The Roots of Obama's "Pundit Delusion"

by: David Sirota

Fri Jul 23, 2010 at 12:33


In a sharp column entitled "The Pundit Delusion," The New York Times' Paul Krugman recently (and rightfully) lamented that the White House seems often to care more about looking like it supports elite pundit consensus than about championing empirically good (and widely popular) policy. This is undoubtedly true, as evidenced by the administration's deficit fetishization that Krugman cites. To be focused on deficit reduction instead of job creation right now is both ludicrously bad economic policy (as evidenced by history) and wildly unpopular (as evidenced by numerous recent polls - including one even from Fox News).

But you don't have to look at particular policies to know that the Obama administration is more obsessed with attracting approval from out-of-touch Washington pundits than with meritorious policy and/or attracting approval from America at large. You can look at this recent lead in a New York magazine profile of the avatar of the insulated and oft-discredited Beltway Punditocracy:

David Sirota :: The Roots of Obama's "Pundit Delusion"
Every Monday and Thursday, as his deadline approaches, Brooks gets a call from someone in the White House - "I'm not going to say who," he says, which means Rahm - asking if tomorrow is going to be a good day...

Obama's team has courted Brooks assiduously. Emanuel once arranged for Obama to swing by a meeting he and Axelrod were having with Brooks...At (a) meeting with journalists, Brooks sat next to Obama, who would periodically turn to Brooks and point out that the policy being discussed was quite Burkean. "You could tell he was really conscious of his presence," says his Times colleague Gail Collins.

Write this off as trivial anecdote at your peril. When coupled with the administration's championing of the ill-advised and unpopular policies regularly promoted by the Punditocracy in D.C. (prioritizing deficit reduction, escalating the war in Afghanistan, dropping a public option, to name a few), this portrait of the Obama-Brooks relationship is a snapshot of a larger attitude in the White House. Irrespective of the fact that - as New York magazine notes - Brooks has been both wildly inconsistent on issues and proven wrong on so many of his assertions, this administration is intensely focused on making sure public policy decisions appease Brooks and all the Brooks clones who populate the nation's capital.

Some will say this is a smart strategy, insisting that avoiding FDR's "I Welcome Their Hate" posture and instead shaping policy to appease the right's discredited pundits is a crucial step in the alleged game of 68-dimensional chess that Obama proponents say the president is so brilliantly playing.

I have trouble believing that, though. Just as the shortest distance between point A and B is a straight line, the more believable explanation for the Obama administration's Pundit Worship is the administration's personnel.

Sadly, this is a White House largely run by a cadre of the most insider of Washington insiders - people like Rahm Emanuel, Jim Messina and Larry Summers. And in the world that the Rahm Emanuels, Jim Messinas and Larry Summerses live in - a world of Capitol Hill receptions and think tank symposia and cable-TV green rooms and near-total insulation from the national recession - people like David Brooks are incredibly important on every level - politically, socially and personally, and for far longer than one presidential administration. The world the rest of us toil in, by contrast, is as important to those insiders as a foreign wilderness - a place that they occasionally are forced to visit (note: this is why DC reporters write their on-the-ground election stories in a tone suggesting they are on exotic safari) and publicly purport to care about, but in a day-to-day sense are not all that interested in.

Thus, we get an administration whose priorities are disproportionately shaped by the former world ruled by Brooksian dieties - not the latter one ruled by real-world economics and day-to-day struggles. It's hardly a surprise, when you really think about it.

As for the notion that this disposition is good for public policy decisions and politically smart - well, that sounds like yet more self-serving pablum from the same Punditocracy currently being prioritized. And, not surprisingly, recent economic news and political polling data suggest this trope has as much credibility as most of the Punditocracy's typical spin - which is to say, none.


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I Would Not Mind (0.00 / 0)
if when these policies and bright ideas fail the people who pushed them are discredited and shoved out of the way for a generation. They should pay for the misery they inflict on innocent people. It's the same dynamic that should apply to the people ran Wall Street into the ground. They should be fired and some thrown in jail. Their money should be returned to shareholders (and their rank and file employees). And a more competent crew should be brought in. Power includes responsibility.

The problem is that there is deliberately no accountability. I don't know (yet) if these politicians and pundits have figured out removing accountability is a shrewd way to continue in power or if refusal to hold people accountable is simply a manifestation of incompetence. Errol Morris in the NY Times had a really interesting essay about people who, say, lose an arm but then act as if they never did. It's the same mental phenomenon, perhaps.

I'd also bet serious money David Brooks is being groomed to be the next David Broder. They push the same idiocy, certainly.


It's so sad that our best chance at a progressive resurgence (4.00 / 2)
is being effectively led by a man who's clearly naturally very intelligent yet has chosen the mask (or path?) of functional stupidity as a substitute for and escape from the painful, risky and dangerous struggle that is genuine progressive reform, of the sort that TR, FDR & LBJ knew a thing or two about.

And calling it "pragmatic" is just further insulting one's intelligence.

At least with Bush, stupidity was a plausibly legitimate defense of his policies. With Obama, it just doesn't pass muster, no matter what his defenders call it.

"Those who stand for nothing fall for anything...Mankind are forever destined to be the dupes of bold & cunning imposture" -- Alexander Hamilton


Brooksie (0.00 / 0)
"Obama's team has courted Brooks assiduously."

I wonder if they met at the Applebee's salad bar?


Courting David Brooks? (4.00 / 2)
::in best Amy Poehler voice:: Really?  Really?

::back to my own voice::  I don't get it.  David Brooks is such a, as Bugs Bunny would say, such a maroon.  Every time I listen to him or read his writings I'm amazed that anyone would give him any credibility.  His idea of reality is so far from the real thing it is almost funny.  What has he been right about?

This story of how Obama metaphorically is his Monica to Bill Clinton really makes me sick, much more than the literal Monica & Bill story ever did.

What the hell?  All I can think is that Obama really is a Republican but realized that he had to be in the Democratic Party to get elected to anything.  What else explains his appreciating David Brooks.

Obama thinks David Brooks matters. ::back to Amy's voice::  Really?  Really?  
R E A L L Y ?!?!?!

Educate, Agitate, Organize, Mobilize, Act!


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