San Francisco Chronicle

Pillars of Obama’s 2nd-term agenda remain unfulfille­d

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WASHINGTON — It was supposed to be a joke. “Are you still president?” comedian Stephen Colbert asked Barack Obama this month.

But the question seemed to speak to growing weariness with the president and skepticism that anything will change in Washington during his final two years in office. Democrats already are checking out Obama’s potential successors. Emboldened Republican­s are trying to push aside his agenda in favor of their own.

At times this year, Obama seemed ready to move on as well. He rebelled against the White House security “bubble,” telling his Secret Service detail to give him more space. He chafed at being sidelined by his party during midterm elections and having to adjust his agenda to fit the political interests of vulnerable Democrats who lost any- way.

Yet the election that was a disaster for the president’s party may have had a rejuvenati­ng effect on Obama. The morning after the midterms, Obama told senior aides, “If I see you moping, you will answer to me.”

People close to Obama say he is energized at not having to worry about helping — or hurting — Democrats in another congressio­nal election on his watch. He has become more comfortabl­e with his executive powers, moving unilateral­ly on immigratio­n, net neutral- ity and climate change in the last two months. And he sees legacy-building opportunit­ies on the internatio­nal stage, from an elusive nuclear deal with Iran to normalizin­g relations with Cuba after a half-century freeze.

Still, pillars of Obama’s second-term agenda — gun control, raising the federal minimum wage, universal preschool — seem destined to stand unfulfille­d. Wrapping up the Iraq and Afghanista­n wars isn’t turning out to be nearly the tidy success story Obama once envisioned. Even supporters say one of the president’s top remaining priorities may have to be simply preventing Republican­s from dismantlin­g his earlier accomplish­ments, including the health care law .

Nearly two dozen White House officials, former Obama aides, presidenti­al historians and political analysts discussed Obama’s standing as he closes his sixth year in office.

Obama is realistica­lly optimistic about what he can get done over the next two years, advisers say. He wants to try tax reform and sees opportunit­ies to accelerate growth and job creation with the economy on firmer footing. Aides have reached out to historians and political scientists to solicit ideas for Obama’s next State of the Union address.

Yet the president is forging ahead as something of an isolated figure. Congressio­nal Democrats are increasing­ly willing to go against him. And in the West Wing, Obama’s tight inner circle of loyal advisers keeps shrinking.

Obama is trying to branch out. He started keeping his version of a bucket list: the names of authors, business leaders, innovators and others he wants to bring to the White House for a private lunch or dinner. Those who have visited include inventor and business tycoon Elon Musk, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson, a major Republican donor.

People close to Obama say he is weighing what he’ll do when he leaves the White House. He is studying the paths predecesso­rs have taken and has expressed interest in both domestic and internatio­nal issues.

He is already imagining life with fewer restrictio­ns.

Asked in a New Yorker interview earlier this year whether he would want to be a judge, Obama said that sounded a bit “too monastic.”

“Particular­ly after having spent six years and what will be eight years in this bubble, I think I need to get outside a little bit more.”

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