[R-G] Obama defends experienced, centrist team

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Thu Nov 27 10:50:51 MST 2008


Obama defends experienced, centrist team
Denies he's recycling Clinton picks
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/11/27/obama_defends_experienced_centrist_team/
By Joseph Williams, Globe Staff  |  November 27, 2008

WASHINGTON - President-elect Barack Obama, rejecting liberals'  
criticism of his emerging Cabinet, yesterday strongly defended his  
decision to choose more experienced, centrist aides for his inner  
circle, arguing that the nation needs sure hands in a time of turmoil  
- and that it's his job to bring the change he promised voters.

At a news conference to introduce his economic advisory board, Obama  
said it would send the wrong message to the nation if he stocked his  
Cabinet with newcomers, especially given the wars in Iraq and  
Afghanistan and the deepening economic crisis. Veterans, he said,  
bring the wisdom to help him shape his agenda and the know-how to  
execute it.

"What we are going to do is combine experience with fresh thinking,"  
he said in his most detailed comments on the issue. "But I understand  
where the vision for change comes from. First and foremost, it comes  
from me. That's my job - to provide a vision in terms of where we are  
going, and to make sure then that my team is implementing."

Seeking to reassure supporters worried that he's recycling" appointees  
from President Clinton's era, Obama suggested it is unrealistic to  
expect him to bypass the best people available simply because of ties  
to the last Democratic administration.

However, liberal activists contend that Obama so far has gone too far  
in one direction, bringing in too many of the same Washington insiders  
and undermining his own message of change. Obama, they complain,  
hasn't given a top Cabinet job to a true liberal, and grumble about  
the expected appointments of rival Hillary Clinton - a centrist  
Democrat - as Obama's secretary of state an of Robert M. Gates, a  
Republican appointed by President Bush, to stay on as defense  
secretary for at least a year.

"I'm not in the camp that says, 'Give him a chance, because his vision  
will dominate,' " said Tom Hayden, a high-profile liberal and antiwar  
activist who said he supports Obama despite misgivings over his  
Cabinet picks. "I don't know what he's doing. This is not governing  
from the center. This is governing from the past."

Liberal bloggers, who helped fuel Obama's grass-roots fund-raising and  
volunteer armies, are particularly vocal in their critique of Obama's  
choices so far.

Some of them argue that competence and experience aren't substitutes  
for the right ideology. "How can selecting only pro-war Cabinet  
members and advisers be justified on the grounds of 'competence' - as  
though one's support for the War has nothing to do with competence?"  
asked blogger Glenn Greenwald, who also writes for the online journal  
Salon.

Bloggers on the left are also taking credit for forcing John Brennan,  
a former top CIA deputy in the Bush administration and Obama’s  
national security adviser during the campaign, to withdraw Tuesday  
from consideration as the next CIA director. In recent weeks, the  
bloggers mounted an online campaign sharply criticizing Brennan,  
associating him with Bush's decisions on harsh interrogations and  
torture though he publicly opposed waterboarding and questioned other  
interrogation methods.

"Appointing Brennan to the CIA does not mean change from Bush. That  
was absolutely a critical part of Obama's message," wrote Andrew  
Sullivan, who blogs on the Atlantic magazine's website.

"With Brennan, we get the taint of a Bush and two-facedness of a  
Clinton. We need to say goodbye to all that, not perpetuate its double- 
speak."

Since he was elected three weeks ago, Obama has tapped several people  
who worked for President Clinton, including Rahm Emanuel as Obama's  
chief of staff and Lawrence Summers as his senior economic adviser.

According to media reports, the president-elect has settled on at  
least two other Clinton-era officials - Eric Holder for attorney  
general and New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson for commerce secretary.

Many mainstream Republicans and Democrats have applauded Obama's  
selections so far, saying he is seeking the best minds available.

Analysts also say that Obama seems to be keeping a campaign pledge to  
avoid excessive partisanship.

Criticism of Obama's personnel picks, however, intensified when word  
leaked out that he will select Clinton as secretary of state. Antiwar  
activists decried her vote in favor of the 2003 Iraq invasion, which  
Obama hammered her about during the Democratic primaries. And after  
reports Tuesday that Obama would keep Gates at the Pentagon, some  
suggested it could mean Obama was reconsidering a campaign pledge to  
withdraw US combat troops from Iraq within 16 months of taking office.

But Larry Sabato, a political analyst at the University of Virginia,  
warned against drawing premature conclusions about any shifts in  
position.

"Let's wait and see the identity of the entire team," he said in an  
interview.

Liberals who are most upset by the Cabinet picks may have had  
unrealistic expectations about what an Obama presidency would look  
like, he said, especially "the ones who have been there from the  
beginning."

Obama, Sabato said, "is also trying to be pragmatic under very  
difficult circumstances. Frankly, I never believed he was a  
superliberal. He's got to do what he thinks is right. Everyone needs  
to keep in mind that he's inheriting a bloody disaster."

But Hayden said the Cabinet picks so far "have shown a pattern of  
rewarding people who got us into this mess." He asserted that Summers  
and other economic advisers supported deregulation that many blame, at  
least in part, for the problems on Wall Street.

Though many have compared Obama to Presidents Abraham Lincoln and  
Franklin Roosevelt, a more apt parallel is "the very young John  
Kennedy, who placated many of the same interests," Hayden said in an  
interview.

Kennedy, he added, learned quickly that "the people he had appointed  
had not shared his vision or program. I don't have any confidence in  
the view that Obama can appoint these people and also get us out of  
Iraq, get us out of Afghanistan, and recover the economy."

Christopher Hayes, a blogger with The Nation magazine, wrote that  
while he's not pleased with Obama's inner circle so far, "it's also  
easy to over-interpret the degree to which the ideological disposition  
of the personnel being named" will determine the new administration's  
policies.

"Just consider that when Dubya appointed his cabinet, it was dominated  
by old GOP hands, with a strong over-representation of the Ford  
administration. None of us thought: uh-oh! Those Fordies are totally  
going to launch an insane campaign of imperial conquest and messianic  
violence. But that's what happened. So who knows?" 


More information about the Rad-Green mailing list