The good and the bad of Obama’s first month
It's been a whirlwind of a first 30 days — so how has he done?
![]() Charles Dharapak / AP Perceptions of President Barack Obama's performance during the first month of his administration depend on the point of view. |
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Barack Obama took the oath of office exactly one month ago Friday, a day where he was greeted by adoring throngs. They expected big things from the man who railed against the last eight years, particularly on the economy.
So how's he done?
It depends on your point of view, of course, but one thing folks on both sides can agree on is that it has certainly been one whirlwind of a first 30 days. Everyone knew going in that the problems were big, the problems were mounting and that the inbox for the incoming president was overflowing.
So far, the country and even the world are still engaged in pretty much anything this president does. The Blackberry-clutching candidate joked on the campaign trail that a president needs to multitask.
Well, he’s gotten his shot at it so far. It’s been a rapid-fire month of successes and pitfalls.
He's even been able to hold onto that Blackberry, something he would consider a success.
The pluses
He won the biggest fight so far. History will record that the 44th president passed the largest economic bill in the history of the country, and he did so in under a month while retaining high approval numbers. Not an easy feat in this 24-7, live-blogging, always-Twittering media culture.
Obama was also able to enact Democratic agenda items like signing the Lilly Ledbetter pay equity bill, as well as signing children's health care — vetoed twice during the Bush years.
Obama’s election and inauguration gave him tremendous good will, which he capitalized on to push through his top campaign priority. The trick now is to convince the public to give his stimulus program some time to work. It's something the White House is mindful of, and so are the Republicans.
In fact, congressional Republicans have been surprisingly unified and combative with the new president. In many respects, while they lost the stimulus battle, they’re still engaging in a spin war about whether it can work. And we may not know for sure who wins this spin war until Election Day 2010 (or even 2012).
The minuses
However, Obama’s attention to the big picture may have gotten him in trouble with all the small stuff. There were a myriad of small flames below the clouds.
They lost the spin war at the outset of the stimulus when zero House Republicans voted for the plan.
The Obama team members set themselves up to be graded on this bipartisan stuff, since they made such a big play for it. And it really hurt that Republican Judd Gregg, a true conservative, withdrew his name from the much-maligned commerce secretary post (still vacant, by the way).
Politically, it's not such a bad thing to attempt to reach out as long as the White House doesn't find itself compromising to the point of losing some base Democrats. So far, that hasn’t happened — even though there have been some rumblings from the Left.
The days of the nominee tax problems — particularly those of former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, who was supposed to be the White House’s health-care shepherd — were the darkest for the president. He was losing the stimulus spin war, and then perhaps his most loyal supporter and key ally. Without Daschle, it’s hard to picture Obama winning all of those superdelegates.
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Former Clinton Chief of Staff John Podesta, who led the Obama transition, confessed Friday that he knew of the problems and that he, well, “screwed up.”
"I take the blame for this,” he told Bloomberg News. “We may have made bad judgments like in the case of Nancy Killefer or some of the others, but it wasn't that we weren't aware of the issues."
There are many inside the White House relieved Podesta has owned up to some of these transition issues.
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And there was Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s rollout of the second part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which at best got a tepid reception.
In the long run, most of these minuses likely will be remembered as the hiccups involved in getting a team in place. But so much for the fastest transition in history. There are still countless important deputy-level and below positions that have not been filled. And those are the people who really roll up their sleeves and help run the government.
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