Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Washington Post: “Where's Obama? No Matter How Hard You Look, Sometimes He's
Impossible To Find.” (Ruth Marcus, Op-Ed, “Obama’s ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Presidency,” The Washington Post, 3/2/11)
WHEN IT COMES TO THE COUNTRY’S TOUGHEST CHALLENGES, OBAMA IS “MISSING IN
ACTION”
The Washington Post’s Ruth Marcus: “For A Man Who Won Office Talking About Change We Can
Believe In, Barack Obama Can Be A Strangely Passive President.” “For a man who won office talking
about change we can believe in, Barack Obama can be a strangely passive president. There are a startling
number of occasions in which the president has been missing in action - unwilling, reluctant or late to weigh
in on the issue of the moment. He is, too often, more reactive than inspirational, more cautious than
forceful.” (Ruth Marcus, Op-Ed, “Obama’s ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Presidency,” The Washington Post, 3/2/11)
• Marcus: “My Biggest Beef Is With The President's Slipperiness On Fiscal Matters.” (Ruth Marcus, Op-
Ed, “Obama’s ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Presidency,” The Washington Post, 3/2/11)
Obama’s Presidency Has Been Marked By A Series Of Politically Calculated Dodges On Tough Issues.
“He didn't want to get mired in legislative details during the health-care debate for fear of repeating the
Clinton administration's prescriptive, take-ours-or-leave-it approach. He doesn't want to go first on
proposing entitlement reform because history teaches that this is not the best route to a deal. He didn't want
to say anything too tough about Libya for fear of endangering Americans trapped there. He didn't want to
weigh in on the labor battle in Wisconsin because, well, it's a swing state.” (Ruth Marcus, Op-Ed, “Obama’s ‘Where’s Waldo?’
Presidency,” The Washington Post, 3/2/11)
• “Yet The Dots Connect To Form An Unsettling Portrait Of A ‘Where's Waldo?’ Presidency: You
Frequently Have To Squint To Find The White House Amid The Larger Landscape.” (Ruth Marcus, Op-
Ed, “Obama’s ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Presidency,” The Washington Post, 3/2/11)
“[P]resident Obama Has Put His New Spokesman In An Unenviable Position: He Is The Mouthpiece Of
An Administration That Has Painfully Little To Say.” (Dana Milbank, “Jay Carney: Mouthpiece For An Inscrutable White House,” The
Washington Post, 2/23/11)
• Jay Carney Has “The Uncomfortable Task Of Articulating A Coherent Policy In The Absence Of
One.” “The passivity wasn't the fault of the new spokesman. He merely had the uncomfortable task of
articulating a coherent policy in the absence of one. The problem was most glaring on the Libyan
uprising, which the president has handled with the detachment of a powerless observer.” (Dana Milbank,
“Jay Carney: Mouthpiece For An Inscrutable White House,” The Washington Post, 2/23/11)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV): “Well, I think they [White House] should be involved more,
and I think they will be…” (Manu Raju, “Democrats: Barack Obama Must Lead On Budget,” Politico, 3/1/11)
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Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-ND) Demanded To Know If The White House
Had A Serious Plan For Spending. “‘If there is a plan, people here deserve to have some sense of what it is,’
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) said at the meeting, according to sources familiar
with his remarks.” (Manu Raju, “Democrats: Barack Obama Must Lead On Budget,” Politico, 3/1/11)
• “At One Point, Conrad Questioned Whether The White House Has A ‘Secret Plan’ Before
Another Senator Interjected.” (Manu Raju, “Democrats: Barack Obama Must Lead On Budget,” Politico, 3/1/11)
• "Obama's Budget Makes Clear That He Will Not Take The Lead In That Debate: It Contains No
Specific Recommendations For Tax Or Entitlement Reform." (Lori Montgomery, "Obama To Offer $3.7 Trillion
Budget Blueprint; Deficit To Hit $1.6 Trillion This Year," The Washington Post, 2/14/11)
When Given The Chance To Show Leadership With His Own Budget, Obama "Chose Instead To Duck"
Behind "The Sort Of Budgetary Gimmicks He Once Derided." "Having been given the chance, the cover
and the push by the fiscal commission he created to take bold steps to raise revenue and curb entitlement
spending, President Obama, in his fiscal 2012 budget proposal, chose instead to duck. To duck, and to mask
some of the ducking with the sort of budgetary gimmicks he once derided." (Editorial, "President Obama's Budget Kicks The
Hard Choices Further Down The Road," The Washington Post, 2/15/11)
The Washington Post's Dana Milbank: "In His New Budget, Obama Kicks The Can One More Time" (Dana
Milbank, Op-Ed, "In His New Budget, Obama Kicks The Can One More Time," The Washington Post, 2/15/11)