March 22, 2010 7:46 AM

Obama Just Sealed His Place in History

By
CBSNews
(The New Republic)  Jonathan Chait is a senior editor of The New Republic.

Let me offer a ludicrously premature opinion: Barack Obama has sealed his reputation as a president of great historical import. We don't know what will follow in his presidency, and it's quite possible that some future event--a war, a scandal--will define his presidency. But we do know that he has put his imprint on the structure of American government in a way that no Democratic president since Lyndon Johnson has.

The last two generations have no model for such a president. The only two other Democratic presidents of the last four decades are Jimmy Carter, a failure, and Bill Clinton, who enjoyed modest successes but failed in his most significant legislative fight. Obama, who helped pull the country out of a depression and reshaped the health care system, has already accomplished far more than Clinton. (This isn't necessarily Clinton's fault--he lacked the votes to break a Republican filibuster that Obama has--but the historical convention is to judge a president by what he and the Congress achieve together.) He will never be plausibly compared with Jimmy Carter.

Historians will see this health care bill as a masterfully crafted piece of legislation. Obama and the Democrats managed to bring together most of the stakeholders and every single Senator in their party. The new law law untangles the dysfunctionalities of the individual insurance market while fulfilling the political imperative of leaving the employer-provided system in place. Through determined advocacy, and against special interest opposition, they put into place numerous reforms to force efficiency into a wasteful system. They found hundreds of billions of dollars in payment offsets, a monumental task in itself. And they will bring economic and physical security to tens of millions of Americans who would otherwise risk seeing their lives torn apart. Health care experts for decades have bemoaned the impossibility of such reforms--the system is wasteful, but the very waste creates a powerful constituency for the status quo. Finally, the Democrats have begun to untangle the Gordian knot. It's a staggering political task and substantive achievement.

The template of a powerful, historically consequential Democratic president is unfamiliar to many of us. Certainly the Republicans have no real idea how to deal with it. Look at Bill Kristol's taunting editorial in the Weekly Standard:

"After his 1851 coup d'état, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of the real Napoleon, pronounced himself Napoleon III. It was the rise to power of this great-man-wannabe that prompted the famous opening of Karl Marx's Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis-Bonaparte: "Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce."

"And presiding over this three-ring circus of liberal incompetence was President Barack Obama, who stands in relation to the towering and tragic figure of Lyndon Johnson as Napoleon III did to the real Napoleon. Have we had in modern times a president who was so out of his depth?"

It occurs to me that Bill Kristol stands in relation to the towering and tragic figure of Irving Kristol as Napoleon III did to the real Napoleon. But I digress. The broader point is that the Republicans have spent a year chortling over the inevitable collapse of Obama, and they seem to cling even more tightly to that fantasy--"Incompetence"? "Out of his depth"?--as it slips further away.

Obama's accomplishments do not, and probably will not, meet those of Johnson, let alone Franklin Roosevelt. It's worth noting that he has smaller majorities, and governs in an era when the republican Party is far more ideologically radical and unified in opposition. A measure of that greater discipline and partisan unity can be seen in the fact that Social Security and Medicare both won significant Republican support, and both were far more liberal and government-centric in their design.

We can't know what the future holds in store for Obama. It's entirely possible that Republicans will gain control of the House in November and block any further domestic progress, unemployment will stay high, and Republicans will win the White House in 2012. Yet he's already left his imprint on history.


By Jonathan Chait:
Reprinted with permission from The New Republic.

The New Republic
Add a Comment See all 52 Comments
by VoteNoObama2012 March 23, 2010 7:28 PM EDT
VoteNoObama2012.com

Two new polls showing the American people are strongly against the health care plan President Barack Obama will sign into law today. According to CNN, 59% of Americans oppose President Obama's plan. And according to CBS News, 48% of Americans oppose the plan (with 33% in strong opposition) compared to only 37% who support it (with only 13% in strong support). Digging deeper into the CBS poll, we find that 76% of Americans disapprove of how Congress is handling its job on health care, 46% think Congress has spent too much time on health care, and 49% believe the rules and procedures used in Congress to get the current health care bill passed have been mostly unfair.
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by tsigili March 23, 2010 5:59 PM EDT
I don't know.......Jimmy carter may just beat him out for the worst President ever.
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by RobAla March 23, 2010 9:02 PM EDT
President Obama may have beat out President Carter in only 14 months! God help us in the coming months and years. I voted for President Carter, but had to hang my head about 2 years after doing so. I wasn't fooled this time, and President Obama did not get my vote.
by tsigili March 23, 2010 1:12 PM EDT
That will be a very negative place in history.
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by noloyalisti March 22, 2010 9:46 PM EDT
We should be so proud of Obama who has done so much good for America in such as short time. He will go down as one of our best Presidents and he is only getting started. We should back him so we can really get progressive change and take out the REAL ENEMY of the people, the rich, greedy big corporations.

We have your back Obama, the progressive majority of America.
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by sjc_1 March 23, 2010 9:04 AM EDT
I agree, this President has done more good in a year than Bush could have ever hoped to do in 8 years. This President has had to fix the damage that Bush did AND lead the country...impressive.
by hateisafourletterword March 22, 2010 7:31 PM EDT
Yes he did "How to BK a Country in 400 Days or Less".
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by novamba March 22, 2010 6:54 PM EDT
"Obama Just Sealed His Place in History"

Wasn't that always the point?
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by wtcmedicdidntforget March 22, 2010 6:39 PM EDT
Hope this country figures out a way to decrease imports, increase exports. make things here and spend it here to pay for the BIG BLACK HOLE created by this program.
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by image_by_m March 22, 2010 6:20 PM EDT
It's not single payer....Do you people actually read?

Look, I can't speak for all Americans and I wouldn't want to, but a lot of us wanted HealthCare reform and we got it. We wanted this man in office and we got that too.

You don't like it, vote or move. Either or, we really don't care, but please shut up about it.

This is the problem with a lot of people these days and the internet in general. They can't just disagree in a civilized manner, they have to fall back on rhetoric, talking points, and nonsense. You voted for McCain-Palin? Good for you. But you lost. So sit quietly for 3 more years ( while we fix your mess ), then come back and try again. Why is that so hard?
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by maistir March 22, 2010 6:02 PM EDT
Whatever the reform of health care brings, let's hope it brings Pres. Obama a legacy better than LBJ's. LBJ (together with Nixon) destroyed the public's trust in presidential leadership. They lied about everything from Vietnam to politics. We've not really recovered any sense that government is not out to trick us for 50 years -- one of the reasons for a sharply divided public today.
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by image_by_m March 22, 2010 5:47 PM EDT
Dear Republicans,

Don't you guys ever get tired of being wrong?

Regards,

The Human Race
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by scottyusa March 22, 2010 5:49 PM EDT
Let me hear you say that in 2014 when we start paying the 400 billion in taxes and have mandatory insurance that no one is going to buy. That of course, will mean more taxes.
by Observer1504 March 22, 2010 6:04 PM EDT
I'd like to hear from you in about 3 years when your income tax spikes to between 45 and 51 percent, and you enjoy paying far higher prices for goods due to a Value Added Tax . Take the time to do a little research on other countries that have this type of health care.
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