December 1, 2009 9:32 PM

Obama Facing Barrage of "Friendly Fire"

By
Jeff Greenfield
(CBS)  November, 2008. In a victory speech, the president-elect thrills a rapturous crowd with his core theme.

"Where we are met with cynicism, and doubt, and those who tell us that we can't, we will respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people: Yes we can," Barack Obama said in Grant Park.

October, 2009. A late-night comedy show mocks President Obama's achievements with a mock "President Obama."

"When you look at my record it's very clear what I've done so far and that is nothing - nada," the fictional Obama said on "Saturday Night Live".

The problem for the White House is that this satirical view is being offered from voices that should be in his corner - voices that could both reflect and reinforce a politically damaging narrative, reports CBS News senior political correspondent Jeff Greenfield.

Recent weeks have seen a barrage of "friendly fire." Les Gelb, a Democratic foreign-policy expert, calls Obama's Asian trip "amateur hour;" The New York Times' Maureen Dowd compares him to Mr. Spock; a New York Magaine cover story detects "the air hissing out of the Obama balloon." Longtime liberal writer Elizabeth Drew writes: "A critical mass of influential people who once held big hopes for his presidency began to wonder whether they had misjudged the man."

"There's a critical mass of people that wish him well, think it's terribly important that he succeed, but are becoming dissapointed, disillusioned," Drew said.

A bad economy and two long wars are bound to feed discontent. But the problem is that discontent can feed other narratives - for instance, that he is too much with us, relying on his wit intelligence and his prudence, rather than a visceral connecttion to the people.

"But as we understand presidency more, there are people that feel too detached, too cool, cerebral, not visceral enough. Not empathy for real lives," said John Harris of Politico.

Presidents can fall -or rise - on such impressions. Gerald Ford was a skilled athlete whose stumbles became a metaphor for incompetence; Clinton survived a sex scandal because while people wouldn't trust him with their daughter, they trusted him with the economy; Reagan's clarity on his core beliefs sustained him.

And after less than a year in office, it's far too early to conclude that Obama's narrative is etched in stone.

"It's very very risky, even silly to say, 'Here's how it is now. Here's how it's always going to look and be,'" Drew said.

What can change a narrative? Well, a major speech on a war can define a president as a strong leader - provided, of course, that the policy he announces works.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by mtntexas December 2, 2009 6:41 PM EST
President Obama would be better off by simply announcing that he had no idea how difficult it would be to change ANYTHING in the midst of massive corruption and graft. He should state that he wasn't prepared to oppose lobbyists who's briefcases are stuffed with cash and doesn't know how to force Congressmen and Senators to abandon payoffs and vacations and jobs for their relatives and board appointments for their wives and furnishings for their homes and weekends with coke ****** and a choice of $Millions in gifts from grateful Corporate CEO's promising reelection. Maybe some of us would step forward and help him out in doing the right thing before his soul is lost. He apparently sold part of it last night in back-tracking on Afghanistan. I'll help him but I won't shake his hand... it has blood on it now.
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by eimorfin December 2, 2009 12:03 PM EST
Crazy how fast this guy has fallen in just under one year....not even I thought this was possible!!!! DISTURBING!!!!
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by WiseWidget December 2, 2009 2:11 AM EST
And "Wrong-way Obama" scores a touchdown for the Bush Gang! So who is this guy, Wrong-way or Bush III? Oh, looks like both, one and the same.
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by RegVoter December 2, 2009 12:18 AM EST
A date is a fixed entity. Benchmarks, goals, etc. can meander all over the place, and are subject to interpretation and manipulation.

It is amazing how the political and religious comments proliferated after the speech. Is there no one with any positive attitude toward this Country any more??? No "Can Do" approach to anything; just mostly negative and sarcastic whatever the issue.
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by charlie3991 December 1, 2009 11:38 PM EST
We should drop both parties. They're aliens from outer space. Vote independent.
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by drbob10001 December 1, 2009 11:09 PM EST
Please don't make it sound like all anti-war supporters of Barack Obama now oppose him. I was an early ardent opponent of the Vietnam and Iraq wars, and a very strong advocate for candidate Obama. But as of today all I have to say is,Bravo President Obama! You have proved with your Afghanistan decision that you have our backs in a complex and dangerous world, and will stand for us regardless of the flack you may take. I commend your political courage, insight and wisdom. American citizens have your back too. Don't let the whiners on the right or left, distract or discourage you. Please stay on this course toward peace and security, we elected you to be there for us, and you are. I am especially proud to have Barack Obama as my President today
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by stryker54 December 1, 2009 11:55 PM EST
your such a loser to back this man, he doesn't back the American people.
by Flyboycal December 1, 2009 10:05 PM EST
some day he will be as good as BUSH, we miss you George!!!!
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by staycalm December 1, 2009 9:50 PM EST
What does this writer mean..."he is too much with us" and then saying he has no visceral connection with the people? It doesn't make sense. Why can't CBS get good writers?

I think that being POTUS is turning out to be a much harder job than Obama anticipated. Because of his inexperience, he had no frame of reference with which to judge his fitness for the position. That is why I did not vote for him but may have voted for him in the future. I now feel sorry for him. I think his intentions are noble but he does not know how to execute them without offending some sector of this incredibly fractured and contentious nation we now live in. Now that we have compartmentalized our society over the last 30 years by race, gender, sexual orientation, etc. we don't know how to get out of our little boxes and get back into the big soup that is America. We have lost our homogeneity and are wandering around wondering who we are.
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by teacher239 December 1, 2009 9:07 PM EST
I hate war and wish the President would have been able to make a different speech, but this was a great speech dealing with very complex problems during very complex times.

To get to Pakistan we have to deal with Afghanistan. And just because the Bush administration utterly failed in their duty doesn't mean we can give up. All Americans should get behind the President in this difficult decision.

God bless President Obama!
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by babooph December 1, 2009 8:43 PM EST
No one can fix the mess idiot george left -2 endless lost wars -massive deficit-trashed economy,a sword through the heart of the middle class-failing health sysytem & a world that knew the US was in a massive decline-endless debt held by China,torture of war prisoners.....
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by stn_sage December 1, 2009 9:32 PM EST
Those "excuses" don't work anymore, babooph!

He's got the job now...and he's NOT taking the action he promised or actions designed to fix these problems...so, he's responsible!

He could end the war...instead he expands it.
He could stop the skulduggery at the Fed by axing Geithner and establishing policy...instead he lets him wreak havoc and dictate policy to Congress.
On and on and on...no, babooph, the days of defending him are OVER!
by slownewsday-5 December 1, 2009 11:31 PM EST
"by Smartdoc
GW is a true gentleman. He kept us safe and responded effectively to the situations we faced."

Not on 9/11 he didn't. Of course, in all fairness, he was coming off a full-month vacation he took in August...
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