Skip navigation
advertisement

Obama bipartisanship push has mixed success

President has show willingness to push priorities past GOP opposition

Image: Barack Obama with congressional leaders
Mark Wilson / Getty Images
Left to right, Rep. James E. Clyburn, D-S.C., House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., listen as President Obama speaks during a Jan. 23 meeting with bipartisan congressional leaders at the White House.
Video
  Obama: All concerned about economic legacy
Feb. 23: Speaking at the end of his economic summit, President Obama notes that bipartisan support for social security, healthcare and tax reforms will help stabilize the economy.

MSNBC

Slideshow
Image: Obama and Bo
  First 100 days
Striking images from President Barack Obama’s jam-packed first 100 days in office.

more photos

Video: White House  
  
Axelrod: Killing health bill would be 'tragic'
Dec. 17: Senior White House advisor David Axelrod says he's "bewildered" by the efforts of some Democrats to kill the health care bill.

INTERACTIVE
Timeline
A president's first days in office can be defined by landmark victories — or memorable failures. Explore our timeline gauging hits and misses from Roosevelt to Obama.

NBC News

Video Explorer
Obama administration
View, clip and share major speeches and addresses from President Obama’s first 100 days, as well as other current political and economic news.
By LIZ SIDOTI
Associated Press Writer
updated 10:54 a.m. ET April 24, 2009

WASHINGTON - Barack Obama swept into office with a lofty promise to bridge the capital's fierce partisan divide.

Easier said than done.

"Old habits are hard to break," the new president acknowledged in February as reality set in just weeks after he took office.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

And that reproach includes him, too, as he nears the 100-day mark of his presidency. While preaching bipartisanship and civility in his first months, Obama also has shown a willingness to push his priorities through Congress over Republican opposition, as with the $787 billion economic stimulus plan.

Polarized times
The White House also has engaged at times in the divisive politics Obama himself has condemned, for instance mocking commentator Rush Limbaugh as the GOP's titular head.

The president continues to emphasize overcoming poisonous partisanship. At one point, he said, "Whether we're Democrats or Republicans, surely there's got to be some capacity for us to work together, not agree on everything but at least set aside small differences to get things done. People have to break out of some of the ideological rigidity and gridlock that we've been carrying around for too long."

That's asking a lot in extraordinarily polarized times, even for a politician who won election by casting himself as a leader able to foster inclusiveness. His advisers say they hope he will get credit at least for trying to change the way Washington works. Republicans in Congress suggest it's little more than lip service.

Video
  Obama and the reluctant GOP
Jan. 27: A Hardball panel discusses why Republicans say it takes more than a presidential visit to Capitol Hill to win support for a stimulus package.

Hardball

"Sometimes the president mistakes courtesy for bipartisanship," said John J. Pitney Jr., a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College in California. "He's basically a very nice fellow and that comes across. But on a more substantive level, there hasn't been a great deal of progress."

Indeed, a new Associated Press-Gfk poll found that the partisan divide on Obama's job approval rating has grown substantially during his first months in office as Republicans become ever more disgruntled with him. Still, Democrats give Obama a stunningly high favorable rating; independents also strongly back him.

Separately, the Pew Research Center says Obama has the most polarized early first-term job approval ratings of any president in the past four decades, part of a long-term trend of partisanship becoming more apparent in the measurement.

There's a 61 percentage point gap between Democratic and Republican opinions of Obama's job performance. Democrats are extraordinarily sweet on Obama, while Republicans are especially sour. The gaps were smaller at comparable periods for both Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton.

Exacerbated divisions
Obama won 53 percent of the popular vote with a coalition that spanned the ideological spectrum. But nearly half the country didn't vote for him and many still don't support him. Obama's job approval rating is in the low 60s. But Bush was at 62 percent at this point in 2001 and left office in the high 20s.

Video
  Chuck Todd crunches the numbers
March 3: Chief White House Correspondent Chuck Todd offers analysis of an NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll with a surprising look at what Americans think of President Barack Obama's performance.

Nightly News

The new Democratic president is presiding over a country that has become more divided through the years — the Republican Party more conservative, the Democratic Party more liberal. Interest groups as well as a proliferation of new media outlets aligned with the right and left have exacerbated the divisions. So has Congress, where redistricting has created strongly Republican and solidly Democratic districts and where leadership promotes party discipline.

In such a polarized environment, Obama has had mixed success following through on his bipartisanship promise.

Given that bipartisanship is a two-way street, it's possible that Republicans are too resistant to working with the president, while Obama himself isn't willing to compromise enough. At the very least, there are deep and sincere differences between Republicans and Democrats, and they may be too difficult to overcome.

Republicans contend Obama hasn't delivered at all.

"I really had high hopes that he would really reach out and work with us," said Virginia Rep. Eric Cantor, the second-ranking House Republican. But, he said, "There has been very little follow through on that commitment."

The White House argues that Republicans are to blame.

"You can open up your door, extend your hand and invite people in, but if they don't want to come, you can't drag them," said David Axelrod, a senior Obama adviser. "That doesn't mean we're not going to keep trying."


Sponsored links

Resource guide