Obama's campaign of 'just words'
Goldberg points out that Bush picked Powell before he knew he would be going to war with Iraq. At this point it would not surprise me to see Obama pick McCain and Palin for post in his administration. Palin would be a better Secretary of Energy than almost any Democrat he could pick and Obama could later name McCain to replace Gates after he finishes the year he has promised him.You almost have to feel sorry for the left.
President-elect Barack Obama was supposed to be their guy. That woman, Hillary Clinton, was the centrist, reach-across-the-aisle type. They picked Obama because he was going to be the "transformative" leader who didn't need to compromise with the right or even with reality. Heck, Obama the Wise would magically change reality itself, right around the same moment he'd force those pesky oceans to recede.
But unlike, say, J.R.R. Tolkien's fictional character Gandalf, who assembled a fellowship of like-minded compatriots, Obama apparently likes to work alone. Let's review.
In the primaries, he insisted that his opposition to the war in Iraq was his signature qualification, and that Hillary Clinton's and (to the extent he mattered) Joe Biden's support for the war proved they lacked the requisite judgment for the job. Since then, he has tapped Biden to be one heart beat away from the Oval Office and picked Clinton to be his secretary of State.
Obama promised to turn the page on, first and foremost, the Bush years, but also the political approach that marked the Clinton years. Nonetheless, he has not only embraced Hillary, he also has hired Bill Clinton's Treasury secretary, Larry Summers, to head his National Economic Council, tapped former Clintonite fixer Rahm Emanuel to be his chief of staff,and former Clinton chief of staff John Podesta to run his transition.
Even Bush holdovers, nominal and actual, outnumber and outrank serious progressives in the Obama Cabinet. Leading the pack is Robert Gates, President Bush's secretary of Defense — the man who oversaw the very troop surge in Iraq that Obama opposed. Timothy Geithner, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, will run the Obama Treasury Department. But Geithner has been a de facto right-hand man of current Bush Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.
Indeed, of all Obama's confirmed or reported picks, only Eric Holder, Obama's nominee for attorney general, will cause any furor from the right. Even so, the former Clinton deputy AG is no darling of the left.
To his dismayed followers, Obama says fear not, I am the change. "Understand where the vision for change comes from, first and foremost," he told supporters. "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."
Time magazine's Peter Beinart seconds Obama. "Cheer up," he tells his comrades on the left. "It's precisely because Obama intends to pursue a genuinely progressive foreign policy that he's surrounding himself with people who can guard his right flank at home. When George W. Bush wanted to sell the Iraq war, he trotted out Colin Powell — because Powell was nobody's idea of a hawk. Now Obama may be preparing to do the reverse."
It's a nice thought — and Beinart might be right about Obama's intentions — but if I were an editor at The Nation, or a mutterer at The Huffington Post, who didn't actually believe Obama to be the Messiah, I would find this cold comfort.
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These picks do suggest that Obama was more about political posturing and cynicism while he was campaign, or he is going to be at war with his appointees.
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