Thursday, November 4, 2010

Election campaign is on

In a Stratfor article on 26 October 2010, George Freidman wrote:

Reversals in the first midterm election after a presidential election happened to Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. It does not mean that Obama is guaranteed to lose a re-election bid, although it does mean that, in order to win that election, he will have to operate in a very different way. It also means that the 2012 presidential campaign will begin next Wednesday on Nov. 3. Given his low approval ratings, Obama appears vulnerable and the Republican nomination has become extremely valuable. For his part, Obama does not have much time to lose in reshaping his presidency. With the Iowa caucuses about 15 months away and the Republicans holding momentum, the president will have to begin his campaign. U.S. Midterm Elections, Obama and Iran | STRATFOR

Nice: two years of campaigning have just ended, two more years of campaigning have just begun.

Obama now has two options in terms of domestic strategy. The first is to continue to press his agenda, knowing that it will be voted down. If the domestic situation improves, he takes credit for it. If it doesn’t, he runs against Republican partisanship. The second option is to abandon his agenda, cooperate with the Republicans and re-establish his image as a centrist. Both have political advantages and disadvantages and present an important strategic decision for Obama to make.

If he moves to the center more, his liberal base will howl and largely abandon him, and the right wing will chew him up: they don't want him as an ally; they want to defeat him.

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