Discussion about this post

User's avatar
David Roberts's avatar

I agree with your assessment.

I believe one of Obama's most unheralded accomplishments is to retain much of the financial team and policy put in place by Bush. A different president might have taken a very different line of attack. It's true that bankers were not held to account, but maybe that was the wise price to pay for keeping the banking system intact.

Understandably, it is much harder to give credit for disasters averted. But Obama deserves it.

Expand full comment
SRS's avatar

While Obama was a successful President, I think he failed badly on two fronts.

He was too much of a Wall Street President, overly committed to preserving the structure of the financialized economy we have rather than tearing more of it down and holding the bad actors accountable for the GFC. So, unlike some people in your list of commenters, I believe he squandered a historic opportunity to blow up Wall Street - commercial banks, investment banks, investment partnerships, the carried interest loophole, privileging capital over labour income, etc. etc. His primary error was putting a committed institutionalist like Tim Geithner in the Treasury rather than Paul Volcker (or Elizabeth Warren!), who knew the banks and funds for the grift machines that they are and would likely have lit the regulatory and structural equivalent of an atomic weapon on Wall Street.

His second major error, and an unpardonable one, IMHO, is Syria and Libya. Syria was probably an unforced error, and a legacy of the unholy mess that the Bush and the second Iraq war had wrought upon the region. Obama and many liberal Democrats (and probably many neoCons) also irresponsibly promoted the Arab Spring-like movements in the Arab world, most of which had no chance of success without forceful intervention by the West. And, of course, we saw how THAT worked in Libya, for which, despite his “lead from behind” line, he does bear an large portion of the blame. Obama had a shot at leaving well enough alone, but did not resist his advisors or his own impulses enough. In the Middle East, the opposite of secular authoritarianism is mostly illiberal theocracy, not liberal democracy. The US State Dept does not seem to realize this, and Obama allowed his idealism to trump what should have been common knowledge.

For all that, I voted for him twice. And would have done so again if he had been allowed to run for a third term.

Expand full comment
80 more comments...

No posts