Friday, February 05, 2010

Historical Revisionism via Barack Obama

From the Editor, William Kristol

The Weekly Standard, February 1, 2010

In an interview with Time’s Joe Klein last week, President Obama endorsed a mythical version of the early days of his own administration:

“I came in expressing a strong spirit of bipartisanship, and what was clear was that even in the midst of crisis, there were those who made decisions based on a quick political calculus rather than on what the country needed. The classic example being me heading over to meet with the House Republican caucus to discuss the stimulus and finding out that [House minority leader John] Boehner had already released a statement saying, We’re going to vote against the bill before we’ve even had a chance to exchange ideas.” We’ve heard this story before, many times, from Robert Gibbs - the Obama flack. But, it’s phony, as Obama himself must know. What really happened is this: Obama spoke to the House Republican conference on the morning of January 27, 2009. The night before, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had already introduced the stimulus bill that she and David Obey drafted with no input from Republicans at all. It was a totally partisan bill.

House Minority Leader Boehner didn’t put out a statement, but what he told Republicans leaked. What he said was that Republicans would oppose this bill, and he said Obama should override it and work with Republicans on a bipartisan stimulus. Republicans weren’t opposing an Obama bill. They were opposing a partisan bill drafted by House Democrats (which Obama embraced soon afterwards).

When Obama spoke to the Republican conference, he was given a list of Republican ideas for the stimulus. After that meeting, Congressman Eric Cantor put out a statement saying this:

“This is the third time we have met with President Obama and we appreciate his openness to Republican solutions. Unfortunately, Congressional Democrats have not shown the same willingness for bipartisan compromise and that is reflected in their bill, which they will force a vote on tomorrow. Indeed, the House voted the next day, January 28,2010 for the stimulus bill that Republicans had played no part in drafting. All House Republicans voted no.

Obama is right about one thing: There were those who made decisions based on a quick political calculus. But, they were in his White House and his party. And, they continue to pay a price at the polls for their high-handedness.

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