Mr.
Obama has repeatedly mocked institutions he didn’t control and abused
the powers of those he did. Almost always, the ridicule and
condescension came in front of cheering audiences. It’s hardly a
surprise that Donald Trump is exploiting and expanding the loss of
public faith. Mr. Obama spent seven years softening up Mr. Trump’s
audiences for him.
Liberals
think the right is gloating at Mr. Obama’s end-of-term difficulties. No
one is gloating. The nation is either furious (the right) or depressed
(the left) at eight wasted, wheel-spinning years whose main achievement
is ObamaCare—a morass.
==============================
America at Obama’s End
By
Daniel Menninger, Wall St. Journal
We are near the end of the seventh year of Barack Obama’s
presidency, and by any measure the United States is a fractured nation.
Its people are more divided politically than any time in recent memory.
Personally, many are anxious, angry or just down.
Whatever
Mr. Obama promised in that famous first Inaugural Address, any sense of
a nation united and raised up is gone. This isn’t normal second-term
blues. It’s a sense of bust.
The
formal measure of all this appeared last week with the release of the
Pew Research poll, whose headline message is that trust in government is
kaput. Forget the old joke about the government coming to “help.”
There’s a darker version now: We’re the government, and we’re here to
screw you.
In
a normal presidential transition year, voters would be excited at the
mere prospect of new leadership. Instead, the American people are
grasping for straw men.
Donald Trump declared
for the presidency in June. The New York City prankster travels from
state to state opening the nation’s political fire hydrants, and no one
seems able to stop the result: years of pent-up political and cultural
contempt pouring into the streets.
Nearly
one-third of Barack Obama’s Democratic Party has migrated to aging
Socialist Bernie Sanders. Sen. Sanders is evoking press comparisons to
the presidential candidacy of Eugene Debs. Today there would be campus
riots if a professor’s test asked students to identify Eugene Debs, a
famous starched-collar Socialist 115 years ago.
Black
Americans, who expected better, live in urban neighborhoods with
soaring murder rates, angry marchers and confused police who are utterly
alienated from the people they are supposed to protect. Young black men
have the worst job prospects of any group in the U.S. The New Republic
magazine’s cover this week says: “Why Hillary Clinton will do more for black people than Obama.”
Our
political vocabulary is now uniformly stark. Presidential candidates in
both parties have built campaigns around income gaps, a struggling
middle class, immigrant phobia and back again, the war on terror. One of
Mr. Obama’s claimed legacies is he prevented an economic depression in
2009. But we’re still in a depression.
Hope and change was the promise. What happened?
Screens
on Kindle readers will crack paging through books explaining what Mr.
Obama could have, should have and would have done. For now, the short
version is enough: America and the world failed because they didn’t do
what Barack Obama told them to do. For seven years, he has been
instructing everyone on the “right thing to do.” If Mr. Obama seems down
these days, it is because so many—from John Boehnerto Vladimir Putin to the man in the street—persisted in doing the wrong thing.
Iran’s ayatollahs got the Obama message, though, and that deal is the legacy.
The
other half of the non-domestic legacy is supposed to be climate change.
His appearance in Paris this week was Mr. Obama’s last turn on the big
global stage, barring a national crisis. Anyone watching the angular
figure of the American president making nonstop pleas at the Paris
climate summit this week had to be struck by a sense of what the French
would call tristesse, a melancholy, even pathetic sadness.
He
alone in Paris seemed to take seriously the notion that the climate
windmills can be reset to less than 2 degrees Celsius above
“preindustrial levels.” In the last of many public apologies for the
U.S., Mr. Obama confessed that his own nation is a grievous “emitter.”
Liberals
think the right is gloating at Mr. Obama’s end-of-term difficulties. No
one is gloating. The nation is either furious (the right) or depressed
(the left) at eight wasted, wheel-spinning years whose main achievement
is ObamaCare—a morass.
Mr.
Obama will go off to do something else, but he leaves behind a country
littered with public and private institutions in disrepute. Whatever the
cumulative causes for this, a president bears responsibility for
maintaining some bedrock level of respect for institutions that are the
necessary machinery of the nation’s daily life.
Instead, Mr. Obama spent much of his presidency vilifying the private sector—banks, insurers, energy producers and utilities.
The
public’s low opinion of Congress is well known, but consider: The Pew
study reports the favorable rating for the Department of Justice is just
46%. That not half the country respects something called the Justice
Department is a travesty.
Mr.
Obama has repeatedly mocked institutions he didn’t control and abused
the powers of those he did. Almost always, the ridicule and
condescension came in front of cheering audiences. It’s hardly a
surprise that Donald Trump is exploiting and expanding the loss of
public faith. Mr. Obama spent seven years softening up Mr. Trump’s
audiences for him.
We may get a third Obama term after all.
Write to henninger@wsj.com
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