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Edited on Sun Aug-12-12 04:42 AM by No Elephants
Presidents take the blame and the glory for what their appointees, advisors and other employees say publicly unless they disavow it publicly and Obama did not ever disavow it publicly. They simply can't have it both ways.
So, I don't see it as all that dishonest or unfair for Republicans to say that Obama promised that, if he got the stimulus package, unemployment would not go over 8%.
Also, I have heard Obama saying for almost four years that the Republicans got us into this mess and how bad things were when he took over, including in the past year's campaign speeches. I am not sure why our perceptions about that are so different.
However, the American voter has just so much tolerance. After almost a full term, they are likely to roll their eyes. At some point, Obama is responsible in their eyes.
IMO, Jand and Joe Six Pack are a lot less interested in passing the buck to Bushco (valid or not) than they are in hearing Obama say what he did to help them, why it has not worked as he expected, why he did not do more and what he plans to do during the next four years that will not suffer the same failures as in his first term.
Also, I think a lot of buck passing during a re-election campaign makes a President of four years sound weak and ineffective--and weakness (or appparent weakness) is something Americans simply do not want in a Presidents. ("Congress didn't help me out," even if true, also suffers from the sounding weak and ineffective defect, unless said very skillfully. If perceived as untrue, as with ACA, fairly or not, it just becomes barf-worthy.)
I would not compare, even a little, what FDR did during the Great Depression with what Obama did. Obama keeps trying to associate himself with Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, FDR and Kennedy, but he is not in the class of any of them, not by a lot.
But, all of the above is among us chickens.
As far as campaign strategy, yes, I would continued to remind people how very bad things were in 2008--but only in the context of what I did and plan to do and why I deserve to keep trying, despite four years. And what Sabrina said.
Bottom line, though, I think Obama is going to win anyway, barring a huge misstep, which is unlikely, or an October surprise type revelation, which is also unlikely. IOW, I think the election is his to lose, not Romney's to win.
Also, I would not rule out an October surprise about Romney. I think Obama will win anyway, but I don't trust Romney as far as I can throw him--and that is not far, especially since he appears to be made of stone.
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