The president is on hold … hello, hello?

By KATHLEEN PARKER   Sunday, Sept. 4, 2011
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— What if the president gave a major speech and no one heard it?

Not a likely scenario, yet this was the question in play for several days as President Obama requested and was kinda-sorta denied an audience before a joint session of Congress. He wasn’t flatly denied, though House Speaker John Boehner strongly suggested that the Republican-controlled House would prefer that he speak the next night, Sept. 8. Logistics, security and various technicalities were cited.

As Kevin Smith, Boehner’s communications director, explained to me:

“No one in the speaker’s office—not the speaker, not any staff—signed off on the date the White House announced abruptly. It’s unfortunate the White House ignored standard protocol of working out a mutually agreeable date and time before making any public announcement. We want to find common ground to help create jobs and lasting economic growth that our country so desperately needs, and we look forward to hearing the president’s speech Thursday night.”

Of course, that night, which Obama ultimately accepted, was also problematic because the prime-time slot coincided with something far more important than a presidential speech on jobs and the economy—football!!! The Green Bay Packers and New Orleans Saints kick off at 8:30. Would the president mind too terribly much speaking before the game so as not to interfere? Once again, Obama obliged.

Much has been written and said about the political implications of this folie a deux between the Democratic president and the Republican House leadership. Whose fault was it that things became so testy? The White House’s claim that Boehner had agreed to the date are false, according to Boehner’s office. When notified that the president wanted to address Congress, Boehner thanked the caller for the heads-up, but nothing was agreed upon when the White House prematurely announced the date.

From the Republican perspective, there was no real downside to making Obama feel “frustrated,” as the president described his feelings in an email to campaign supporters. Boehner’s resistance to the president’s request, even if justified under the circumstances described, merely added to the growing perception that Obama is weak. He can’t get no respect. Recall that Boehner also refused to return the president’s phone calls for several days during the debt-ceiling debate.

Rude, or just shrewd?

The answer depends on whose side you’re on and whose team is “winning.” Though Democrats may protest the speaker’s “rudeness,” they also feel the increasing loserness of Obama. As pure gamesmanship, whether intended, Boehner’s move was brilliant. Just as Obama’s team had to know that his original request conflicted with a much-ballyhooed Republican debate, Boehner’s surely knew that the big game was on the alternative date he suggested. If Obama’s speech wasn’t compelling enough for Congress to pull a hasty resolution together, then what does it say that he can’t compete with a ball game?

To be fair, all presidents have to be concerned with the timing of their public addresses. The Bush administration was no exception. Worse than going up against a football game in the idiocracy formerly known as the United States was competing with “American Idol” and “Dancing With the Stars.”

In one sense, Obama will profit from his positioning just before kickoff. Some percentage of viewers will tune in to the last 15 minutes of a speech they otherwise might have missed. In another sense, however, Obama’s presidency is further diminished by his perceived inability to prevail as the more important event of an evening.

This isn’t just any speech, but one we’ve been awaiting for, oh, about three years—through a recession, unemployment that never dipped below the 8 percent level predicted way back when, and an earthquake followed by a hurricane that disrupted the Obamas’ summer vacation. This is it. The one. The very speech that finally is going to lay out The Plan to put America back to work and get that old economy breaking a sweat again.

It’s important to the country. It may even be consequential. But the message thus far is that the president can’t command an audience. Congressional Republicans, with a little help from certain media cohorts, may have engineered the public’s consumption of that message, but they can’t really be blamed for the content.

Kathleen Parker is a columnist for the Orlando Sentinel. Her email address is kathleenparker@washpost.com.

reader COMMENTS
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(10)
unclesmoothie
Sep 6, 2011 at 12:28 p.m.
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Some people just cannot wait for the government to tell them what to do, what to eat, where to live, or where to get a job. What a sorry state our once great county is in.

SuperDave
Sep 6, 2011 at 11:03 a.m.
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Btw, when you use the term "lockstepping" it evokes thoughts of the Nazis, which were ideolgically closer to the modern Democratic Party than to the Republicans. (I am neither).

SuperDave
Sep 6, 2011 at 11:01 a.m.
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Here is the man himself laying out his grand plan back in 2008:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m17pz0R_q...
Pay particular attention to the part between about 1:06 and 1:34.

SuperDave
Sep 6, 2011 at 10:39 a.m.
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Why hold Mr. Obama responsible? Well let's see...maybe because he said he would create millions of jobs? Of course, you're right, only the private sector creates real jobs, but politicians love to take credit for it if it happens on their watch. In reality, gubmint just creates/allows conditions in which the private sector can create jobs, or more recently, does the opposite and creates conditions which discourage job creation.

SuperDave
Sep 6, 2011 at 10:35 a.m.
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The private sector "doesn't really exist" LOL! Wow, someone's been huffing the unleaded! Have you ever heard of Ford Motor Company? McDonalds? Proctor and Gamble? Ace Hardware? Krogers, K-Mart, Sears, Georgia-Pacific, Westinghouse, GE, Kraft Foods, Tyson, Dole?
I guess not.

westorbust
Sep 6, 2011 at 8:52 a.m.
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So why do lockstepping Repubs hold Obama responsible for not creating jobs, when you clearly acknowledge that the "private sector" (which doesn't really exist btw) only creates jobs? You people make no sense whatsoever, and THAT is what's offensive.
The American economy is 70% consumer spending. If we don't have jobs, it's actually your fault. You're not spending enough.

SuperDave
Sep 4, 2011 at 9:11 a.m.
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The whole idea that it's the gubmint that creates private sectore, i.e. real jobs, is offensive. Whatever scheme Pres. Carter comes up with will likely make things worse, as he has already demonstrated. And the fact that Pres. Hoover is up against the NFL matters not - few listen to him anymore reagrdless of timing.

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