Political Hotsheet
By

Stephanie Condon /

CBS News/ September 28, 2010, 4:07 PM

What's Behind Obama's "Hippie Punching"?

Five weeks ahead of the congressional midterm elections, the Obama administration and liberal activists agree they need to rally the Democratic base. But instead, they're caught pointing fingers at each other for the depressed mood among Democratic voters.

President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden had some harsh words for the liberal base this week, telling them to "buck up" and "stop whining" about what the administration has yet to accomplish. It's as if the administration has been trying to give liberal voters a guilt trip as a way to get them out to the polls.

This wasn't the first time the White House has clashed with the left -- the tension between the president and his core constituents came to a head last week during a conference call in which a liberal blogger accused the administration of "hippie punching."

Yet even as liberal activists and bloggers warn the White House that its attitude is only discouraging the Democrats' strongest supporters, the administration has not shied away from taking digs at its critics on the left. Some on the left say that the president and his administration are only speaking the truth -- and his willingness to buck his base proves his strong leadership. Others, however, contend that the president is simply interested in preserving his presidency and is passing on the blame for what is sure to be a bad November for Democrats.

The dissent between the White House and the left stems from the list of progressive agenda items Mr. Obama has yet to check off -- such as ending the military's "don't ask, don't tell policy," removing all troops from Iraq or Afghanistan, and closing the prison at Guantanamo Bay. The White House, meanwhile, is emphatically pointing to what it has accomplished -- passing a landmark health care bill, removing combat troops from Iraq, reforming the student loan industry, enacting an enormous stimulus package, and so on.

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"I understand why there would be a fair amount of frustration at the White House," Democratic Strategist and CBS News analyst Jamal Simmons told the Hotsheet. "To face as much criticism as he has despite the fact he passed a health care bill Democrats have wanted for 40 years could be pretty frustrating."

Simmons said that the hand-wringing among liberal activists doesn't match the attitude among everyday Democratic voters.

"There's a little bit of a disconnect between the intelligentsia and the people who will benefit the most from the president's policies," he said. "Most of the people advocating single payer health care actually have health care. The fact that the president covered 95 percent of Americans with health care versus 100 percent -- that's a win."

Nevertheless, the fact remains that the president's health care reforms remain unpopular, and a recent Associated Press poll found that "Americans who think the law should have done more outnumber those who think the government should stay out of health care by 2-to-1." The president's supporters say that Democrats passed the strongest bill possible, given the partisan atmosphere in Washington.

The White House is arguing that whether or not liberals think Mr. Obama could have pushed for a more robust health care bill, they need to get behind him now if they want Democrats to maintain majorities .

"Some of it may be venting," Simmons said of the administration's critique of the left. "But some of it is truth telling -- Democrats do need to buck up. In order to win, everybody needs to get on the same page."

Jane Hamsher, co-founder of the liberal blog FireDogLake and one of administration's strongest critics from the left, is not convinced. She argues that the White House's digs at the left have nothing to do with rallying voters this November.

"This isn't about GOTV [get-out-the-vote]," she writes on FireDogLake. "It's about setting up a narrative for who will take the blame for a disastrous election. And once again, the White House doesn't care if they make matters worse in order to deflect responsibility from Obama."

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She points to a number of reports from mainstream media outlets of the president distancing himself from losing Democrats, such as Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania.

"Insulating the President from blame for electoral losses is paramount, even at the risk of triggering the loss," Hamsher writes.

Taking a cue from an ABC News affiliate headline from May that read, "White House distances Obama from Specter," Hamsher writes that current headlines could read, "Obama Distances Himself From Democratic Voters."

This isn't the first time Mr. Obama has jostled with the partisan left, however. In 2005, then-Sen. Obama wrote an open letter on the liberal blog Daily Kos. Much as the president is now beseeching liberals to "buck up," he urged liberals in 2005 to stop attacking Democrats who voted to confirm Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts. He wrote:

There is one way, over the long haul, to guarantee the appointment of judges that are sensitive to issues of social justice, and that is to win the right to appoint them by recapturing the presidency and the Senate. And I don't believe we get there by vilifying good allies, with a lifetime record of battling for progressive causes, over one vote or position. I am convinced that, our mutual frustrations and strongly-held beliefs notwithstanding, the strategy driving much of Democratic advocacy, and the tone of much of our rhetoric, is an impediment to creating a workable progressive majority in this country.

Portions of the president's letter sounded as if they could have been written this week: "When we lash out at those who share our fundamental values because they have not met the criteria of every single item on our progressive 'checklist,' then we are essentially preventing them from thinking in new ways about problems. We are tying them up in a straightjacket and forcing them into a conversation only with the converted."

Simmons said that Mr. Obama is one of the few Democrats with enough credibility to occasionally push back against his base -- and he argued Republicans would be better off with a comparable figure.

"The Republican Party could stand to have a similar figure who would do that when it comes to the Tea Party," he said. "Someone who has credibility with that segment of the conservative movement should stand up and let those folks know when they've gone too far. Any Republican who hopes to win the broad middle will have to be someone who can capture the spirit of the Tea Party but let them know he's not prisoner to that."

It may be the case that such a figure could emerge as the 2012 elections gear up.

Hamsher argues, however, that it's not a strategy anyone running this year would employ: "Notice that nobody actually running for office is wagging their finger at voters and scolding them like a bunch of children," she writes.



Stephanie Condon is a political reporter for CBSNews.com. You can read more of her posts here. Follow Hotsheet on Facebook and Twitter.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
52 Comments Add a Comment
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skepticalJM says:
The real problem is no one represents the Nation and its people anymore.
The GOP shouldn't even say the word Nation because to them the Nation is the top 1% of people who earn 25% 0f the income. Their philosophy is "only I count, and to hell with society"; they are traitors to those soldiers risking their lives for this Nation and ALL its people; those soldiers who put their lives on the line for others they don't even know.
But is the Democratic Party any better?
Oh, they know how to spout Liberal rhetoric, but Obama is furthering only the same 1% that the GOP does.
Both these parties are using us to further their masters; the same ones who tripled gas prices after Katrina; keep an endless war going to further their Capitalistic Corporate fascism; keep the CD rates artificially low for the elderly and unemployed; gave us a Health Care Bill that favors their Insurance companies while Health Costs spiral out of control; and bailed out the speculators and con-men.
None of them care about our Nation or our society.
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tmittelstaed says:
What this is all about here is the MAJORITY of the Left - which is represented by Obama - is telling the very SMALL MINORITY of the ultraliberals - the gays, the pot smokers, and so on - that they ARE NOT going to see any of the ultraliberal agenda items that they wanted.

And this is perfectly fine to the majority of the liberals. In fact it's far more likely that the Democrats will garner a majority of the undecided voters by doing this.

Just think of this. If you are an undecided voter - and I mean truly undecided - your choices are to vote for a Republican who is embracing Sara Palin and no-************-odonnell, or vote for a Democrat who is telling the gay marriage people to go jump in the lake.

it's pretty obvious who your going to vote for.

The conservative's problem is that they are all so far to the Right that they think Palin is -normal-!!!
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skeezix06 says:
I gave up and have walked away. Obama's on his own. Not only has he not repealed Bush's policies, he's expanded them. There is no way I will enable or vote for him again.
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ozilot says:
Obama tells his base to buck up...I feel like telling the him to shut up and get back to work.

Results are what his base is looking for and frankly his have been few and far between, and water downed because he and the rest of the democratic leadership have caved in everytime the GOP whined!

Obama should take a page or 100 from Alan Greyson's play book and smack the GOP everytime they get in the way!

Further Obama missed his big opportunity, the economy, if he focused on that issue and had visable progress everything else would follow.

The other issue Obama is failing miserably on is Afghanistan. When Bush started the war we had a clear objective -- capture Osama Bin Laden and destroy Al Qaeda...Bush failed that mission and decided to go into nation building...something Bush said we would not do and that has failed miserably too...Obama continues the Bush policies and still no Osama or a stable Afghanistan...IT IS TIME TO CUT OUR LOSSES and bring our troops home. Afghanis will simply have to buck up and fix their own problems!
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endrepubs says:
Will someone tell what Obama has done that has been so bad?? Look at the facts: the stock market is up to 10700 from 6700 under Bush2, corporate profits are even higher now than they were pre-recession, CEO and executive compensation is now even higher than before the recession. The gap between the rich and poor has risen dramatically, worker productivity is up, corporations are sitting on record amounts of cash. The wealthiest 2% now own 24% of Americas wealth. This is totally a Republican WET DREAM. Why do you Repubs hate Obama so much. Sounds like he is a totally pro business and pro wealthy President which is why the left are having problems with him.
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askagain replies:
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I sold 80% of my stock portfolio when the market peaked atound 14000 under George Bush. I have been buying stocks back at low prices for two years now under Obama. My home is paid for and still worth over twice what I paid for it and my pension is fully funded. You won't hear any complaints about Bush from me.
DF68 replies:
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It's pretty simple. Van Jones was right. Repubs are anal orficies.
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askagain says:
correction

This article is music to the ears. Apparently things aren't so hunky dory in the Dmocratic party. Many posters chuckled with glee when they thought the Republican party was dieing. Now the shoe may be on the other foot. This will be an interesting election.
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askagain says:
This article is music to the ears. Apparently things aren't so hunky dory in the Emocratic party. Many posters chuckled with glee when they thought the Republican party was dieing. Now the shoe may be on the other foot. This will be an interesting election.
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ky7474 says:
I know of at least 2 occasions in question and answer sessions where Pres. Obama laughed in the face of people who voted for him when they expressed their concerns or had a question he didn't like. One was the lady who said she was tired of defending him while her family was hurting, the other when the college student asked his position on cannibis legalization to help stimulate the economy. I'm sure these two will be eager to get to the polls. Obama and Biden need to stand side by side, look in the mirror and have a great big laugh.
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redwilma replies:
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I remember that. Why does he do stuff like that? I totally support him, but why alienate anyone?
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esq777 says:
When you're being attacked by both hippies and tea baggers then you are clearly doing something right. Most of the country is between the wingnut extremes.
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thanksgreed replies:
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we'll see...
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infantryman1968 says:
To all of the Obama follwers: Your Revolution is over.
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thanksgreed replies:
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The morons are out...
infantryman1968 replies:
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So you dont think the Obama revolutionis over? Please tell us why?
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