Clinton: President Needs To "Run The Government"

As I alluded to the other day, the debate between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton has shifted to a debate between models of the presidency. Those that argue Barack Obama should be president insist that experience is overrated and that the office is more about agenda-setting and uniting the country and world behind a common purpose. Obama himself elaborated on this presidential model yesterday in an interview with The Reno Gazette Journal editorial board and in the process gave what I suspect will go down as an enormous gift to the Clinton campaign.

"I have a pretty good sense of my strengths and my weaknesses," he said Monday during a meeting with the Reno Gazette-Journal editorial board.

"I am very good at teasing out from people who are smarter than me what the issues are and how we resolve them," he said. "I don't think there is anybody in this race who can inspire the American people better than I can. And I don't think there is anybody in this race who can bridge differences ... better than I can.

"But I'm not an operating officer. Some in this debate around experience seem to think the job of the president is to go in and run some bureaucracy. Well, that's not my job. My job is to set a vision of 'here's where the bureaucracy needs to go.'"

This is exactly the debate Hillary Clinton wants to have because at the heart of her experience pitch is her own philosophy of what the presidency should be; as she put it in an interview with Bloomberg News in the wake of Obama's comments yesterday, she feels the president needs to "run the government."

Watch it (h/t TPM):

She used the same phrasing on a conference call with press earlier today to promote her economic stimulus package. We've all seen the details of her stimulus plan, it was clear that the point of the call was more about injecting this talking point into the dialogue rather than discussing the finer points of the economy. The danger of the debate taking this turn for Obama is evident in a response Clinton made to a question late in the conference call.

The president needs to run the government and manage the economy. You can't have a hands off approach, especially after George W Bush who has adopted that sort of governing philosophy. We have seen the disastrous consequences of that kind of approach.

When Barack Obama says "I am very good at teasing out from people who are smarter than me what the issues are and how we resolve them" voters' minds go immediately to George W. Bush's reassurance to voters that he'd  be surrounding himself with smart experienced people. Shorter Clinton: we all know how that worked out.

This is dangerous territory for Barack Obama and I suspect is something that is going to have to be dealt with. She's making a very strong argument against a sort of hands off presidency and is presenting herself as the antidote to that; in other words, that she would constitute a greater change from George W. Bush than he would. What is Obama's argument against a hands on presidency? Everyone agrees that he's the guy to unite and to inspire, but what's the case for why that's the type of president we need right now versus one who will, as Clinton might put it, roll up her sleeves and work hard for the American people every day? That's an argument I suspect Barack Obama is going to have to make, and fast.



Display:


President Needs To "Run The Government" (none / 0)

I really do not understand why Obama wanted to go down this road at all.  I'm sure his supporters will argue passionately that his view of the presidency is the best one, because all of his positions turn out to be the right one, but the reality is that there just aren't very many voters who feel like "wow, we really don't want a hands-on president."  So why even get into the argument in the first place?  How does it benefit him?


"Another problem we have...is that in election years we behave somewhat as primitive peoples do at the time of the full moon." --Harry Truman
by Steve M on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:29:19 PM EST

that was extremely poor messaging (none / 0)

I think all of the candidates are tired after several weeks of campaigning with little break.


John McCain: 100 years in Iraq "would be fine with me."
by desmoinesdem on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:30:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: that was extremely poor messaging (none / 0)

He's like the polar opposite of Hillary, whom you can almost never budge off her talking points.

I really felt he dug the hole deeper last night when he kept rambling on about misplacing pieces of paper or whatever the heck it was.  I mean, this argument has nowhere good to go.


"Another problem we have...is that in election years we behave somewhat as primitive peoples do at the time of the full moon." --Harry Truman
by Steve M on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:35:37 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: that was extremely poor messaging (2.00 / 0)

I get these horrible Dr. Strangelove visions of President Obama leaving the nuclear codes on a table at Starbucks somewhere.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:37:33 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: that was extremely poor messaging (none / 0)

LOL Oh come on now hwc. That is a bit much, but very funny indeed. LOL


by lonnette33 on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:47:41 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: that was extremely poor messaging (none / 0)

Sadly, I wasn't trying to be funny.

You know, this "being President" stuff is serious business. I get no sense that Obama really grasps the nature of the responsibility or the challenge.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:59:32 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: that was extremely poor messaging (none / 0)

Obama repeated his story about being disorganized in his interview with the Reno paper today. He seems to be pitching it as a new campaign theme.

I dunno...maybe it will sell to the Starbucks crowd.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:36:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]

They are tired (none / 0)

No question about that.  I thought that Obama's paper stuff last night was awkwardly said because he was tired.  It made me wince, but I was willing to assume some of it was just inartful phrasing.  Just as I thought Clinton's "I voted for it and I'm glad it never became law" phrasing was due to fatigue.  

Unfortunately, Obama seems to be sticking with this today.  I get what he's going for - he's a big vision guy and not some middle manager - but I wonder how that's going to play.  While there is certainly a thirst for inspiration, I think there's also one for a government that can respond to a hurricane with some semblence of competence.  


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:45:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: They are tired (none / 0)

This is the spot in the argument where Obama points out that George Bush always gets enough sleep!


"Another problem we have...is that in election years we behave somewhat as primitive peoples do at the time of the full moon." --Harry Truman
by Steve M on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:28:40 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I look at it as Executive Power (none / 0)

...while almost surely not as authoritarian as Bush, I trust Obama far more than Clinton not to abuse his powers as the executive.


by MNPundit on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:55:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]

That's a very different argument (none / 0)

The power of the executive argument is one that goes on between every President and every Congress.  To some extent the solution that is found to it tends to depend on the President's personality.

Bill Clinton's vision of expansive executive power was in closely managing the details of the powers given to him by Congress'.

W.'s vision is Ronald Reagan's and Richard Nixon's, secretively defying the Congress and doing whatever he pleases.

THIS question, though, is clearly separable from the Presidential power question.  This is the question of whether the President should be a hands-on manager or a big-picture guy who hires capable underlings who are allowed to run their own shops so long as the headlines they generate are consonant with the Administration's "themes."  The former model has come to be associated with Democratic Presidents--Carter and Clinton were both very hands-on--while Reagan and Bush II were/are two of the most disengaged Presidents in U.S. history, guys whose cabinet secretaries get little to no direction from the top (other than political).

W. is the greatest example AGAINST the delegative model of Presidential leadership that has yet come down the pike.  With him still sitting there in the White House proving every day how badly this model can perform, it's probably not a good time for a Democrat to be running on such a stance.


by Trickster on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:15:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Trust (2.00 / 1)

It is extremely naive to give over one's trust to any politician -- especially one who claims to have a visionary approach to leadership.

I'd much rather have a hands-on, can-do pragmatist who will deliver real, well-thought-through legislation.

This is my major worry about Obama and the argument of many of his supporters.


by Coral on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 07:02:41 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Boneheaded Statement (none / 0)

This was a very stupid statement likely made out of exhaustion.  That's no excuse, as all the candidates are tired, but that's what I chalk it up to.  No doubt, this will hurt him.  Which sucks.


by HSTruman on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 08:35:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Obama wants to be like Bush (none / 0)

And just sit there delegating, getting great people--in his estimation--to do their Cabinet jobs but not really bothering with the nuts and bolts of the whole operation.  Bill Clinton was just the opposite; I understand he was something of a micro-manager.  And apparently, the stress of it caused him to do so really weird things or people, e.g. Monica.  I think Hillary will strike a happy medium and be both a visionary and a bureaucrat.


I proudly support Barack Obama for President!
by Zeitgeist9000 on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:33:14 PM EST

Re: Obama wants to be like Bush (none / 0)

In Richard Clarke's book, he recounted being blown away that Clinton not only knew the outlines of important subjects, he'd read all of the important texts, and even read pre-published galleys.


by Pacific John on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:37:33 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama wants to be like Bush (none / 0)

Senator Clinton's staffers have spoken of her management organization in some interviews over the last year. She is very demanding of well prepared briefs which she takes home at night and returns the next morning with action items penciled in the margins. Very thoroughly prepared and runs a highly-competent Senate office.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:41:13 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I like a hard worker for president n/t (none / 0)


by Coral on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 07:03:54 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Cheney (2.00 / 1)

I didn't think so much of Bush last night as I did of Cheney because part of the reason Cheney is so powerful is that he controls the paper. As the Washington Post series made clear he decides what the president sees and hears and so, ultimately, decides most policy issues.  

Leaving the management of government to someone else basically means you're leaving the governing to someone else.  


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:38:56 PM EST

Re: Cheney (none / 0)

i'm an obama supporter but...that's a good point.


by CalDem on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:48:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Flame away (none / 0)

But for the past 7 years -- it was not the "hands off" approach that pissed me off about Bush... it was the "imperial presidency".

I'm not saying an HRC presidency would be more of the same -- only that power concentration in a single person scares me and IS a campaign issue for me.


by zonk on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:39:22 PM EST

Re: Flame away (none / 0)

Zonk:

The danger of a concentration of power is PRECISELY WHY you don't want a President who is indifferent to the government bureacracy. The career professionals, such as those at State, Defense, Treasury, OMB, etc. serve as a vital institutional check and balance against a President flying by the seat of his or her pants. It is absolutely vital that a President be engaged and receptive to the arguments from the career professionals.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:44:26 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Flame away (none / 0)

If I were a government employee, I would much rather  work for an executive that is saying the things that Clinton says, rather that what Obama is saying. I've worked for big-picture "vision" types before: often what they mean by vision is "I am going to ignore the things that the people reporting to me are saying." Even though I do not like her policy record, I am pretty receptive to Clinton's argument that laziness is the worst sin.

Evil flourishes where apathy reigns, or something like that...


blogs:1 2 3
by Mark Wallace on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:59:47 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Certainly (2.00 / 1)

not all of us career folks are Clinton supporters.  But among those who are, a lot of it - a LOT of it - is based on a desire simply to see government function again.  She should know how it works having been in the WH and so we figure that she won't have nearly as steep a learning curve.

Sitting through the aimless drift and false starts of a new administration while all the new staffers in the White House learn where the bathrooms are is always painful.  The last eight years, however, make the thought of it unbearable.


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:11:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Certainly (none / 0)

I think this is Hillary's strength:  Competent, middle-of-the-road governance.  She would surround herself with the superstars of the Clinton years and the brain power coming out of the White House may in fact become a new form of alternative energy.  I know I'll get hammered for this statement, but I think John McCain would be very similar in that regard.

But I think people are looking for a fundamentally different thing than that.  Maybe those people (myself included) should want for something a little more realistic.  But, there isn't a great desire to return to the uber-technocrat Clinton days.  People want things to be run fundamentally differently.  

Clinton perhaps could have achieved this if it hadn't been for the Monica Lewinsky thing.  But nevertheless, I never got the sense that he was striving for greatness so much as winning.


by the mollusk on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:33:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]

What We Want (none / 0)

I don't think we want different things.  I want a complete realignment that gets more things done than Clinton was able to do in the 90s.  I fundamentally disagree with Obama that you get it through unity.  Every major realignment has been brought about by taking your partisan argument and using it to discredit the other side and bring your side to power.

Obama has chosen not to do that and is, instead, very much running like a moderate.  His years in the Senate have shown him to be, IMO, someone who very much files the edges off his beliefs to appeal to the establishment.  His policies are not fundamentally more liberal than Clinton's.  

Why should I vote for someone who isn't more liberal, who I don't believe is fundamentally different from any other D.C. politician, and who doesn't know how to run a government?

If I thought Obama were the second coming of FDR, I'd vote for him.  Instead, I fear he is the second coming of Bill Clinton - someone who has immense political skills, but will have no idea of what he is doing for the first several years and by the time he figures it out, the GOP will already have knee-capped his administration.


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:51:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We Want (none / 0)

We find ourselves in an interesting situation:

The second coming of Clinton is not the second coming of Clinton,

but the coming of Obama is the second coming of Clinton.

Hmm.

You may be correct, who knows.


by the mollusk on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 10:12:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]

RunsThe Government" AND inspires (none / 0)

It's funny you want to have this conversation now.

But, hey, better late than never. The fact is the problem with this conversation is that a great President, not just a good one, must be both.  Where Obama has gone wrong is to accept the either/or frame. But then maybe he had not choice?


by bruh21 on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:42:17 PM EST

What do you gain by being "hands-on"? (2.00 / 3)

If you think about it, it's a fallacy to liken Obama to President Bush when discussing Obama's so-called "hands-off" approach to leading the country.  If you asked President Bush, I'm sure he would say that he surrounded himself with smart, experienced people, however that was not the source of the myriad problems associated with this presidency.  What Bush really made happen is he surrounded himself with ideologically similar people, and alienated those who dissented from his plans.  Then he and those around him did the exact same thing.  I'm not convinced Barack Obama has any desire to do that.  His methodology has always been inquisitive and inclusive, not believing he has the answers off-hand, but instead waiting to find the right ones.  

As for the "hands-off" approach, I don't claim to be an expert in the inner workings of the Federal government, but I don't believe it's the task of the President to micromanage every level of this vast bureaucracy.  That's the only thing I can think of when I hear the term "hands-on".  If you do that, you're going to make an already glacial bureaucratic machine run even slower.  On a broad-strokes level, a President should be tasked with appointing smart, experienced personnel to executive positions.  Perhaps instead of debating hands-on vs. hands-off, we should consider who Obama and Hillary plan on appointing as heads of these various departments and agencies in our country?  


by Hour of Wolves on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:43:18 PM EST

Not Micro-Managing (none / 0)

When I say "hands on" I don't mean micromanaging every aspect of the federal government, that's ridiculous.

But the policy decision-making process in D.C. is very paper heavy.  The government runs on briefing papers, talking points, and decision memos.  How those documents are developed and circulated is key to getting good policy.  What Cheney was able to do in the Bush Administration is make sure that all paper essentially flowed through his office or originated in his office.  At the same time, he'd often make sure no one from his office was listed as the author or reviewer - he'd launder his policy through other administration officials.  In this way, he exercised a lot of control on the information Bush received.  

It wasn't just Cheney's knowledge of the federal beauracracy that permitted him to do this - it was Bush's lack of knowledge about the system and lack of interest in trying to control it.  

Certainly no president is going to control every piece of paper, but understanding the policy making process and being an active participant in it, instead of just a passive recipient, makes it more likely that the president will get better advice from a larger variety of sources.  


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:53:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Not Micro-Managing (none / 0)

Bingo. You have nailed the exact nature of Cheney's government coup.

Bush's hands-off management style (whether intentional or inadvertant) is what allowed a radical neocon philosophy to take over the government of the United States. Very, very dangerous.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:02:58 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Not Micro-Managing (none / 0)

You need a President who gets a briefing paper and knows enough to ask, "wait a minute, why don't we have a recommendation from the Deputy Secretary of Widgets? This is his area of expertise. Was it short-stopped along the way? Does he agree with this recommendation?


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:17:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: (none / 0)

Come on guys. Actually managing the country does not compare to the excellent speeches Obama will deliver once he becomes president.

Imagine what State of the Union speeches would be like!


by dailyroad on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:43:28 PM EST

Re: (none / 0)

Yes, and then imagine what the state of the Union would be!


by mlr701 on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:53:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Obama thinks like Bush (none / 0)

Oh it ain't hard to run a government.  Give a few speeches and pose for some photo ops.  The government stuff pretty much runs itself.  Do a lot of delegating.

Obama's plan is the same as W's plan and we all have seen what a huge mess that leads to.


by dpANDREWS on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:46:49 PM EST

Re: Obama thinks like Bush (none / 0)

LOL, you guys are hilarious today.


by lonnette33 on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:56:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]

"Run The Government" (none / 0)

Just on a political strategy level, I was dumbfounded last night when Obama said that he was disorganized and would have to rely on others to run the government. That reinforces what he surely knows is the vulnerable underbelly of his entire candidacy: the perception that he is simply not ready to be President.

Maybe he's got some kind of political death wish?


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:48:06 PM EST

Re: "Run The Government" (none / 0)

Obama's inexperience and his belief that the American people will vote for celebrity over substance or experience is beginning to show.

It is becoming apparent he is wrong.

I wonder what the landscape will look like if Edwards has a stronger than expected showing?

He was very strong at the debate. Of course that's his best forum.


just a red meat eatin' Democratic Dawg frontpaging at The Democratic Daily...
by BigDog on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:53:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: "Run The Government" (none / 0)

Have you not noticed that during the debates Obama rarely gets asked a question first or if he does his answer pretty much comes out of one of  his stump speeches (although Edwards does this a lot, too)? Then, the question goes to Clinton or Edwards, after which Obama just has to interject only to repackage and rephrase what one of them just said? He's a professional mimic. Plus, as David Shuster said yesterday morning in the latter segment of Morning Joe, he's a "shape shifter", which is another aspect of being a mimic. This tells you a whole lot about how he'd be running his presidency. Then you have to ask yourself who will be standing behind the curtain pulling the strings -- if not Cheney.


by Artificial Intelligence on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 04:12:08 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama Governing Kung-Fu is Weak? (2.00 / 1)

This goes to the heart of my primary concern about Obama -- he doesn't appear to fully appreciate how small elements of process (legislative process, regulatory process, budgetary process, enforcement process, and the bureaucrats who directly manage these processes) can stymie even relatively large amounts of political will. Put another way: Obama doesn't appeart to quite realize just how many different ways the GOP can mess up his governing mojo as President.


by blueflorida on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:55:56 PM EST

Re: Obama Governing Kung-Fu is Weak? (2.00 / 1)

Nevermind the Republicans. Many Presidents have been derailed by their own Cabinet officers because the President failed to understand the way the government operates.

That failure crippled Jimmy Carter's administration and caused Bill Clinton to have to hit the rest button two years into his administration.

Hillary knows better. That's what she means when she says "hit the ground running on Day One".


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:06:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: (none / 0)

Since we're in Vegas, it seems like an opportune time to throw out the inevitable sports analogy.

Obama can't win this fight on points. He has to score a K.O., or he will be worn down and out eventually. The longer the match goes the less his chances are. In Iowa Barack threw his best first round haymaker, but Clinton got up off the canvas and is starting to connect with those relentless jabs.


by robert ethan on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 05:58:38 PM EST

Re: (none / 0)

He failed to connect with the New Hampshire knock out punch when he had her on the ropes.

You are correct. Obama probably knows that he can't afford to go 15 rounds against her.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:08:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Civil Service (2.00 / 1)

I'll add one more concern about the need for a president to run the government.  The civil service ain't what it used to be.  This administration has driven a lot of very good folks out or to the hinterlands.  

Not only is the political part of the government broken, but the career part has been severely weakened.  It cannot take up nearly as much slack as it used to.  It needs a strong hand to put it back together again.


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:00:00 PM EST

Re: Civil Service (none / 0)

Obama probably doesn't even know where to look for all the places the career service is broken.

For example, the Justice Department is in shambles. It is going to take a President who understands what all these divisions at Justice actually do (like enforce civil rights laws) to fix the government.

Clinton often says that we won't even know the half of it until the next President gets to the White House and starts lifting the carpets and poking around to find out all the damage Bush has done. Just digging through the Bush Executive Orders is going to be a major undertaking.


by hwc on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:12:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Dude (2.00 / 1)

You are so right about the mess being out of public sight.

In addition to DOJ, the Treasury department has bled talented folks.  These are the sconomists and other people Robert Rubin claimed were among the brightest he'd worked with in his career.  When it comes to running the country, Treasury and DOJ are the two biggies domestically.  

As for smaller agencies, there's a blogger who is an FDA career employee who has done an excellent job reporting on the polticalization of that agency.  It wouldn't surprise me to find that other agencies that depend on science have been similarly politicized.

Essentially, the Bush folks made it very clear that they were uninterested in any kind of rational fact-based analysis of policy options of any kind and so any agency that is made up of those kind of folks, like Treasury or the FDA, probably has problems.

Similarly, the Bush folks were all about extending their political/ideological power and so I suspect those agencies, like DOJ, DOD and State, also have been compromised.  Well, we know DOJ has been.  Everyone in that department is scared out of their minds.

So basically the entire government has been broken by these jerks.  And it wasn't incompetence, it was a deliberate decision.  


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:21:57 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Dude (none / 0)

It's not just the politicization but the outsourcing, as well, including everything from IRS collections to Blackwater. I seriously doubt that anyone has a real idea of how much the civil service has been gutted.

Back in 1980s, during the Tom Peters' Search for Excellence days, I was part of a civilian task force addressing fraud, waste and abuse at a major European military base. The issues that we dealt with were minute compared to the kind of mess the next president will have confronting them. Without some concept of how government is supposed to run there would be no way to get it running the way it should. How in heaven's name could a disconnected chief executive delegate others to fix things if they wouldn't even be able to recognize that (or how) they are broken?


by Artificial Intelligence on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 04:22:08 AM EST
[ Parent ]

so you think kennedy was a disconnected... (none / 0)

chief executive???


"Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Senator Obama than Senator McCain." -- Hillary Clinton
by bored now on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 08:03:21 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Civil Service (2.00 / 1)

ITA with this statement, BDB. As a gov't worker, there's not a day that goes by where someone announces his/her retirement. There have been several retirements OR people leaving the government to go to the private sector. In the agency where I work, there's a lot of low morale among employees. A lot of the political appointees don't know what they're doing and just waste time with public relations and videoconferences about "improving the culture of the agency." It drives the employees who have been in the agency for quite some time up the wall. I was just talking with a few people that work with political appointees a few months ago. They are just waiting for a change in administration b/c these politicos don't know what they're doing.  

I also know that it's not just my agency, but the same problems exist at the agencies that my friends work for as well. I recall vividly a conversation I had with a complete stranger at Panera Bread a few years ago, where she, a federal employee, just started going off about the problems with her agency. The problems are widespread throughout the government. I figure it will probably take a year, maybe two just to get the government to start functioning on the most basic level.

One of the reasons why I decided to support Clinton last spring was b/c of her knowledge of the way the Executive Branch is SUPPOSED to work and her "ready on day one" message really resonates with me. I seriously don't think that the government could handle another laissez faire approach to management that we've seen the past 2 terms. We just can't afford it....  


by ademption on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:28:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Civil Service (2.00 / 1)

Yep, it's depressing.  I was on jury service awhile back and ran into another federal employee.  Neither of us knew anything about the other's politics and we both almost simultaneously launched into a rant about the current mismanagement by this Administration.

One of my colleagues said the other day that he never thought he'd miss the Reagan Administration folks, but he'd take those guys back in a heartbeat.

I'm not sure folks outside the government know how unprecedented this level of mismangement is.  I worked closely with Clinton appointees in the prior administration.  Some were smart, some were not, some were nice, some were not - but I will give them this, even the jerks by and large tried to do a good job and that includes managing the career staff.  I never had my politics questioned until the current bozos showed up.  Neither had many of the other career folks I worked with and some dated back to the Nixon administration.  

So, yes, right now competence looks like heaven.  

And perhaps I'm blinded by my perspective as a government employee but I honestly don't know how you transform a government that is broken and already struggling.  Any new programs will fail unless the management of the government improves, IMO.


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 07:02:38 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Civil Service (none / 0)

I would imagine that Clinton would try to revamp Vice President Gore's "Reinventing Government" initiatives, but it would be impossible to do anything to make government processes more efficient etc when it's in such disarray. That will probably have to wait for another 3 years or so.

Probably another order of business for the next Democratic president is to determine how many government contractors are really needed. We contract out a lot of stuff that probably could be kept in house. I'm not totally against government contracting entirely, but I think the Bush administration has relied entirely too much on government consultants/contractors....


by ademption on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 07:27:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Clinton: President Needs To "Run (none / 0)

Obama said in yesterday's debate that people want a President who can bring people together. Now I don't diagree, but I imagine they want more so a smart, competent President, who doesn't have to overrely on  advisors like Bush has. This is a powerful arguement for Hillary to make, and Obama has given her an opening.


by Christopher Lib on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:04:16 PM EST

Once again, a wrong analysis (none / 0)

I don't know where these spins come from, if not the Clinton campaign. Was Reagan popular because he was hands on? Bush is unpopular not because he isn't hands on, it's because his entire agenda extremist, ideological, and irrational, and most importantly, a failure.


by cmpnwtr on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:11:10 PM EST

Reagan was different than Obama (none / 0)

Even if I accept your representations about Reagan, he was different than Obama because Reagan was all about getting the government to do less.  There were polticial appointees whose entire job was to make sure no regulations got done by certain agencies.  That's all they did.  You don't have to be hands on to do nothing.

To his credit, Obama has big plans for the government.  That takes management to get done.


by BDB on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:25:12 PM EST
[ Parent ]

i'm stunned at clinton's stupidity... (none / 0)

now we know: she didn't learn a thing.

we've had several presidents in my lifetime who were hands-on micromanagers.  we have nixon, who was so intent to run his government that he directed the plumbers unit.  then we had jimmy carter, who's reputation for micro-management i figured would never be surpassed.

then we have hillary herself, who's hands-on management of health care reform led to her biggest accomplishment.  add to that bill clinton's belief that he could do what he wanted, too -- and it got us "don't ask, don't tell."  and now we have george bush, who refuses input from others, believes his own advice is better than the rest, and may be the only person who thinks he's successful.

and hillary thinks this a good model to follow?

you would have thought hillary was smarter than that.  obviously not...


"Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Senator Obama than Senator McCain." -- Hillary Clinton
by bored now on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:28:23 PM EST

Close your eyes, think listen (1.50 / 2)

I can picture it, I can hear it:

Obama:  "Brownie here is going a heckuva job"


by dpANDREWS on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:31:12 PM EST

Hummm (none / 0)

I have a brilliant idea: maybe he said this to get more endorsements? (Just think, if you endorse and are picked for his cabinet or VP, you could end out running the country!)


by hairy legs on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 06:39:56 PM EST

How the Clintons DID run the government (none / 0)

We can argue in the abstract about what 'hands-on' might mean to different people. What it means to Hillary is obviously what she and Bill did in their 12 years in the Arkansas Governor's Mansion and 8 years in the White House. Which resulted in, among other things, balancing the budget and paying down the National Debt.

http://userpic.livejournal.com/69609345/ 14414315


by 1950democrat on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 07:59:51 PM EST

Okay (2.00 / 1)

Obama's argument is that the job of the President is not to micromanage the federal government. It is not to micromanage the White House. The President needs to put forward a clear policy vision and agenda, marshal political support for that agenda, and then appoint the most competent people to implement it. The most important part of that is the willingness to take advice wherever he/she can find it and the sound judgment and experience to weigh that advice properly--because there's no way any one person, no matter how brilliant, can be an expert in every policy area or can come up with every legislative strategy to pass bills through Congress. So yes, the President must be a good manager. But whether or not he/she is personally organized or even particularly disciplined is irrelevant. Bill Clinton was pretty unorganized and undisciplined, if I recall correctly. But he was a good President.

To pick up from what some guy said on Ben Smith's blog, this is why Presidents have a Chief of Staff: to micromanage all the little crap so that the President can deal with the big picture stuff. Of course the President needs the skill to pick the right Chief of Staff. But that's a very different skillset.    


by Korha on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 09:11:05 PM EST

Re: Okay (none / 0)

Exactly.  Obama is making a contrast between the job of Chief Operating Officer and a Chief Executive Officer.  The CEO is responsible for making the tough decisions and setting the broad agenda, for holding his/her people accountable but not for micro-managing the day-to-day activities of the firm.  That's what the COO is there for.  If your Chief Executive is spending all their time in the weeds, you'll inevitably lose sight of the big picture and the road ahead and eventually it won't matter if schedule's are met and papers are filed because your company will no longer exist.  There's a need for this division of labor, and it's absolutely disingenuous for Sen. Clinton to argue that she can single-handedly manage it all on her own (or worse, to argue that the President is more like a COO than a CEO.  If the President isn't going to play the part of Chief Executive, then who the hell is?)

I have to hand it to Obama for not backing down on this, even if it is politically very potent for Clinton.  There's a real thrust to her argument that's going to be hard to deflect, even if it isn't really an accurate portrayal of Obama's comments, the Bush Administration's failures or the nature of the presidency itself.  


by Ryan Anderson on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 09:53:38 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Clinton: President Needs To (none / 0)

I suppose Mr. Obama will have to look into the eyes of his cabinet, see their souls and trust that everything will be fine.


While I could sit in church and pray all I want, I wouldn't be fulfilling God's will unless I went out and did the Lord's work ~ Barack Obama
by bowiegeek on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 09:17:56 PM EST

Can we look at what Obama actually said? (none / 0)

I don't get, from the Obama quote above, that he's advocating a "hands-off" approach at all.  Let's look at the actual words that came out of his mouth,:

"I am very good at teasing out from people who are smarter than me what the issues are and how we resolve them,...But I'm not an operating officer."

Now, to me that doesn't sound like he's going to spend six months out of the year clearing brush.  It sounds like, instead of trying to run every government department himself, he's going to give those people direction, and then trust them to do their jobs well.  [i]That's how a good manager works.[/i]

The best bosses I've ever had have been ones who said, "here's what I need from you; here's what you can do better," and then left me alone to do my job.  The worst ones were constant meddlers, who tried to micromanage everything instead of just letting me work.  Worse still (although I've never had a boss like this) would be someone who takes a 3-month vacation to his estate in Texas and doesn't notice that my department is on fire.

Now, maybe it's just me, but the first approach (Obama) doesn't really resemble the third approach (Bush) in any way.

Honestly, based on these two approaches, I really think an Obama/Clinton or Clinton/Obama ticket would be a great team once in office.  He has "the vision thing"; she has the policy-wonk knowledge.  She'd be a great Al Gore to his Bill Clinton.  Of course, I can't see either of them taking the second spot on the ticket, so we'll never know.


"It's not enough to say you'll be ready from Day One - you have to be right from Day One."
by schroeder on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 09:20:19 PM EST

right... (none / 0)

his model of presidency would be akin to that of kennedy's.  hillary's would be more akin to nixon's.  

and she's proud of it.  only a goldwater girl would be...


"Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Senator Obama than Senator McCain." -- Hillary Clinton
by bored now on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 09:29:52 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Hands on, please! (none / 0)

So Obama is fawning and gushing over Reagan to pander to the right? The ersatz Gipper who introduced the term/adjective "homeless" into our American vocabulary. Perhaps he's recalling  people pushing shopping carts with all their worldy belongings in numbers previously unseen or imagined. Reaganomics? Reagan said deficits don't matter. Anyone believe that bullsh!t? Is he (Obama) out of his mind? It must really be a  pain in the ass to wake up every day and constantly defend this clown. He simply is not a leader. Yet. And the I'm a uniter, not a divider theme has already been perpetrated in another playbook.    

Reagan said, "The nine most terrifying words in the English language are, 'I'm from the government and I'm here to help.'

I'll bet you our veterans would really appreciate a functioning government that is there to help. This same kind of thinking led to the tragegy of Walter Reed. Katrina. The mining disaters. Poison from China. Not reading the 'Bin Laden determined to strike in US' daily briefing. Give me hands on please.
A contempt of government will not allow one to govern properly. The next POTUS is is really going to need to do some heavy lifting to get us out of this mess.

Now what kills me is we have some bozos slamming Bill Clinton's presidency while their candidate of choice is hearting rightwingers with their make believe hero.(That means Reagan to you Obama supporters)
Why do I often get the idea that many Obama supporters are incapable of nuanced thinking and may very well have previously voted for Sanjaya? And let's not forget many of them seem to share a more than  healthy dose of contempt for history.
They should be glad EST isn't recruiting anymore.


by durendal on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 10:17:37 PM EST

we got a strong president now... (none / 0)

one who doesn't listen to his advisors (his secretary of state and military men didn't want to invade iraq -- but a strong president did!).  at least hillary is honest.  she's going to continue the arrogant, stubborn, "i know best" presidency of george w. bush.

but i'm already against the next war -- hillary's elective, immoral war...


"Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Senator Obama than Senator McCain." -- Hillary Clinton
by bored now on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 08:07:17 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Moral courage (none / 0)

Present.


by durendal on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 05:38:21 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Hillary: Strong Executive (none / 0)

Hillary's views on a strong executive are consistent with the intent of our founders. As such, her views more clearly reflect American values for good government.

Hemp-advocate Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist Paper 70:

There can be no need, however, to multiply arguments or examples on this head. A feeble Executive implies a feeble execution of the government. A feeble execution is but another phrase for a bad execution; and a government ill executed, whatever it may be in theory, must be, in practice, a bad government.

Taking it for granted, therefore, that all men of sense will agree in the necessity of an energetic Executive, it will only remain to inquire, what are the ingredients which constitute this energy? How far can they be combined with those other ingredients which constitute safety in the republican sense? And how far does this combination characterize the plan which has been reported by the convention?

The ingredients which constitute energy in the Executive are, first, unity; secondly, duration; thirdly, an adequate provision for its support; fourthly, competent powers.
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/federa l/fed70.htm

Repugs and the Bush administration have a hands-off, let-the-buyer-beware approach to government. That qualifies as bad government.

That's just some more of the Repugs anti-American values philosophy.

Clearly, Hillary is the candidate that best reflects and expresses an affirmation of American values. She needs to point out that her views best reflect, and are consistent with, American values.


by Hempy on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 02:18:52 AM EST

i agree hamilton is her model... (none / 0)

but hamilton ISN'T the model for democrats.  just the opposite.

but what do you expect from a goldwater girl???


"Anyone who voted for me or caucused for me has so much more in common with Senator Obama than Senator McCain." -- Hillary Clinton
by bored now on Thu Jan 17, 2008 at 08:08:13 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: i agree hamilton is her model... (none / 0)

Hamilton isn't the model for Democrats?

In Federalist Paper 30, Hamilton wrote:

How can it [the government] undertake or execute any liberal or enlarged plans of public good?
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/federa l/fed30.htm

Liberal or enlarged plans for the public good? I seriously doubt there are many conservatives championing liberal or enlarged plans for the public good.

Conservative values are anti-American values.

Hillary's plans are liberal and enlarged and are for the public good.

Hamilton does not espouse conservative values.


by Hempy on Fri Jan 18, 2008 at 02:22:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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