Barack Obama won a sizable election victory one year ago, in large measure due to voters anxious to see the new president work to minimize division and distrust of government.
Well, let’s look at where we are a year later.
Democrats in Congress are pushing through a national health care plan that has split Americans down the middle, and it arrives on the heels of spending policies that, in themselves, make many Americans very nervous. If the health care plan is finally adopted and signed into law by Obama, only then will we begin to determine whether it was wise or misguided. But it has heightened the level of mistrust. Unless someone acts decisively to reset the public discourse, this poisoned atmosphere will extend to the next election cycle.
There is plenty of blame to sling. Surely, the president’s critics pinned the most unflattering of motives on the opposition in an effort to fuel the anger. They accused the president and his supporters of upending the Constitution, of turning our republic into a European-style socialist state. They resorted to name-calling, drowning out the thoughtful analysis that should have instead resonated in the voters’ minds. Soon enough, a gargantuan issue like health care became undebatable.
But in order to get health care moving through a widening divide, the other side too quickly abandoned engagement on the issues as their primary foil. Obama, himself, repeated platitudes that were long on promises but short on demonstrable facts. Caught off guard by the August protests, Obama and his Democratic party reacted in the same vein as their critics — with name-calling and vilification — widening the divide even further.
Obama brings a palpable irony to this equation. His predecesor, George W. Bush, was seen as a divider, not a uniter, because he staked out positions contrary to half the country and doggedly stuck to them while simultaneously failing to articulate his vision. This president sees himself as the anti-Bush, yet it’s ironic that the national mood remains split, only this time along different fault lines.
Presidents need to be magnanimous. Little more than a year ago, Obama asked us to make him president largely on his ability to unite a divided country. OK, Mr. President, perhaps it’s time for another charm offensive — not just overseas, but at home.
The president’s previous attempts at seeking common ground have fallen on deaf ears. Some say Republicans won’t play ball; others say Obama and the Democrats only want cooperation when they get to call all the shots. The truth may lie somewhere in the middle. Let the president be the one to start the ball rolling again toward a saner direction.
Editorials
Our View: One nation, still quite divided
- Editorials
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Our View: Patriot fans behave poorly
Thumbs down: To Pawngo.com and its CEO Todd Hills for his company’s dumping of hundreds of Butterfinger candy bars in Boston’s Copley Square in a jab at New England Patriot receiver Wes Welker for a dropped pass in the Super Bowl.
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Latest editorial cartoons Feb. 10-11, 2012
A sampling of editorial cartoons from around the U.S.A.
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Latest editorial cartoons Feb. 8-9, 2012
A sampling of editorial cartoons from around the U.S.A.
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Our View: Legislate voter ID proposal
If 80 percent of Minnesota voters favor requiring a photo ID to vote, we’re wondering why it hasn’t happened at the Legislature.
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Our View: Santorum shakes up GOP race
Mitt Romney’s message leading up to Tuesday’s nominating contests in Minnesota, Colorado and Missouri was: Vote for me, because I’m inevitable.
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Latest editorial cartoons Feb. 8-9, 2012
A sampling of editorial cartoons from around the U.S.A.
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Our View: Interlock system for DWI works
It’s no stretch of the imagination to argue a new law governing drunk driving in Minnesota is likely having a significant impact on public safety.
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Editorial: Teachers: experience is not everything (Poll)
Why it matters: Teacher seniority protection not the best way to ensure the most qualified teachers are in the classroom.
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Latest editorial cartoons Feb. 2012
A sampling of editorial cartoons from around the U.S.A.
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Our View: A new take on mentoring
Why it matters
Success of youth depends on the number of healthy relationships they have during their years of development. - More Editorials Headlines
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