The furor that blew up over US President Barack Obama’s start-of-school speech to the nation’s students — challenging them to work hard, earn good grades and stay in school — typifies the country’s widening rift over politics and social issues.
It’s certainly an unwelcome distraction as the president prepares to address both houses of Congress and the nation tomorrow about his embattled attempt to overhaul the healthcare system, which has taken a hammering from Republicans and some middle-of-the-road Democrats.
Dating back to his campaign for president, radical Obama opponents have tried to paint him as a “socialist.” Since winning the White House, the attacks have continued over his moves to prevent a national economic collapse and invigorate the tumbling economy with a US$787 billion stimulus.
It might, therefore, not surprise that far-right critics now charge that Obama would use his remarks today to indoctrinate youngsters and press his alleged “socialist” agenda.
Fox News Channel commentators Michelle Malkin and Glenn Beck had been prominent in attacking the speech. Florida Republican party chairman Jim Greer said he was “absolutely appalled that taxpayer dollars are being used to spread President Obama’s socialist ideology.”
Even Republican Governor Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota, a moderate and potential presidential contender in 2012, said Obama’s speech was “uninvited” and raises questions of content and motive.
Many school districts have decided not to show Obama’s speech, partly in response to concerns from parents.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan called that “just silly” during a Sunday TV interview. He said the text of the speech was to be posted on the White House Web site yesterday and that watching the address was voluntary.
Opponents to the president’s beginning-of-term message latched on a lesson plan, since amended, that the department sent out asking students to write to the president about what they could do to help him meet his “goal of having the highest percent of college graduates by 2020. He’s drawn a line in the sand in that,” Duncan said in a Sunday TV interview.
“We just clarified that to say ‘write a letter about your own goals and what you’re going to do to achieve those goals.’ So again it’s really about personal responsibility and being accountable, setting real goals and having the work ethic to see them through,” Duncan said.
The White House is having to fight off a partisan clobbering of plans for a speech to schoolchildren, something done by Republican former presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, even as his environmental adviser, Van Jones, resigned under fire for inflammatory statements made before he joined the administration.
Jones “understood that he was going to get in the way” of President Barack Obama’s agenda, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said on Sunday.
Jones, who specialized in environmentally friendly “green jobs” with the White House Council on Environmental Quality, was linked to efforts suggesting a government role in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and to derogatory comments about Republicans. Fox’s Beck was one of Jones leading detractors.
Some Obama critics are sparing no efforts to diminish his presidency — piling on such distractions as he prepares for the critical healthcare address — hoping that a defeat of the overhaul, a signature campaign promise, will tarnish his administration. That, the thinking goes, could open the way for Republicans to make a comeback in next year’s congressional elections after their shattering defeat by the Obama juggernaut last year.
Obama took office vowing the change the tenor in Washington, to seek bipartisanship as he worked through his reform agenda. So far he’s had no success with that course.
Switching tactics at the eight-month mark in his four-year term would mark a seminal development for a president elected by an unusually wide margin, but who has seen public opinion poll numbers shrink considerably among independents and those who have been confused or turned against his legislative agenda by the relentless criticism from the conservative right.
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