To: LindyBill who wrote (345498 ) 1/25/2010 4:14:22 PM From: Nadine Carroll 2 Recommendations Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793958 Rep. Marion Berry is not running again and can speak freely. Bet he speaks for all the Blue Dogs: How did Barack Obama manage to kick off his presidency by making exactly the same disastrous mistake Bill Clinton made 16 years earlier? One answer is that Obama thought Clinton's health-care errors were tactical rather than strategic, and that correcting these--by letting Congress write the bill, or by cutting deals with industry groups in exchange for their support--would be sufficient to ensure success. But if Rep. Marion Berry is right, the answer may be as simple as sheer hubris. Berry, an Arkansas Democrat first elected in 1996, announced over the weekend that he won't seek re-election. In an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, reprinted by Politico, Berry, who was an "aye" in the House's 220-215 vote for ObamaCare Nov. 7, recounts his unsuccessful efforts to persuade the White House to pursue more moderate policies: Berry recounted meetings with White House officials, reminiscent of some during the Clinton days, where he and others urged them not to force Blue Dogs "off into that swamp" of supporting bills that would be unpopular with voters back home. "I've been doing that with this White House, and they just don't seem to give it any credibility at all," Berry said. "They just kept telling us how good it was going to be. The president himself, when that was brought up in one group, said, 'Well, the big difference here and in '94 was you've got me.' We're going to see how much difference that makes now." "You've got me." In fairness, one can see why Obama might have been overly impressed with himself. Here's a guy who became president of the United States just four years out of the Illinois Senate, and along the way developed a cultlike following. It sounds as though Obama became a follower as well as figurehead of his own cult of personality. He overestimated the degree to which he was special as opposed to lucky--a very human failing. by James Taranto in a piece titled "You've Got Me, Babe"online.wsj.com