Is President Obama orchestrating reality TV?
Beginning in 2012, President Obama seems to have taken on a new
job title; that being the host and director of a reality TV show. He is the
host of a Washington, DC based reality TV show whereby he is cast as the leader
and uses sensationalism to attract audience viewership and to increase
attention. This added attention leads to advertising revenue. Only in this DC
setting, the viewership happens to be concerns citizens worried about their
future and the advertising revenue is actually campaign dollars. The
participants in this reality TV show are members of Congress. The members of
Congress are often put in abnormal situations that allow the “producers” (Obama
campaign strategists) to portray them in a manipulated and contrived way. The
topics are usually a bit on the outrageous side and chosen to create on-screen
drama and tension.
The first TV show segment of the 2012 season was the melodrama that
surrounded the payroll tax holiday extension bill. The President re-cast the
bill in a new role whereby the “producers” called it a tax break for the
“little guy.” He then pushed Congress to
pass a year extension of the bill and asked them to pay the tab from the
expenses created by the bill on the backs of the “rich.” These unwilling “rich” participants became
the villains in this made-up Jerry Springer moment. The President stood in front of countdown
clocks while having press events and convincing the viewership that their 2012
was going to be a disaster all because of the members of Congress.
The next melodrama of the 2012 season was last week’s recess
appointment of Mr. Cordray to be the head of the consumer financial bureau.
This is the new watch dog agency created in the Dodd-Frank financial
modernization bill. The President used Article II of the Constitution to recess
appoint Mr. Cordray while the Senate was in recess. He then directed a moment
whereby one of Mr. Cordray’s first acts as the head of this consumer agency was
to listen and counsel two folks who had been harmed by the financial meltdown
of the last few years. All the while, the participants (members of Congress)
are screaming about the recess appointment process which gave Mr. Cordray his
new job. The President, or host of the show, seems in complete control,
creating “Jerry Springer” moments and then walking away letting the
“participants” look like out of control drama kings and queens.
Why would the President start this reality show in 2012, the same
year as his reelection for a second Presidential term? The answer for this
writer is simple...because of Congress’ approval rating. Last week it came out
that Congress' approval rating hit an all time low according to the latest Rasmussen reports national phone poll. They polled 1,000 likely
voters on Dec. 27 and 28 and found that only 5% of them thought Congress was
doing a good or excellent job. If only 5% of the public approve of Congress,
that means that 95% of us presumably don’t like Congress. If the President can orchestrate
mini-turf battles and tug-of-war games with Congress and win them, at least
temporarily, he appears to be on the side of the 95% of us that dislike
Congress. These scenarios, if repeated over and over in 2012, will allow us to
begin to think of President Obama as being “on our side.”
Members of Congress allowed themselves to be cast in this realty
TV series as a result of their legislative accomplishments starting from the
beginning of President Obama’s term of office. Remember, the democratically
controlled Congress passed almost every initiative this President asked of them
in 2009 and 2010. By 2011, the American people had really begun to feel the effects
of the President’s legislation agenda and all of the adverse effects. The
American people began to lash out at the ones who enacted the harmful
legislation…members of Congress. Once Congress’ approval rating hit
rock-bottom, the President casted them in his new reality TV series. Almost
immediately the President began to look like he is standing up for the “little
guy” because his adversary is the extremely unpopular Congress.
If Congress doesn’t begin to recast themselves in different roles,
the President might just win the survivor grand prize this coming November.
Stay tuned to see how this new reality TV show works out for our
President and Congress over the next several months
Elizabeth B. Letchworth is a retired, elected United
States Senate Secretary for the Majority and Minority. Currently she is a
senior legislative adviser for Covington & Burling, LLC and is the founder
of GradeGov.com.