A Report Card For America's Top Community Organizer
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- When U.S. President Barack Obama was elected in 2008, it marked the
first time that a local "community organizer" had risen to the highest office on
the planet. I wasn't entirely optimistic. Granted, the geopolitical competition
(Russia) is also led by a community organizer of sorts, Vladimir Putin, except
that the community he was organizing was the Russian domestic intelligence
service.
At the time, it was hard to see how Obama's community-organizing background
could bode well for America. Five years later, how has it all worked out? The
results so far have been mixed.
Politics is a profession whereby the qualities necessary for victory are
different from those that make a great leader. In political campaigns, reaching
out to voters and making them feel like they're part of something important is
often the key to success. But once elected, the same behavior can give the
impression that the politician who was elected to lead needs to consult the
masses because he doesn't really know what he's doing.
Not that there isn't value in community-organizing and alliance-building skills.
Let's look at some of the major issues Obama has handled, and how those skills
have served him.
-- Obamacare: Whereas President George W. Bush's biggest perceived quagmire
involved a global chessboard, complex geopolitical strategy and troop logistics,
Obama's Waterloo is a health-care comparison-shopping website that he probably
could have had a Stanford computer-science student build for course credit.
Obama is now apparently using his community-organizing skills to get kids
involved in cleaning up his mess. Speaking at a White House youth summit on
December 4, Obama said to the kids in attendance: "So I'm going to need you all
to spread the word about how the Affordable Care Act really works, what its
benefits are, what its protections are and, most importantly, how people can
sign up. ... But no matter how much I care, the truth is ... for your friends
and your family, the most important source of information is not going to be me,
it's going to be you. They are going to trust you."
Seriously? Why not get the kids to mow the White House lawn, too?
Selling policies is your job, Mr. President. Imagine if Bush had said, at the
height of Iraq war criticism, "I'm calling on all y'all kids to explain to ma
and pa why we went into Iraq and why we're fighting over there. I'm counting on
you to provide daily intelligence briefings to those around you. And pull up
your jeans from under your butt and brush the Dorito dust off your vintage band
t-shirt first."
Grade: F.
-- International Relations: This is the one field to which community-organizing
skills should be transferable, since it ought to involve the construction of
strategic alliances. There's no need for the U.S. to be everywhere when allies
can do the job -- particularly in cases where new geopolitical realities have
rendered America's interests much less direct, and where other nations have more
pragmatic regional influence. Obama passed the ball to regional power Russia
during the Syrian conflict, albeit only after taking America to the brink of
war.
He has effectively offloaded management of Middle Eastern and African conflicts
to European allies while focusing on more economically imperative interests.
Despite America having claim to oil-rich Arctic territory, Obama seems content
to let Canada lead North America in that turf war with Russia. Canadian Prime
Minister Stephen Harper ordered a remapping of Canadian Arctic claims, with
Putin responding by ordering military reinforcement in the area. Although some
might label all of this a lack of leadership on Obama's part, it could just as
easily be labeled as a leveraging of strategic alliances. Time will tell. For
now, the community-organizing background gets the benefit of the doubt.
Grade: B-minus (subject to periodic review).
-- Economy: Here's where a community organizer can behave like a kid sitting in
the backseat with a toy steering wheel, thinking he controls the car. The U.S.
economy is controlled by market forces on a global scale, beyond the reach of
any president who might try to meddle and make people believe that he's doing so
for the benefit of the masses. Even with taxpayer-funded government bailouts,
the funding still ultimately comes from the consumer. It's nothing more than a
shell game with the taxpayer's wallet. Calling on Congress to increase
unemployment benefits, or crowing about General Motors being profitable
post-bailout, or claiming on the White House website that you're "putting
America back to work" is the equivalent of taking credit for the fact that
everyone gets a day off work on December 25.
Grade: Not applicable.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN