CID1990 wrote:Actually, I have been fairly happy with Obama on a few issues, and national security so far is one of them. We still have no plan on Afghanistan, but the administration says that is forthcoming. (Amazing how hard it is to put together a plan overnight, isn't it? Easy to say "we need a plan", a little harder to actually put one together) Agreed with the administration on not releasing Gitmo pics. It is bad enough that we have shown our whole hand in terms of interrogations, but there's no way to put that cat back in the bag now. I think Obama is realizing that as a pragmatist (which he appears to be) he is going to have to hang on to some of the Bush policies in the war on terror. As a result, we have already seen how the called for immediate pullout from Iraq is no longer on the table. We are also seeing that Obama has decided to keep the military tribunals. It is going to be spun as being tweaked to provide more rights to the defendants, but this is just window dressing for the Pelosi crowd. Obama knows that if he sends terrorists into the loving arms of our civilian courts it will not be a happy political day when one of them gets turned loose.
All this being said, Nancy Pelosi is not just a liability to her party, she is also a liability to Obama. She represents the moonbattiest part of the Democratic Party, and Obama is going to have problems with that side of the house. As long as Pelosi is Speaker, the Obama administration is going to have to play ball with her and the baggage (read: interests) that she brings with her. Obama will find it much easier to pursue his agenda (leftist, but not nearly as leftist as Pelosi's) when Nancy is relegated to the House Subcommittee on Parks and Paper Clips.
As a side note.... look for Janet Napolitano to be the first cabinet member to "retire" to a consultancy.
Although it is way too early to make any predictions, the best thing that could happen politically for Obama, and maybe for the country, would be a Republican sweep of Congress in 2010.
Although they lost some credibility under Bush as the party of responsibility, the Republicans have a better chance than the Democrats of saving Obama from his most foolish policies and setting the country on a more responsible course, just as they did in 1994 for Bill Clinton.
Besides, both Wall Street and Main Street seem to prefer divided government.