Friday, September 09, 2011

On Moderation and Obama

I respect the idea of moderation and centrism. The answer is sometimes in the middle. And moderates can do good to blunt the edges of the extremes on each side. But if you are going to be a moderate, you need to own it; in other words, it needs to come from core beliefs and not smell of political opportunism.

I can think of two examples of moderates that own it. David Brooks is a good example. He is a moderate conservative. Overall he believes in limited but energetic government. He is sometimes skeptical of government programs and thinks communities are better at solving problems. But he does believe government should do things like spend money on education and infrastructure.

Mitt Romney is another example - at least the Mitt Romney before he developed presidential aspirations. That Mitt Romney wants less taxes on businesses and fewer regulations. But he isn't opposed to new health care programs or social security. And he doesn't disbelieve science like global warming or evolution. That the current Mitt Romney no longer stands by those positions helps prove my point. By going more extreme, people don't believe he is genuine. 

President Obama does not own his moderation. His previous positions sometimes show that he doesn't come by it naturally. And other times he shows it by trying to have it both ways.

Let's look at some examples for Obama. On same sex marriage, Obama has staked out an absurd position. He tries to support New York's law allowing same sex marriage, but he does this by nodding to states' rights. He also says that he personally supports civil union but that his position is evolving. So he is staking out a position in the middle - civil unions - but also winking to the left saying he really agrees with them.

As as a senator, Obama was a leading critic of the Bush administration on foreign policy. Yet as president, he has barely changed anything but the most extreme. He has ended the use of torture, but won't close Guantanamo Bay and uses drone attacks with reckless abandon. He even argued for war while receiving the Nobel Peace Prize. And his policy towards Israel has only barely changed compared to Bush. All of this lack of change has left the Muslim world liking him no more than Bush.

And most recently, he has committed to shrinking the budget. He uses language like, "Government needs to live within its means," but also says government needs to take care of its people. It's as if he wants to defend government spending.

Some see this as trying to be all things to all people. I see it as someone that believes in liberal values, but doesn't trust the voters to support him if he stands up for those things. He thinks voters want him to be moderate. But voters can tell when you aren't being yourself.

No comments: