Barack Obama is not our first charismatic president. John F.
Kennedy comes to mind, as do Bill Clinton and Franklin Roosevelt.
If we are to believe Fouad Ajami, President Obama stands
alone in basing his presidency on nothing but charisma. It is about him and
nothing but him.
Surely, Ronald Reagan had charisma. But, that is where the
comparison between Reagan and Obama ends.
Ajami explains:
During
his first campaign, Mr. Obama had paid tribute to Ronald Reagan as a
"transformational" president and hinted that he aspired to a
presidency of that kind. But the Reagan presidency was about America, and never
about Ronald Reagan. Reagan was never a scold or a narcissist. He stood in awe
of America, and of its capacity for renewal. There was forgiveness in Reagan,
right alongside the belief in the things that mattered about America—free
people charting their own path.
A charismatic leader moves people emotionally. He induces
them to take leave of their rational faculties. He calls on them to believe in
him and to stake their hopes on him. It’s a magic moment, like what happens at
a rock concert when everyone is moving in unison to the rhythm. It feels like transcendence;
it feels like melting into the crowd.
But what happens when the magic wears off? Ajami analyzes
the current state of the Obama presidency:
Rule by
personal charisma has met its proper fate. The spell has been broken, and the
magician stands exposed. We need no pollsters to tell us of the loss of faith
in Mr. Obama's policies—and, more significantly, in the man himself. Charisma
is like that. Crowds come together and they project their needs onto an
imagined redeemer. The redeemer leaves the crowd to its imagination: For as
long as the charismatic moment lasts—a year, an era—the redeemer is above and
beyond judgment. He glides through crises, he knits together groups of varied,
often clashing, interests. Always there is that magical moment, and its beauty,
as a reference point.
Ironically, a man whose charisma promised to bring us all
together, to make, of many, one… has turned out to be one of America’s most
polarizing leaders.
Ajami writes:
A
nemesis awaited the promise of this new presidency: Mr. Obama would turn out to
be among the most polarizing of American leaders. No, it wasn't his race, as Harry Reid would
contend, that stirred up the opposition to him. It was his exalted views of
himself, and his mission. The sharp lines were sharp between those who raised
his banners and those who objected to his policies.
It might also be true that Obama believes in dividing the
nation against itself, diving the body politic into good and evil,and in fighting a Holy War against those he despises.
By all appearances, Obama has governed by the law of the
dialectic: sharpen conflict, avoid negotiated compromise. It’s more about heat
than light.
Believing, beyond reason, that his charisma could transform
the country, Obama did not care, or did not know how to do the dirty work of governing:
A
leader who set out to remake the health-care system in the country, a sixth of
the national economy, on a razor-thin majority with no support whatsoever from
the opposition party, misunderstood the nature of democratic politics. An
election victory is the beginning of things, not the culmination. With Air
Force One and the other prerogatives of office come the need for compromise,
and for the disputations of democracy. A president who sought consensus would
have never left his agenda on Capitol Hill in the hands of Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi.
As has often been noted, Obama is so insecure that he surrounds himself with people who know less and are less competent than he is.
It was a daunting challenge, but he seems to have succeeded. Anything to maintain the illusion that he is the best and
the brightest:
No
advisers of stature can question his policies; the price of access in the Obama
court is quiescence before the leader's will. The imperial presidency is in
full bloom.
There
are no stars in the Obama cabinet today, men and women of independent stature
and outlook. It was after a walk on the White House grounds with his chief of
staff, Denis McDonough, that Mr. Obama called off the attacks on the Syrian
regime that he had threatened. If he had taken that walk with Henry Kissinger or
George Shultz, one of those skilled statesmen might have explained to him the
consequences of so abject a retreat. But Mr. Obama needs no sage advice, he
rules through political handlers.
First among whom is a Chicago real estate developer named Valerie
Jarrett. Ajami does not quite say it—he hints—but how did someone who had no experience with government, who did not know the rules or the players, become the behind-the-scenes power in the
Obama presidency?
1 comment:
"
It might also be true that Obama believes in dividing the nation against itself,
diving*********"dividing************
the body politic into good and evil,and in fighting a Holy War against those he despises. "
That's our Barry!
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