SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (45901)9/14/2010 11:32:45 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
An Election 2010 GOP takeover: How bad for Obama?

As Election 2010 nears, Republicans are confident of dominating the House as Democrats shape strategies for either outcome. How will Obama deal with Republican gains?


John Boehner, now House minority leader, stands to be speaker if Republicans win big on Nov. 2. Mr. Boehner joined President Obama at a White House fiscal summit. (Charles Dharapak/AP/File)

By Linda Feldmann, Staff writer
posted September 14, 2010 at 10:14 am EDT
csmonitor.com

Washington —

No president wants to lose any levers of power. And if the Democrats lose control of the House in November – an outcome that is looking increasingly likely – it will be seen as an embarrassing rejection of President Obama and his record after two years in office.

But if the choice is between keeping a Democratic House by a slim majority and losing the House to the Republicans, Mr. Obama may well be better off under the latter scenario. Either way, analysts say, not much of significance gets done, but if the Republicans control at least one house of Congress, Obama can point to them for blame. And it could boost his reelection chances in 2012.

Democrats are reluctant to say this on the record. And few Republicans are openly arguing the reverse – that they're better off in the minority, lobbing criticisms from the sidelines and making life difficult for Obama without the responsibility of governing.

"This is a little ticklish," says Democratic strategist Peter Fenn. "It's hard to argue, 'You're a Democrat, you should go out there and argue that you want to lose.' "

For the Democrats, it's more a case of making the best of a bad situation, lemonade out of lemons, not wishing for defeat. The Nov. 2 midterm elections are less than two months away. If the Greek chorus of political prognosticators has it right, the Democrats will lose many, if not most, of the 55 House seats they netted in 2006 and 2008 – plus others held for many years by Democrats in conservative districts. The 39-seat net gain Republicans need for House control looks easier by the day. (More than 80 or 90 seats are in play, most of them currently held by Democrats, the handicappers say.)

In the Senate, which Democrats currently control with a 59 to 41 majority, the 10-seat net gain Republicans need to take over seemed a bridge too far until recently. Now polls suggest that, too, is possible, though still not likely.

Neither party is a sure winner

If it's any consolation to Democrats, voters are just as unenthusiastic about the Republican Party as they are about the Democratic Party – and in some polls even more so – even though many want a change in congressional control as a check on Obama.

"A lot of this" – the political landscape – "has to do ... with people saying no to the Democrats, not saying yes to the Republicans," South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) said Sept. 5 on "Meet the Press."

If Obama has no choice but to spend the next two years presiding over a divided government, it could force him to do what he said he would do during the 2008 campaign – work in a more bipartisan fashion, though with Republicans setting the agenda in the chamber(s) they control. The Clinton presidency is an obvious model. President Clinton had a rough first two years in office, and the Democrats lost control of both houses of Congress in the 1994 midterms, forcing him to the center. He won reelection easily in 1996.

But history never fully repeats itself. Political polarization is worse than it was in the mid-'90s. The Republicans have their own internal divisions to sort through, with the rise of the conservative "tea party" movement, which looks set to elect a healthy contingent of members this fall. And Obama is no Clinton when it comes to political wheeling and dealing.

"Obama doesn't have Clinton's ability to connect with average voters, but he certainly has his intelligence," says Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville.

Mr. Sabato believes Obama is capable of learning to "triangulate," the Clintonian practice of working both sides in Congress and getting results. In Mr. Clinton's case, that meant crime and welfare legislation. "Obama will adapt," Sabato says. "He has to adapt. His staff will help him. And he'll get into it, and probably enjoy it."

An important difference between Obama and Clinton, at this point in their tenures, is that Obama already has significant legislation under his belt, while Clinton had yet to produce much. So, while Clinton still needed some accomplishments on which to run for reelection, Obama faces much less pressure legislatively.

The economy's influence

Most important is the economy. And if there's little improvement two years from now, not much else matters. Obama's reelection is likely beyond reach. In 1996, by the time Clinton faced the voters again, the economy had improved and the nation was at peace.

If the economic picture is mixed in 2012 – and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan don't descend into crisis – then Obama's interplay with Republicans could be critical.

"There are so many variables to contemplate," says a Democratic aide on Capitol Hill who is not sure that Obama is necessarily better off if Democrats lose the House. "Does Obama adjust like Clinton adjusted? Do the Republicans overreach like they did in '95?"

If Republicans take over Congress, they will gain subpoena power on the government oversight committees – a potent weapon. Even in the minority, Rep. Darrell Issa (R) of California has been aggressive in pursuit of suspected Obama administration wrongdoing. In the majority, as chair of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, he could make the White House miserable – or he could overdo it. Or both.

Effects of a narrow majority

Talk of a government shutdown next year – as part of a GOP attempt to defund health-care reform – and even impeachment brings back memories of the '90s, when Clinton only gained in popularity in the face of aggressive Republican tactics.

"Is having a Speaker Boehner as a foil good for Obama's reelection?" says Mr. Fenn, the Democratic strategist. "Oh, I think it could be, yeah. I never underestimate John Boehner to screw things up."

Still, Fenn says, there's more that Democrats can get done if they keep the majority. "But I hate this idea of a 35-seat Republican gain," he adds, "because then there's paralysis anyway." So do some Republicans.

"If the Republicans are going to take the House, I'd rather they take it by a sufficiently big margin that they can run it – or fall one vote short, so they avoid the problem of having authority but no power," says Ari Fleischer, White House spokesman under President George W. Bush.

Mr. Fleischer defines "sufficient" as roughly a 10-seat cushion. And he counsels congressional Republicans to exercise patience and compromise, so they can "grow that cushion" and elect a Republican president in 2012.

"That's going to be hard for some Republicans to swallow," Fleischer says. "Republicans can cement their gains, keep their conservative base, and rally the center if they're patient. But if they try to go too far too fast in 2011, it could strengthen Barack Obama's hand going into his reelection."

In fact, a Republican-led majority suddenly in a position of responsibility could surprise Obama and the Democrats.

The Republicans' "new majority will include people who will not want to spend even on things Republicans want to spend money on," says Bruce Buchanan, a political scientist at the University of Texas, Austin. "What that means is that Republicans in control in the House will need Democratic votes, as well as Obama's cooperation – so he might do as well on some measures with their majority in the leadership than he would with a narrower Democratic majority in the House."

If nothing else, a loss of Democratic control in Congress could give Obama the biggest gift of all heading into 2012: a way to rev up the engines of the Democratic base. The "enthusiasm gap" is killing the Democrats in 2010. And if Obama is going to win reelection, he needs to reenergize his voters. Watching the Republicans regain a slice of power could do it.

© The Christian Science Monitor. All Rights Reserved.



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (45901)9/20/2010 12:41:49 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Respond to of 71588
 
Islam's Encounters With America
A survey by Elaph, the most respected electronic daily in the Arab world, saw 58% object to the building of the WTC mosque.
SEPTEMBER 20, 2010.

By FOUAD AJAMI
From his recent travels to the Persian Gulf—sponsored and paid for by Obama's State Department—Imam Faisal Abdul Rauf returned with a none-too-subtle threat. His project, the Ground Zero Mosque, would have to go on. Its cancellation would risk putting "our soldiers, our troops, our embassies and citizens under attack in the Muslim world."

Leave aside the attempt to make this project a matter of national security. The self-appointed bridge between America and the Arab-Islamic world is a false witness to the sentiments in Islamic lands.

The truth is that the trajectory of Islam in America (and Europe for that matter) is at variance with the play of things in Islam's main habitat. A survey by Elaph, the most respected electronic daily in the Arab world, gave a decided edge to those who objected to the building of this mosque—58% saw it as a project of folly.

Elaph was at it again in the aftermath of Pastor Terry Jones's threat to burn copies of the Quran: It queried its readers as to whether America was a "tolerant" or a "bigoted" society. The split was 63% to 37% in favor of those who accepted the good faith and pluralism of this country.

This is remarkable. The ground burned in the Arab-Islamic world over the last three decades. Sly preachers and their foot soldiers "weaponized" the faith and all but devoured what modernists had tried to build in the face of difficult odds. The fury has not burned out. Self-styled imams continue to issue fatwas that have made it all but impossible for Arabs and Muslims to partake of the modern world. But from this ruinous history, there has settled upon countless Muslims and Arabs the recognition that the wells are poisoned in their midst, that the faith has to be reined in or that the faith will kill, and that the economic and cultural prospects of modern Islam hang in the balance.

To this kind of sobriety, Muslim activists and preachers in the diaspora—in Patterson, N.J., and Minneapolis, in Copenhagen and Amsterdam—appear to be largely indifferent. They are forever on the look-out for the smallest slight.

Islam in America is of recent vintage. This country can't be "Islamic." Its foundations are deep in the Puritan religious tradition. The waves of immigrants who came to these shores understood the need for discretion, and for patience.

View Full Image

David Klein
.It wasn't belligerence that carried the Catholics and the Jews into the great American mainstream. It was the swarm of daily life—the grocery store, the assembly line, the garment industry, the public schools, and the big wars that knit the American communities together—and tore down the religious and ethnic barriers.

There is no gain to be had, no hearts and minds to be won, in Imam Rauf insisting that Ground Zero can't be hallowed ground because there is a strip joint and an off-track betting office nearby. This may be true, but it is irrelevant.

A terrible deed took place on that ground nine years ago. Nineteen young Arabs brought death and ruin onto American soil, and discretion has a place of pride in the way the aftermath is handled. "Islam" didn't commit these crimes, but young Arabs and Muslims did.

There is no use for the incantation that Islam is a religion of peace. The incantation is false; Islam, like other religions, is theologically a religion of war and a religion of peace. In our time, it is a religion in distress, fought over, hijacked at times, by a militant breed at war with the modern world.

Again, from Elaph, here are the thoughts of an Arab writer, Ahmed Abu Mattar, who sees through the militancy of the religious radicals. He dismisses outright the anger over the "foolish and deranged" Pastor Terry Jones who threatened to burn copies of the Quran. "Where is the anger in the face of dictatorships which dominate the lives of Arabs from the cradle to the grave? Would the Prophet Muhammad look with favor on the prisons in our midst which outnumber the universities and hospitals? Would he take comfort in the rate of illiteracy among the Arabs which exceeds 60%? Would he be satisfied with the backwardness that renders us a burden on other nations?"

The first Arabs who came to America arrived during the time of the Great Migration (1880-1920). Their story is told by Gregory Orfalea in his book, "The Arab Americans: A History" (2006). The pioneers were mostly Christians on the run from the hunger and the privations of a dying Ottoman empire. One such pioneer who fled Lebanon for America said he wanted to leave his homeland and "go to the land of justice." Ellis Island was fondly named bayt al-hurriya (the house of freedom). It was New York, in the larger neighborhood of Wall Street, that was the first home of the immigrants.

Restrictive quotas and the Great Depression reduced the migration to a trickle. This would change drastically in the 1950s and '60s. The time of Islam in America had begun.

It was in 1965, Imam Faisal Abdul Rauf tells us, that he made his way to America as a young man. He and a vast migration would be here as American identity would undergo a drastic metamorphosis.

The prudence of days past was now a distant memory. These activists who came in the 1990s—the time of multiculturalism and of what the late Arthur Schlesinger Jr. called the "disuniting of America"—would insist on a full-scale revision of the American creed. American liberalism had broken with American patriotism, and the self-styled activists would give themselves over to a militancy that would have shocked their forerunners. It is out of that larger history that this project at Ground Zero is born.

There is a great Arab and Islamic tale. It happened in the early years of Islam, but it speaks to this controversy. It took place in A.D. 638, the time of Islam's triumphs.

More
In One City, an Islamic Center Unifies
.The second successor to the Prophet, the Caliph Omar—to orthodox Muslims the most revered of the four Guided Caliphs for the great conquests that took place during his reign—had come to Jerusalem to accept the city's surrender. Patriarch Sophronius, the city's chief magistrate, is by his side for the ceremony of surrender. Prayer time comes for Omar while the patriarch is showing him the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

The conqueror asks where he could spread out his prayer rug. Sophronius tells him that he could stay where he was. Omar refuses, because his followers, he said, might then claim for Islam the holy shrine of the Christians. Omar stepped outside for his prayer.

We don't always assert all the "rights" that we can get away with. The faith is honored when the faith bends to necessity and discretion.

Mr. Ajami is a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

online.wsj.com



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (45901)9/25/2010 11:24:58 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 71588
 
that is funny