Starkville Daily News

To be a great president, you first have to like politics

-

On the consensus list of the most significan­t American presidents following George Washington, there is a common trait.

Abraham Lincoln,

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Teddy Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson and Harry

Truman — each of these great leaders was first a very good politician who actually enjoyed politics.

Lincoln, who served four terms in the Illinois Legislatur­e, where he helped to move the state’s capital from Vandalia to Springfiel­d, conveyed to people that he understood their struggles and he stood squarely on their side, in contrast with Woodrow Wilson, who professed his love for mankind in the abstract but preferred to avoid the company of ordinary human beings, who frequently sweat and burp.

Barack Obama, painful as it may be for his devoted admirers to admit, did not really much like politics or the company of the people who practice politics. He was not good at politics other than getting himself elected, at which he was exceptiona­lly good.

This is captured in a story told to me by one of the people who was in a private meeting with Obama. In Obama’s first term — when Democrats in Congress were being called upon to cast politicall­y difficult votes on such controvers­ial matters as national health care, an economic stimulus and bailing out and regulating Wall Street — one Democratic senator who had voted with Obama at considerab­le political risk needed some personal presidenti­al attention wherein Obama would tell him repeatedly how much he valued the senator’s courage and support in backing the White House.

When the senator, partially assuaged, left, an exasperate­d Obama asked rhetorical­ly: “Why are people so damn needy?” If you’re so self-contained that you don’t understand someone’s being needy, you’re destined to be a Woodrow Wilson rather than a Lincoln or an FDR.

We learned from Donna Brazile, who once was the interim chair of the Democratic National Committee (which, like the RNC, is totally under the thumb of the White House when the president is a party member), that President Obama, who had raised close to $2 billion for his own White House campaigns, left the Democratic Party some $24 million in debt after the 2012 election. Rather than use the magic of his office or his personal magnetism to recruit Democratic candidates, Obama mostly passively presided over eight years in office when the Democrats suffered losses of 62 House seats, nine Senate seats, control of 13 state legislatur­es, 12 governorsh­ips and a whopping 959 state legislativ­e seats. When Obama left office Jan. 20, there were more elected GOP state legislator­s than at any time since the founding of the Republican Party.

Maybe an anecdote says it best. In 1980,

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? MARK SHIELDS SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
MARK SHIELDS SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States