By Victor Davis Hanson
Tuesday, January 06, 2015
Six years of slumber later, a surging America finally is
transcending even the effects of hope and change. For the last few years, most
Americans have tuned out their president’s no-time-to-profit rhetoric. They
just kept slogging away at what they always did as the most productive people in
the world, and waited for the natural up-bound of a moribund economy.
Obama himself understands that America is prevailing
despite his efforts, and the evidence comes from his own admissions. In a
recent National Public Radio interview, Obama took credit for the fact that the
deficit was falling — as if, suddenly, fiscal prudence is a good thing and
red-ink stimulus is not. But that change of heart came only after five years of
disastrous trillion-dollar budget shortfalls that no one any more believed had
jump-started the economy. The European Union is stagnating and America is
working, not because Obama championed the U.S. model of free-market capitalism,
but because his efforts to emulate Europe proved politically and culturally
impossible.
The populist backlash against reckless spending — spurred
on by the caricatured grass-roots Tea Party — cost Obama the House of
Representatives in 2010. The next year the new Congress forced sequestration
and mandatory cuts. Gridlock followed, and Obama’s agenda was fossilized after
the enactment of the disastrous Obamacare.
Gridlock ensured that the government’s share of the gross
national product is falling to traditional levels. Apparently Obama now looks
back at that as a good thing. Is the logic that Obama deliberately and
diabolically so turned off the electorate that it voted Republicans into office
to thwart his huge borrowing, so that he could take credit for declining
deficits?
Obama feels he has new leverage with Iran and Russia. But
if that is true, the opportunity did not derive from his heralded reset
policies, which offered outreach while blaming the prior administration for the
tense relations with those two countries. Instead, the oil-price crash of late
2014 — brought about by private American drillers and conniving Middle East oil
sheiks — robbed Iran, Russia, and Venezuela of hundreds of billions of dollars
in income.
That shortfall meant internal instability, smaller
subsidies to terrorists, fewer cut-rate arms sales, and less direct aid to
America’s enemies. In contrast, as far as his own initiatives go, Obama does
not brag much about the bombing of Libya, the pullout of all troops from a
once-quiet Iraq, supposed red lines and deadlines in the Middle East, or the
expected calm in Afghanistan after he has sent home all U.S. constabulary
troops.
Perhaps Obama believes that he jawboned against new
energy production in hopes of enraging domestic producers to the point where
they would double up their efforts on private lands, which in turn would help
lower oil prices — all as part of a grand Machiavellian plan to weaken our
petro enemies. If so, bravo.
Obama takes credit for the fact that gas prices at home
have crashed, which when he entered office he would have labeled a bad thing
because it would spike the driving of carbon-spewing vehicles and heat up the planet.
He apparently assumed, however, that the private sector would keep drilling
when he predicted in 2012 that it could not lower prices much by doing just
that.
Again, maybe that twisted logic was part of a brilliantly
convoluted plan to discredit green wind and solar subsidies, whose corrupt
crony capitalism had weakened his administration. In any case, suddenly there
is no more administration talk of hoping gasoline prices climb to European
levels or that electricity costs skyrocket. Steven Chu’s mutterings and the
ideal of a family of five packed into a Prius on the way to the
high-speed-railroad station seem like yesteryear.
Obama talked a lot about obstreperous Republicans
blocking his legislative agenda. But, since 2011, congressional opposition has
actually helped Obama. Even Democrats hope that he will stop his current spate
of executive orders, not so much because the edicts are probably
unconstitutional, or because they are ideologically unwelcome, but because they
are unpopular and may make life more difficult for Democrats in Congress. It is
much wiser to damn Republican reactionaries while allowing them to make the
necessary changes that will enhance Obama’s final two years in office. The
mystery is not that Obama the consummate politician takes credit for something
that he had nothing to do with or in fact opposed, but rather the thought
processes necessary to explain how opposing energy recovery is proof of support
for its effects or how his thwarted new spending proposals prove his fiscal
sobriety.
Conservatives complain that Obama spends too much time on
the golf course. But Obama’s ups and downs in the polls reflect the fact that
the less the public sees or hears of him, the more it likes the idea rather
than the reality of the president. The logic may again be deliberate and
perhaps something like the following: “The more that my opponents stop my
progressive agenda, and the more that I disappear from Washington in shorts and
polo shirts to head for the putting greens, the more the nation moves ahead and
credits whoever happens to nominally occupy the White House.” Some polls have
shown a recent upsurge in Obama’s persistently weak ratings; if so, they
coincide with the collapse in gasoline prices, the decline of unchecked federal
spending, the long holiday when Americans were too busy to worry much about
politics, and Obama’s own long absence golfing in Hawaii, when he was neither
seen nor heard.
Cheap energy, a falling deficit, a roaring stock market,
and the fact that America still survives as the freest and most open economy in
the world explain why the U.S. is belatedly resurgent after six years of
stagnation. It is hard to Europeanize America in six years; and the Obama
effort to do so will make it difficult for progressives to see it attempted
again for some time.
So there is no longer talk of Obama ushering in a new age
of progressive politics, given that on his watch the Democrats lost both Houses
of Congress and turned out to be the best thing for the Republican party in 86
years. In polls on his major initiatives — immigration amnesties, Obamacare,
the Keystone pipeline, race relations — the public is opposed to the
administration’s record. The next year may well see Congress or the courts — or
both — neuter many of the Obama executive orders and presidential memoranda on
the Affordable Care Act and immigration. Nothing could be better for Obama’s
popularity than to cry crocodile tears for his pruned-away agenda.
A supposedly permanent Obama coalition of minorities and
progressive elites is hemorrhaging for two simple reasons. First, the divisive
talk that the Obama team engaged in to gin up block minority voting apparently
turns off one old voter for each new one it energizes. Moreover, it is hard to
make the case that America is racist, when people of color the world over are
crashing the U.S. borders by any means necessary. Second, while there is plenty
of evidence that in 2008 and 2012 Obama galvanized new voters, there is little
evidence that they voted — or will vote in the future — in such record numbers
for a liberal candidate other than Obama himself. Again, the result of the
Obama electoral strategy seems to be that he has empowered his opposition in a
way unseen in eight decades — and allowed himself to become a nominal president
who will take credit for all that transpires contrary to his intentions. Maybe
he has accepted that empowering conservative opposition would allow him to
boast of an unworkable agenda in theory, while in fact seeing it quietly
shelved.
All this is not to say that Obama did not make major
changes in American life. Health care is in turmoil. The national debt will
have nearly doubled during the Obama tenure. Racial divisiveness is worse than
at any time in the last three decades. The number of those on federal and state
entitlements is also at a record high. Defense spending in real terms is lower
than at any time since the 1930s — and we know how that turned out. America is
seen abroad as hesitant, unreliable, and confused.
The next president will probably not talk of borrowing $1
trillion a year to stimulate the economy. Shovel-ready jobs will be a bad joke,
along with Cash for Clunkers and not losing your existing health plan. The next
president will not lecture abroad about America’s supposed failings or the need
for radical reset, other than to disown Obama’s aberrant foreign policy. She
will not belittle the effect of new oil drilling on gasoline prices.
Democrat or Republican, the next president will praise,
but then ignore, Obama the iconic president. The president in 2017 will assume
that a defiant America on autopilot kept working despite, not because of,
Obama’s policies.
And Obama himself? He will probably enjoy a lucrative
post-presidency deriding his opponents, whose opposition ended up helping him,
while praising his own failed policies, which neutered his presidency.
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