On health-care reform, the president didn't repeat Clinton's mistakes. Obama made new ones.
Eleanor Clift, Feb 12, 2010
Many armchair analysts agree President Obama shouldn't have tackled comprehensive health-care reform in his first year, that he should have focused on the economy and creating jobs. That's easy to say now that we've seen what a hash Congress made of the reform effort. But if Obama had walked away from universal health care, it would have been seen as a colossal betrayal of the Democratic dream and the liberal lion whose endorsement helped propel him to the White House.
Obama's nomination was far from a sure thing when Sen. Ted Kennedy, with Caroline Kennedy at his side, took the stage at American University a week before Super Tuesday and endorsed Obama. It was one of those moments in politics when the ground shifted, when liberals and feminists and African-Americans—the Democratic base—got the OK from their first family of politics to back Obama, an upstart in the party, over Hillary Clinton, who had assumed this would be her base, as it had been during her husband's presidency.
As it turned out, Kennedy's endorsement wasn’t enough for Obama to carry Massachusetts, an inkling perhaps of what would follow with this year's loss of Kennedy's seat to Republican Scott Brown. Hillary's feistiness was more popular with working-class Democrats in the state than Obama's cool intellectualism.The Kennedy mystique took a minor hit, but the national momentum had shifted to Obama, generationally and culturally, and Kennedy made it happen.
[snip] After being diagnosed with a brain tumor in May 2008, Kennedy let it be known he was orchestrating meetings with lobbyists and lawmakers so Democrats would be ready to go with legislation once the election formalities were over. [snip]
Obama took office with two agendas—the one that he ran on, which included health-care reform, education reform, and energy independence—and the one he inherited, rescuing the economy, bailing out the banks, and filling the huge hole created by the collapse of private investment with government spending. The much-maligned stimulus bill didn't save or create as many jobs as promised, but it pulled the economy back from the brink, allowing Obama to soldier on with health care, fulfilling the commitment of the campaign. This time, building on the lessons of the past, he would do it differently.
The last big push for health-care reform had ended in failure when Hillary Clinton crafted a bill in the White House and congressional leaders treated it like an anthrax letter. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then chair of the Senate Finance Committee, held the Clinton bill aloft, all 1,342 pages, and let it drop to the floor with a thud, signaling what he thought of it.
Obama, taking the opposite tack, turned over the drafting of legislation to Congress on the assumption that powerful committee chairmen would have a vested interest in its passage. Now we know the opposite of an error is another error, and that Obama was too passive in his relationship with Congress. He didn't provide leadership to his allies on Capitol Hill, and the result was an extended period of stumbling that allowed reform opponents to gain the upper hand. (Emphasis added)
[SNIP]
If Hillary had been elected, would she have done things differently? Having been burned once with health-care reform, she probably would have approached it more gingerly, and she wouldn't have felt indebted to Kennedy. Those who know her say she would never have given up that much control to Congress, not so much for ideological or philosophical reasons, but simply because she's a more controlling personality than Obama. And she certainly wouldn't have wasted any time seeking bipartisanship. She would have accepted today's polarizing politics as a fact of life, something to be conquered, not changed.
Can you just hear the "IF ONLY..." in that article?
Aside, on the sub-item in there, I think Kennedy mystique took major hit. As we see, with the unravelling of Pres.Obama, the Kennedy empire has gone down too.
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
This is the Most racist article I have ever read. NOTE To the stupid biotch that wrote this article African Americans didn't fricking need Kennedy's endorsement to fricking vote for Obama. Hillary never had the African American vote and that was HER mistake by thinking that she did. This bitch is saying that black people are to stupid to make up their own minds without Teddy Kennedy saying its OK black people don't even like Ted Kennedy or any other Kennedy since the ****ing 60s. I am so sick of these idiots. Also someone tell the dumb bimbo that Obama didn't get the fricking Feminist votes Hillary did. Stupid bitch.
HMG, I see your point. When I read it I read it as superdelegates. But what the author said is in fact females and African Americans.
I think Kennedy's endorsement made it more acceptable for super delegates to endorse him. It gave him more standing with the media. This in turn influenced the masses.
__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010