Obama’s State of the Union speech, signaling a Republican battle for middle-class voters that could help re-energize his party and also propel a potential 2016 White House run.

  • GOP needs to construct a 2.0 version of itself

    On the surface, Republicans are already doing a good job of beginning to change their party. Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana gave a speech to the Republican National Committee calling on Republicans to stop being the stupid party, to stop insulting the intelligence of the American people.

  • State of the Union shows an ideological fatigue

    President Barack Obama’s second inaugural address and his recent State of the Union have been described as “two acts in the same play.” They are matched “bookends.” They belong together “like bagels and toothpaste.”

  • Obama’s inaugural speech a call to a new liberal era

    No doubt anymore where President Barack Obama wants America, and history, to place him: As a tough-minded liberal.

  • With student loan rates about to double, lawmakers squabble

    Student loan rates will double to 6.8 percent on July 1 if Congress doesn’t settle on a new plan soon, but disagreements flared Thursday, not only between the two parties, but between a veteran Democrat and President Barack Obama.