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ADT Home Security in Virginia

Obama or Bust: We Need Leadership from the Top

by: Heather TaylorMiesle NRDC Action Fund

Mon May 24, 2010 at 14:49:06 PM EDT


(I couldn't agree more. - promoted by lowkell)

If you look at any of the 24X7 news shows or even the Today Show, you will see everyone proclaiming that there is an anti-incumbent mood spreading across America. There is good reason to say that as evidenced by the size of Tea Party rallies and even a few of the races last Tuesday. But, my personal opinion is that this is less about an anti-incumbent mood and more about a "pro-change" disposition. Voters are angry about the current state of blame and stall politics. They expect elected officials to keep their promises - and that extends to clean energy and climate legislation.

Even though clean energy and climate issues are rarely at the heart of the anti-incumbency rhetoric, the frustration with all things Beltway could block comprehensive energy legislation this year.

President Obama's leadership is the only force that can change that.

You see, when the electorate turns anti-Washington, Congressmen freeze up. They get scared of taking bold steps and they start saying "no" to everything.

Even on a good day, the odds of passing any bill in Congress--no matter the issue--starts at about 5 percent. Smart gamblers always bet the no vote in Congress.

But being a naysayer becomes even more attractive to politicians when they think their job is at risk. Voting "no" on a big, transformative bill allows them to give the illusion that they are "playing it safe" and to keep the bull's-eye off their back for potential mid-term popularity contests.

"No" may be an easy decision for politicians, but it is the wrong choice for the American people.

Heather TaylorMiesle NRDC Action Fund :: Obama or Bust: We Need Leadership from the Top

We need to say yes to a clean energy and climate bill that will generate nearly 2 million jobs, put our nation at the forefront of one of the biggest markets of the 21st century, end our reliance on oil, and reduce dangerous pollution. Yet so many lawmakers are in a panic over elections that they can't see these benefits.

They need to snap out of it. In a movie, this is the moment when someone would come along and slap the panicking person in the face. In politics, that slap is leadership.

President Obama must take charge of clean energy and climate legislation. The only major bills that pass through Congress are the ones with White House support. We are fortunate that President Obama backs climate action, but given this anti-incumbent mood, we need him not just to support it; we need him to lead it.

What would that look like? We saw it in the heath care debate. President Obama went into campaign mode and stumped on that bill every single day. He called in political chits. He got people in the same room to negotiate. He dragged it over the finish line because he went farther than asking for change. He demanded it.

That is what we need him to do for a clean energy and climate bill. Because let's be frank: either we see some leadership or we call it a day.

If we don't pass the bill this year, we won't get another chance for years. Dave Robert's painted the grim prospects for national climate action given the likely outcomes of future election cycles in his Grist blog this week. It doesn't look good for another eight years - at least.

We need to get America moving right now toward a clean energy future, and we need President Obama to lead the way.

This week, Robert Redford appeared in a television ad for the NRDC that has already been written about in the Washington Post and New York Times. Interestingly, he didn't call on Congress to take clean energy and climate action. He called on President Obama.

The president is the one with the bully pulpit. Tell him to use it on behalf of clean energy and climate solutions. Securing our future depends on it.

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We Want What We Voted for in 2008 (0.00 / 0)
America overwhelmingly elected a strongly progressive Obama in 2008 but we ot a middling shadow.

Ygleseas had a good post about this back in February:
http://yglesias.thinkprogress....

It's worth reviewing the mainstream liberal policy agenda for the 111th Senate:

A $1.2 trillion stimulus.

The forcible breakup of large banks.

Universal health care with a public option linked to Medicare rates.

An economy-wide cap on carbon emissions, with the permits auctioned.

Repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell.

A path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

An exit strategy from Afghanistan.

An end to special exemption of military spending from fiscal discipline.

An independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency.

The Employee Free Choice Act.
None of these things have happened.  And it's worth emphasizing that the White House hasn't even seriously attempted to do the vast majority of these things.

As much as we believe in change and as much as it's about what we do, it still takes presidential leadership to move Congress.  We haven't seen it, and you can only mobilize progressive activists for the middle for so long.  


That was in February (0.00 / 0)
some things have been moving since then. For example:
http://washingtonindependent.c...

Rome hasn't been built in a day. Probably not in 18months, either.

 


[ Parent ]
Political leadership (0.00 / 0)
is exactly what we expect of our Presidents, and it is especially necessary in this polarized era----- but on his signature issue of health care reform, Obama at the beginning showed no political leadership whatsoever, as I mentioned in the diary  "America is Center Left", when he dumped health care reform on Congress and then went on vacation. He never got his message across to the public, odd after being such an effective campaigner; instead, the howling Tea Party took over, framed the issue instead, and his presidency has never quite recovered. I dearly hope he learned his lesson, and it seems he did about health care, because he came late to the party, but was finally in campaign mode and won the day on some kind of health care reform..

Obama cannot afford to dawdle again on an energy bill. He absolutely must get out there now before the Republicans are successful in smearing him with the failures of the Deepwater Horizon spill control and cleanup. This disaster offered him a perfect opportunity to get a visionary energy policy passed, but so far we have had very darned little out of the White House. Is he going to ignore this window of opportunity? What does it take to make him get up and do the job (cool intellectuality goes only so far in a bare knuckles political fight and, besides, his own troops need a psychological boost here).  


Action on the oil spill is CRITICAL (0.00 / 0)
I cannot explain or understand the WH's reaction to the BP oil spill.  Beyond saying a few times, firmly, that BP is responsible and will pay - what have we seen from the president?  A commission?

I am not concern-trolling here.  I think the WH is risking Bush-Katrina levels of negative perception.  I think anyone who's been generally supportive of the president is obliged at this point to contact the White House and demand a sustained, strong response.

A slow-moving disaster has been unfolding with very halting and uncertain government action, and the scientific conclusion seems now to be that the spill will in many ways kill the Gulf of Mexico.

This administration has got to engage, now, what has clearly become the most pressing issue of American domestic policy.


[ Parent ]
Yeah, but (0.00 / 0)
just what else would you have him do? Send in the Marines to shoot all the BP representatives and experts? Puff up his chest and gobble like a turkey to scare the oil away?

It reeks that he has to, essentially, trust the arsonist to put out the fire but, unfortunately, the arsonist in this case probably knows more about the options and possibilities than anyone else.  


[ Parent ]
"Yeah, but" will equal a GOP win in 2012 (0.00 / 0)
I didn't say it was an easy proposition.  I said it was necessary.  And responses like this are not the least bit persuasive to the contrary.  Of course no use of military force nor plain bluster will be of any use.  But tolerant practicality is not going to be the general response to perceived inaction.

As a momentary conversation among commenters on a liberal blog, this is fine, and what you say has some truth (and an unhelpful tone of derision).  But if the national discourse becomes a similar question-and-answer exchange -- Q: "Why didn't the government do more?"  A: "What else was there to do?  Nothing." -- then we are going to be in a world of hurt.

The essence of my comment was an effort to state the urgency of this issue.  I have no way of knowing this, but to an outsider's view, the WH is not feeling that urgency.  I hope I'm wrong.


[ Parent ]
I'm not the only one who thinks some improvement is possible (0.00 / 0)
Read Bob Herbert (via Atrios)

http://www.eschatonblog.com/20...


[ Parent ]
Where there could be more leadership (0.00 / 0)
in the oil gusher ("spill" is too mild a word) is in the cleanup in Louisiana, where apparently the federal government has been dragging its feet on getting approval for protection booms and materials out to the marshes---- or am I being gullible about Gov. Jindal's complaints? What I am saying is, of course the feds could do little about plugging the well, but they could be doing a great deal more on the defense of the marsh and shoreline.

And, since we need street theatre and sound bites for news nowadays, we could have a cameo appearance of President Obama in the marshes and maybe dipping up a bit of oil.... photos of his phoning down to Louisiana are about as dumb as the photo of Bush boy looking out the airplane window at Katrina days after the hurricane and flood hit.  


[ Parent ]
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The purpose of Blue Virginia is to cover Virginia politics from a progressive and Democratic perspective. This is a group blog and a community blog. We invite everyone to comment here, but please be aware that profanity, personal attacks, bigotry, insults, rudeness, frequent unsupported or off-point statements, and "trolling" (NOTE: that includes outright lies, whether about climate science, or what other people said, or whatever) are not permitted and, if continued, will lead to banning. For more on trolling, see the Daily Kos FAQs. Also note that diaries may be deleted if they do not contain at least 2 solid paragraphs of original text; if not, please use the comments section of a relevant diary. For more on writing diaries, click here. Thanks, and enjoy!

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