OBAMA
LOSES THE LEFT
Politicians
and mainstream media turn against the president
WND,
7
June, 2013
It’s
become so bad, even Obama may be giving up on Obama.
From
moderates to radicals, the left is abandoning Obama in droves, and a
statement from the president might suggest even he has already given
up on himself.
While
commenting Friday on his latest scandal, the NSA’s spying on the
phone records of millions of Americans, the president seemed to
predict his own impeachment, saying he “will leave office sometime
in the next three and half years.”
It
may be sooner than later, the way he’s going. Virtually everyone on
the left is howling over the Obama administration, from the New York
Times to Al Gore.
The
Times may have delivered the most serious blow to Obama, given
the enormous credibility it has with the left
Its
Thursday editorial condemned his administration for collecting phone
call data from millions of Americans and starkly stated, “the
administration had lost all credibility.”
That
was a dramatic break between the leading leftist newspaper and the
president it has supported so strongly and consistently during his
two terms.
The
Times editorial board must have had second thoughts because it later
revised the bold statement, toning it down a few hours later to read
the “administration has now lost all credibility on this issue.”
But
other leftists certainly are not toning down their scathing criticism
of the president.
Al
Gore called the actions of the Obama administration “obscenely
outrageous.”
After
it was reported Wednesday the National Security Agency has been using
a secret court order to collect the phone records of everyone on the
Verizon network, the former vice-president turned on the
administration.
Want
to know how and why America has so rapidly come to resemble the
totalitarian society described by novelist George Orwell in “1984,”
one characterized by universal surveillance? It’s all exposed in a
special issue of Whistleblower magazine – titled “ONE NATION
UNDER SURVEILLANCE: Big Brother is watching in ways Orwell never
dreamed.”
Gore
blasted the Obama administration with a tweet reading, “In digital
era, privacy must be a priority. Is it just me, or is secret blanket
surveillance obscenely outrageous?”
The
Huffington Post took the satirical route and delivered perhaps the
unkindest cut of all, for a leftist, comparing Obama to former
president George W. Bush. The website posted a picture on the front
page photo-shopped to depict Obama as a hybrid of Bush.
Liberal
pundit Bob Beckel may have delivered the most extreme criticism,
nearly calling Obama a fascist.
“I
think it is one of the most outrageous examples of the stepping on
the Constitution I’ve heard. They have no right to the phone
records. … It is illegal, it is unconstitutional, and it is
deplorable. I didn’t like it when they did it during the Bush
administration, and I don’t like when they’re doing it now,”
Beckel said on Fox News.
“They
have taken this Patriot Act, which I think was the most dangerous act
passed, and they have taken it and abused it,” he added.
“You
talk about fascism? You’re getting damn close to it,” Beckel
concluded.
The
leftist institution the ACLU was already upset with the
administration over its policy of using drones for assassinations,
including the targeting of Americans.
Now,
the ACLU sees the administration as Big Brother and its use of the
NSA as even more alarming than the novel “1984.”
“It’s
a program in which some untold number of innocent people have been
put under the constant surveillance of government agents. It is
beyond Orwellian, and it provides further evidence of the extent to
which basic democratic rights are being surrendered in secret to the
demands of unaccountable intelligence agencies,” Jameel Jaffer, the
deputy legal director of the ACLU, said in a statement.
Michelle
Richardson, legislative counsel with the ACLU Washington Legislative
Office, called for a full investigation by Congress, saying, “Such
extreme secrecy is inconsistent with our democratic values of open
government and accountability.”
An
influential leftist has even written an editorial calling for fellow
liberals to band together against the Obama administration.
Julie
Roginsky served as a political strategist for the late Sen. Frank
Lautenberg and other Democrats.
On
Friday, she wrote on the Fox News website, “Every progressive with
even a shred of moral consistency should side with the New York Times
against the White House.”
But
she wasn’t referring to just the latest scandal, the one involving
the NSA.
“The
events of the past month – from the Associated Press subpoena to
the James Rosen search warrant to the revelation that our government
has been indiscriminately collecting phone records data – have
forced liberals to make a choice between complacency and outrage,
between keeping silent because one of our own is in the White House
and calling him out on betraying the principles for which we have
fought for so long,” wrote Roginsky.
She
did not stop there.
“If
this White House truly wanted to level with the American people, the
president would have gone on national television to explain the
necessity of these programs and the trade-offs between civil
liberties and security he believes are consistent with his policies.
“That
he has failed to do this for nearly six years is evidence of the fact
that there is likely no excuse for such blanket surveillance upon the
American public, aside from the usual ‘it’s necessary to keep us
safe’ bromide.”
Roginsky
plainly feels betrayed and perhaps that’s why her criticism is so
bitter.
“As
progressives, we cannot remain silent when a president, whom we
worked hard to elect and defend at every turn, betrays the very
values upon which he ran five years ago.”
The
tide has been turning against Obama ever since congressional
committees began hearings in May on the slew of scandals dogging the
administration.
Those
scandals involved the murder of four Americans (including Ambassador
Chris Stevens) at a diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, in a
terrorist attack the administration falsely portrayed as a protest
over a video; the IRS targeting of conservative groups applying for
tax-exempt status; and the Justice Department secretly snooping on
the phone records of journalists.
Leftists
were already either abandoning the president or preparing to give up
on him before this latest round of snooping scandals even broke.
On
May 16, leftist talk radio host Bill Press called for the firing of
Attorney General Eric Holder over the secret collection of the phone
records of the AP and Fox News reporter James Rosen.
He
didn’t mince words in a tweet that read “What ‘breach of
national security’ are we talking about re the AP story? It’s BS
and Holder should be fired.”
Liberal
talk show host Chris Matthews had already soured on the president a
day earlier, saying Obama “obviously likes giving speeches more
than he does running the executive branch.”
“What
part of the presidency does Obama like? He doesn’t like dealing
with other politicians — that means his own cabinet, that means
members of the congress, either party. He doesn’t particularly like
the press…. He likes to write the speeches, likes to rewrite what
Favreau and the others wrote for the first draft,” Matthews
continued.
“He
doesn’t seem to like being an executive,” pondered Matthews.
On
May 18, WND reported how Matthews blasted testimony from former IRS
chief Steve Miller, who suggested the agency’s behavior was
inappropriate but denied any political targeting.
“That
Mr. Miller guy,” Matthews said, “It’s like he didn’t see what
he knew people certainly right, left and center could see, that when
you target particular groups, you’re targeting particular groups. I
mean, if this were on the other foot, and this was a George W.
administration, they were targeting groups that were calling
themselves progressives, I would say it’s prima facie evidence of
targeting. I don’t think it’s complicated.”
WND
also reported, even CNN talk-show host Piers Morgan paused in his
relentless crusade for stricter gun-control laws to comment, “I’ve
had some of the pro-gun lobbyists on here, saying to me, ‘Well, the
reason we need to be armed is because of tyranny from our own
government,’ and I’ve always laughed at them. I said, ‘Don’t
be ridiculous! Your government won’t turn itself on you.
“But,
actually, this is vaguely tyrannical behavior by the American
government,” Morgan concluded. “I think what the IRS did is
bordering on tyrannical behavior. I think what the Department of
Justice has done to the AP is bordering on tyrannical behavior.”
An
Investor’s Business Daily editorial commented, “Many in the
dominant press are indeed turning. Politico ran a chilling story
headlined ‘The IRS Wants You to Share Everything’; NBC’s Andrea
Mitchell accuses Obama of ‘the most outrageous excesses I’ve
seen’ in her years in journalism, going back before Watergate; the
Washington Post’s Dana Milbank accuses Obama of ‘a full frontal
assault on the First Amendment.’”
“Let
me tell you how bad it’s gotten,” NBC “Tonight Show” host Jay
Leno quipped. “Fox News has changed its slogan from ‘Fair and
Balanced’ to ‘See, I Told You So!’”
MSNBC’s
Rachel Maddow further noticed it’s not just the media, but also
congressional allies jumping off the Obama bandwagon. When Sen. Max
Baucus, D-Mont., announced plans to retire in 2014, he became the
sixth Democrat to step down two years from now instead of running for
re-election.
“Tell
us if something is wrong there,” Maddow said rhetorically. “What
is the secret about this place that has you fleeing like rats from a
sinking ship?”
Even
Democrat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid bristled over the AP
phone-records story, telling Salon he “can’t really defend the
Department of Justice at all” and, “I just think this has been
handled so wrong.”
Rep.
Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., agreed, telling MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”
program, “I don’t think anyone truly believes that the president
has given a sufficient answer for America, much less our press [about
the AP scandal]. The president has to come forward and share why he
did not alert the press that they were going to do this. He has to
tell Americans, including me, what was this national security
question? You just can’t raise the flag and expect us just to
salute it every time without any reason, and the same thing applies
to the IRS. We’ve got to give him an opportunity to root out any
wrongdoing, whether it’s just negligence or it’s criminal.”
The
Daily Beast – a website merged with Newsweek – ran a column from
James Goodale, the attorney who defended the New York Times against
President Richard Nixon in the famous Pentagon Papers trial, who
asserted, “President Barack H. Obama’s outrageous seizure of the
Associated Press’s phone records, allegedly to discover sources of
leaks, should surprise no one. Obama has relentlessly pursued leakers
ever since he became president. He is fast becoming the worst
national security press president ever, and it may not get any
better.”
In
an interview with the New York Observer, Goodale added, “Obama has
all these things that he’s done to the press on national security
matters that Nixon never did.”
Lanny
J. Davis, a former crisis manager for President Clinton who admits he
voted for and backs Obama, told National Public Radio, “[Obama's]
crisis-management communications team is absent without leave. Ever
since we lost the message on health care, I’ve wondered if there’s
anybody there trying to get out in front on the facts.”
NPR
further reported Davis saying the IRS story goes to the heart of
government abuse of power: “The president of the United States
should hold a press conference and commit to a full, 100-percent
investigation in concert with the Republican leadership of the House
and say, ‘I want to have on my desk the list of anybody who
recommended doing this. In the government, in the White House, or
anywhere else.’”
Time
political columnist Joe Klein wrote of the IRS news, even before the
AP scandal broke, “Yet again, we have an example of Democrats
simply not managing the government properly and with discipline. …
This is just poisonous at a time of skepticism about the efficacy of
government. … [Obama's] unwillingness to concentrate – and I mean
concentrate obsessively – on making sure that government is managed
efficiently will be part of his legacy.”
Dana
Milbank of the Washington Post penned similar criticism of Obama.
“President Passerby needs urgently to become a participant in his
presidency,” Milbank wrote, arguing Obama was reacting to the
scandals with a portrayed ignorance reminiscent of “just some bloke
on a bar stool, getting his information from the evening news.”
Jim
Kuhnhenn of the Associated Press leveled his criticism at White House
Press Secretary Jay Carney at a May 14 press briefing: “The White
House right now is confronting a confluence of issues – Benghazi
talking points, IRS reviews of political groups, Justice Department
review of journalists’ phone records. And in every instance, either
the president or you have placed the burden of responsibility
someplace else. On the Benghazi talking points, it’s been political
motivations on the Hill. On the IRS, it’s been the bureaucrats at
the IRS. And on the Justice Department issue, yesterday in your
statement you said those matters are handled independently by the
Justice Department. But it is the president’s administration, so I
wonder, doesn’t responsibility for setting tone and setting
direction ultimately rest with the president on these matters?”
Other
reporters at the same press briefing passed up softball questions for
tougher lines of inquiry, including whether news of the IRS scandal
was “withheld until after the election,” whether or not the AP
subpoena’s constituted an “overreach,” whether the
administration “might be hiding something,” if the IRS is being
“truthful” and how the president feels about “being compared to
President Nixon.” The press corps also grilled Carney relentlessly
on the president’s reputation for prosecuting those who leak
information to the press.
Michigan’s
Rep. Sander Levin, ranking Democrat on the House Ways and Means
Committee, said in hearings before the committee the IRS and its
employees “have completely failed the American people” by
“singling out organizations for review based on their name or
political views, rather than their activity. … All of us are angry
about this on behalf of the nation.”
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