By Charles
Krauthammer, Published: May 2
Fate is
fickle, power cyclical, and nothing is new under the sun. Especially in
Washington, where after every election the losing party is sagely instructed
to confess sin, rend garments and rethink its principles lest it go the way of
the Whigs. And where the victor is hailed as the new Caesar, facing an open
road to domination.
And where
Barack Obama, already naturally inclined to believe his own loftiness,
graciously accepted the kingly crown and proceeded to ride his reelection
success to a crushing victory over the GOP at the fiscal cliff, leaving a
humiliated John Boehner & Co. with nothing but naked tax hikes.
Thus
emboldened, Obama turned his inaugural and State of the Union addresses into a
left-wing dream factory, from his declaration of war on global warming (on a
planet where temperatures are the same as 16 years ago and in a country whose
CO2 emissions are at a 20-year low) to the invention of new entitlements —
e.g., universal preschool for 5-year-olds— for a country already drowning in
debt.
To realize
his dreams, Obama sought to fracture and neutralize the congressional GOP as a
prelude to reclaiming the House in 2014. This would enable him to fully enact
his agenda in the final two years of his presidency, usually a time of
lame-duck paralysis. Hail the Obama juggernaut.
Well, that
story — excuse me, narrative — lasted exactly six months. The Big Mo is gone.
It began with
the sequester. Obama never believed the Republicans would call his bluff and
let it go into effect. They did.
Taken by
surprise, Obama cried wolf, predicting the end of everything we hold dear if
the sequester was not stopped. It wasn’t. Nothing happened.
Highly
embarrassed, and determined to indeed make (bad) things happen, the White
House refused Republican offers to give it more discretion in making cuts.
Bureaucrats were instructed to inflict maximum pain from minimal cuts, as
revealed by one memo from the Agriculture Department demanding agency cuts
that the public would feel.
Things began
with the near-comical cancellation of White House tours and ended with
not-so-comical airline delays. Obama thought furious passengers would blame
the GOP. But isn’t the executive branch in charge of these agencies? Who
thinks that a government spending $3.6 trillion a year can’t cut 2 percent
without furloughing air-traffic controllers?
Looking not
just incompetent at managing budgets but cynical for deliberately injuring the
public welfare, the administration relented. Congress quickly passed a bill
giving Obama reallocation authority to restore air traffic control. Having
previously threatened to veto any such bill, Obama caved. He signed.
Not exactly
Appomattox, but coming immediately after Obama’s spectacular defeat on gun
control, it marked an administration that had lost its “juice,” to paraphrase
a charming question at the president’s Tuesday news conference.
For Obama,
gun control was a political disaster. He invested capital. He went on a
multi-city tour. He paraded grieving relatives. And got nothing. An
assault-weapons ban — a similar measure had passed the Congress 20 years ago —
lost 60 to 40 in a Senate where Democrats control 55 seats. Obama failed even
to get mere background checks.
All this
while appearing passive, if not helpless, on the world stage. On Syria, Obama
is nervously trying to erase the WMD red line he had so publicly established.
On Benghazi, he stonewalled accusations that State Department officials
wishing to testify are being blocked.
He is even
taking heat for the Boston bombings. Every day brings another revelation of
signals missed beforehand. And his post-bombing pledge to hunt down those
responsible was mocked by the scandalous Mirandizing of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev,
gratuitously shutting down information from the one person who knows more than
anyone about possible still-existent explosives, associates, trainers, future
plans, etc.
Now, the
screw will undoubtedly turn again. If immigration reform passes, Obama will be
hailed as the comeback kid, and a new “Obama rising” narrative proclaimed.
This will
overlook the fact that immigration reform has little to do with Obama and
everything to do with GOP panic about the Hispanic vote. In fact, Obama has
been asked by congressional negotiators to stay away, so polarizing a figure
has he become.
Nonetheless,
whatever happens, the screw will surely turn again, if only because of media
boredom. But that’s the one constant of Washington political life: There are
no straight-line graphs. We live from inflection point to inflection point.
And we’ve
just experienced one. From king of the world to dead in the water in six
months. Quite a ride.
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