It was first suggested that the Gulf of Mexico spill could be “Obama’s Katrina” long before a drop of oil from the ruptured well hit shore. Five weeks after the Deepwater Horizon exploded, the tar is beginning to stick.
The margins are so tight that a single vote could decide it, here or there. The number of formally undecided Democrats is dwindling by the hour, but still, no-one can be certain if the legislation will pass.
For seven hours, Democrats and Republicans maintained the pretence of bipartisanship, knowing full well that agreement is impossible. President Obama was determined to show that he is taking the opposition’s ideas seriously. His opponents were keen to demonstrate that they could be reasonable. No amount of platitudes could disguise how entrenched their positions have become.
The opening day account on Fox News sounded a suitably defensive note. “Don’t let anyone tell you this is not a big deal,” reporter Carl Cameron said. “If this gathering is unimportant and this movement is a mirage, why are its detractors so upset and its participants so upbeat?”
“Democrats nationwide should be on notice,” wrote Republican Senator John Cornyn. “Voters are prepared to hold the party in power responsible for their reckless spending.” Democrat Evan Bayh agreed. “If you lose Massachusetts and that’s not a wake-up call, there’s no hope of waking up,” he said. The midterm elections in November seem awfully close.
The role of an elder statesman, free from the constraints of seeking political office, is to say the unsayable. When Jimmy Carter suggested that “an overwhelming portion of the intensely demonstrated animosity toward President Barack Obama is based on the fact that he is a black man,” he was articulating a belief, commonly held in left wing circles, that his party would rather disown.
Theodora Rose wept beneath her baseball cap. The mascara ran down her face as she pumped her fist in the air. “You have to have lived through what I’ve lived through to feel it,” she said.
They gave out the flags at three o’clock, one for every person in the stadium. I told the woman thanks, but no thanks, I’m not American. “You are tonight,” she said.
The Texas primary was supposed to be Clinton’s Alamo, but Ohio is a better place to make her last stand. Deadlocked opinion polls suggest an extremely nervous evening for both campaigns on Tuesday.
Overexposure to the primary season makes even the best speeches sound dull. After three months of rhetoric for breakfast and oratory for tea, live from Iowa, New Hampshire, Michigan, Florida and Maine, Barack Obama no longer inspires like he used to.