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Doyle McManus, Washington columnist for the Los Angeles Times, has reported on national and international issues from Washington for more than 25 years. His weekly Op-Ed column delivers original reporting and analysis on a wide range of national issues.
McManus is a four-time winner of the National Press Club's Edwin Hood Award for reporting on U.S. foreign policy, most recently in 2004 for articles on the U.S. occupation of Iraq. He has also won Georgetown University's Weintal Prize for diplomatic reporting and other awards. From 1996 to 2008, he was The Times' Washington bureau chief, leading a team of 40 reporters and editors that won recognition as one of the nation's best news operations. He is author or coauthor of three books, including "Landslide: The Unmaking of the President 1984-88," named by the New York Times as one of the notable books of 1988. He appears frequently on PBS's "Washington Week" and other programs and was a panelist for presidential primary election debates in 2000 and 2008. McManus joined The Times in 1978 after three years as a foreign correspondent for United Press International. He reported for The Times in Los Angeles, the Middle East, Central America, New York and Washington, where he served as a State department correspondent and White House correspondent before he was named bureau chief. He has also written for Foreign Policy, Time, Sports Illustrated and the London Daily Express. McManus graduated from Stanford University in 1974 and was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Brussels. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Reporters' Committee for Freedom of the Press, the Advisory Board of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford and the Board of Visitors of the Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland. He was a member of Stanford's board of trustees from 1988 to 1993. He lives in Bethesda, Md. with his wife, Paula Copeland McManus; they have three grown daughters. His e-mail address is doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com. Obama by the numbersPolls and election results show that rising unemployment and partisan politics have chipped away at the president's popularity.
President Obama didn't get much time last week to savor the gauzy one-year-after retrospectives of his 2008 election victory, with its 53% of the popular vote and 365 electoral votes. He had other numbers to think about.
On Friday, the Labor Department announced that unemployment hit a 26-year high of 10.2% last month. Earlier last week, in Virginia and New Jersey -- states that were Obama's last year -- Republicans won gubernatorial seats by margins of about 17% and 5%, respectively. And the president's own approval rating, a dizzying 78% when he was inaugurated, has fallen to a prosaic 50%. State and local elections often turn on local circumstances, and there were plenty of those to muddy the message from Tuesday's election. But there's nothing complicated about the mood in the rest of the nation. Voters in 50 states are unhappy about the economy, angry about partisanship in Washington and disappointed in Obama's failure to live up to their inflated expectations. For Democrats, the unemployment number was the week's most alarming. It now becomes the Republicans' chief argument that Obama's policies have failed -- never mind that their own alternative, a smaller economic stimulus, would have done no better. "Tell me what the unemployment rate is in 2010 and I'll tell you how that election turns out," Republican strategist David Winston said. "When unemployment hits a certain level, it's the only domestic issue that matters." In the first months of his presidency, Winston noted, Obama focused like a laser on the economy, and his approval ratings were high. But during the last six months, his agenda has been more fragmented as he's tackled healthcare, climate change and Afghanistan. Some White House aides say that there's nothing here that a couple of million new jobs won't fix. But Obama didn't run for president only to fix the economy. Candidate Obama's promise was to move American politics beyond its normal limits. On that count, two more numbers should give the president pause. When the Gallup Poll asked voters last month if Obama had kept "the promises he made during his presidential campaign," only 48% said yes. And when the pollsters asked whether voters considered Obama a liberal or a moderate, 54% called him a liberal -- a big jump from the 43% who gave that answer on election day in 2008. Many of those disillusioned voters are moderates and independents, people who voted for Obama not because they supported liberal programs but because they responded to his call for a post-partisan politics. To be sure, Republicans in Congress haven't given Obama many chances to pass bipartisan legislation; they have opted instead for drawing sharp contrasts. At least in the short run, that strategy appears to be working. Instead of a new centrist consensus, Obama's first year has produced a backlash -- and not only among zealots of the Republican right. Polls show conservative views up across the entire electorate. On election day last week, those trends were reflected in an "intensity gap" that brought Republican voters to the polls -- the inverse of the 2008 intensity gap that brought young voters and African Americans out for Obama. In Virginia, most of last week's voters said they voted for John McCain in 2008; Obama voters stayed home. What's all this mean for the next 12 months? In the debate over healthcare, it means moderate Democrats from swing districts -- "Blue Dogs" who give Obama his majority -- will be even more skittish. They are demanding a bill without a hint of federal funding for abortions, and they are likely to get it -- just as Obama's lone GOP partner on healthcare, Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine, may get her wish for a bill without a "public option." Obama also needs to reassure voters in the coming weeks that he hasn't forgotten about jobs. Expect to hear the president talk up not only the original stimulus plan -- whose effects have been real but disappointing -- but also new measures that add up to a stealth "second stimulus" package: last week's extension of unemployment benefits, the expansion of home buyers' tax credits and a $250 bonus for Social Security recipients. In recent weeks, Obama and his aides have abandoned any pretense of post-partisanship; they have responded to every attack and even waged a brief jihad against Fox News. Their explanation was that conservative attacks on healthcare proposals required an energetic response. But their fury has damaged Obama's image as a post-partisan centrist. Not every number is as bad as it looks, though. Obama's approval rating of 50% is almost exactly where Ronald Reagan's was at this point in his presidency in 1981; it's higher than Bill Clinton's was in 1993. "When things aren't going well in the economy, you can't expect people to say they approve," said Andrew Kohut of the Pew Research Center. "But he's managed to maintain the public's confidence. ... People like him." Last week's numbers just mean that American politics have returned to normal. That doesn't mean Obama's presidency has failed; far from it. But it does mean his ambitions, which once seemed limitless, will now be trimmed. doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com |
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