The Record (Troy, NY)

Obama didn’t birth Trump’s movement

- Email E.J. Dionne at ejdionne@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON >> Blaming President Obama for the rise of Donald Trump is popular among Republican leaders. They don’t want to take responsibi­lity for the choices made by their own voters or their complicity in tolerating and even encouragin­g the extremism Trump represents.

They also don’t want to face the fact that many Trump ballots were aimed at them.

It should be said that many conservati­ves are resisting the Blame-Obama-First temptation by trying to come to terms with what has happened to their cause. National Review’s Ramesh Ponnuru offered an admirably sober assessment of his side’s role in Trump’s emergence that included this observatio­n: “We have come to reward the expression of resentment and anger more than the mastery of public policy.”

This is an accurate and powerful critique of a movement that once claimed to have all the new ideas.

Now their main insight is that Obama is wrong about everything. The Wall Street Journal drew on dialectic to editoriali­ze on the Obama-leads-to-Trump concept: “Every thesis creates its antithesis.”

Just last Friday, Barry Sternlicht, a big-time investor, said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” that “Obama basically apologized for us” on the world stage, and that Americans are “tired of apologizin­g.” Trump, he explained, has tapped into a “deep vein,” the desire of the United States to win.

Now it’s true that every president ends up with responsibi­lity in some way for everything that goes awry on his watch. And you can make a case that Democrats, in the brief period under Obama when they held a filibuster-proof Senate majority should have done more to stimulate the economy, lift working-class incomes and thus reduce the level of anger in parts of the electorate.

But what’s maddening here is not just the incongruit­y of indicting Obama for the success of the man who denied his very right to be president. It’s also that Obama has consistent­ly stood for the things that conservati­ves say they want liberals to stand for – starting with a robust patriotism.

No one who heard Obama’s 2015 speech in Selma, Alabama, could doubt his belief that the United States is a special place, “strong enough to be self-critical” and thus capable of extraordin­ary moments of self-improvemen­t and self-correction.

But it goes beyond this. Obama’s commenceme­nt address earlier this month at Howard University, which has received less attention than it deserved, was a compendium of arguments that conservati­ves have wanted to hear. Don’t they want to argue that to deny racial progress is to ignore what’s happened over the last 50 years? Obama thinks this, too.

“To deny how far we’ve come would do a disservice to the cause of justice, to the legions of foot soldiers ... your mothers and your dads, and grandparen­ts and great grandparen­ts, who marched and toiled and suffered and overcame to make this day possible.”

Conservati­ves regularly criticize self-righteous moralism on the part of progressiv­es. Well, Obama insisted that “change requires more than righteous anger. It requires a program, and it requires organizing . ... In particular, it requires listening to those with whom you disagree, and being prepared to compromise.”

“Listening to those with whom you disagree.” Now there is a bracing idea at a moment when the politician getting all the media attention is famous for attaching nasty adjectives to the names of his opponents and urging his followers to strong-arm dissident voices out of his rallies.

Blaming Obama for that guy is like condemning someone who’s trying to stop the fight for starting it. It’s sad. Very weak, too.

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 ??  ?? EJ Dionne Columnist
EJ Dionne Columnist

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