How Obama won
US President Barack
Obama confounded political logic by triumphing over a sluggish economy to win a
second term in office.A gruelling and often unpleasant campaign yielded, in the
end, a decisive victory, built on the strong foundations laid down months ago
by his crack campaign team.Here are some of the keys to Obama's win over
Republican Mitt Romney.The economy, despite tepid growth rates and high
unemployment, was not bad enough to doom Obama, and he appears to have finally
received belated credit for halting the slide into a second Great Depression.When
he took office in January 2009, the economy was losing 700 000 jobs a month,
and while Americans are still dissatisfied with the economy, exit polls suggest
they still blame ex-president George W Bush as much as Obama.Obama endured
months of grisly monthly unemployment numbers, which told a tale of an economy
struggling to gain steam.He got a break over the last few months, as the
unemployment rate dipped below the psychological barrier of eight percent.Consumer
confidence and optimism began to rise along with the stock market, and Americans
began to feel a bit more optimistic as house prices finally began a slow rise,
despite a lingering foreclosure crisis.Often criticised as aloof and
professorial, Obama, in the final days of his campaign, his voice hoarse,
finally seemed to strike a chord with blue collar workers who enrich the
Democratic coalition in the rustbelt.In a twist of political history, Obama was
helped by the embrace of his former Democratic antagonist, ex-president Bill
Clinton, who buried the hatchet after Obama's defeat of his wife Hillary in the
2008 Democratic primary.Clinton, remembered for leading an era of economic
prosperity, often made the case for Obama better than the president himself.The
two Democratic giants will now stand together in history as the only two
Democrats to win a second term since World War II.The Obama campaign made a
gamble soon after Romney captured the Republican primary to go negative.Searing
Obama ads and rhetoric branded the former investment manager a corporate
vulture, who bought and sold firms for his own profit and heartlessly put good
Americans out of work or shipped their jobs overseas.The plan was to define
Romney in a harsh light before he had the chance to introduce himself to
Americans with a multi-million dollar blitz of television advertising in the
swing states, like Ohio, which would decide the election.Romney's limp defence
of his record as head of Bain Capital, and his missteps - including a refusal
to divulge his complicated offshore tax arrangements and a video in which he
was seen decrying 47% of Americans as freeloaders who paid no income taxes played
into the stereotype.By the time of Romney's stellar performance in the first
presidential debate in October, the damage had been done.The killing of
al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden in a daring Navy SEAL raid in 2011 did not win
Obama re-election.But it bolstered the image of the president as a steely
commander-in-chief who kept Americans safe and defused the classic Republican
attack that Democrats are weak and cannot be trusted on national security.Kudos
Obama won with the Bin Laden raid, not to mention a ruthless drone war against
terror suspects abroad, may have also insulated the president against a late-election
furore over the killing of the US ambassador to Libya in Benghazi.For the
second election running, Obama's campaign team has reinvented the way presidential
elections are won.In 2008, Obama's political brain trust, led by the intense
David Plouffe, outwitted the political machine of Bill and Hillary Clinton with
a delegate collection strategy that redefined the way primary campaigns are
won.This time around, they defied the strong headwinds of a slowly growing
economy and re-elected their president in the face of ferocious Republican
opposition.The path to victory lay in the most sophisticated voter targeting
and turnout machine in history, which reached all the way down to neighbourhoods
and was constructed over several years.Way back in October 2011, Obama's
political high command insisted to sceptical journalists that the president,
smarting from a drubbing in mid-term congressional elections, could and would
win re-election.The strategy: position Obama as a populist warrior for the
middle class, and brand his opponent as a rich plutocrat oblivious to the suffering
of regular Americans.Obama's team insisted all along that his coalition of
young voters, Hispanics and African Americans, as well as the educated white
middle class, would show up for him in 2012, just as they did in 2008.Republicans
scoffed, but they were proven wrong.According to exit polls, 93% of African Americans backed Obama, along with 69%
of Latinos and 70% of Jewish voters, and he was able to limit his losses among
white voters.Obama also won an important victory among unmarried women voters,
68% of whom backed him.
Obama has little time to savour election triumph
Fresh from a decisive re-election
win, President Barack Obama returns from the campaign trail today with little
time to savour victory, facing urgent economic challenges, a looming fiscal
showdown and a still-divided Congress able to block his every move.Obama
defeated Republican challenger Mitt Romney last night in a gruelling
presidential race and used his acceptance speech in front of a huge cheering
crowd in Chicago to strike a conciliatory note toward his political opponents.But
in the cold light of the 2012 election's morning-after, it was clear that even
though voters have endorsed a second Obama term, the president will have a hard
time translating that into a mandate to push forward with his agenda.Obama need
to get back to work straight away "because he's got major problems with
the economy".The "fiscal cliff" a combination of expiring tax
cuts and automatic across-the-board reductions in federal spending due to come
in at the end of the year could take out over half a trillion dollars from the
US economy.The fact that Obama won the popular vote as well as getting more
than 300 Electoral College votes meant "he's got that mandate I guess that
power a little bit behind him - where he can push on."However, Americans
chose to preserve the status quo of divided government in Washington.Obama's
fellow Democrats retained control of the Senate and Republicans kept their
majority in the House of Representatives, giving them power to curb the
president's legislative ambitions on everything from taxes to immigration
reform.This is the political reality that Obama - who won a far narrower
victory over Romney than his historic election as the country's first black
president in 2008 - faces when he returns to Washington later on Wednesday.But
that did not stop him from basking in the glow of re-election together with
thousands of elated supporters in his hometown of Chicago early yesterday."You
voted for action, not politics as usual," Obama said, calling for
compromise and pledging to work with leaders of both parties to reduce the
deficit, to reform the tax code and immigration laws, and to cut dependence on
foreign oil.Obama told the crowd he hoped to sit down with Romney in the coming
weeks and examine ways to meet the challenges ahead though the president may be
more in need of mending fences with Republican congressional leaders who wield
clout in Washington.The problems that dogged Obama in his first term, which
cast a long shadow over his 2008 campaign message of hope and change, still
confront him. He must tackle the $US1 trillion annual deficits, rein in the
$US16 trillion national debt, overhaul expensive social programs and deal with
the split Congress.The immediate focus for Obama and US lawmakers will be to
deal with the "fiscal cliff," a mix of tax increases and spending
cuts due to extract some $US600 billion from the economy at the end of the year
barring a deal with Congress. Economists warn it could push the United States back into recession.House Majority Leader John Boehner moved swiftly on
the fiscal cliff issue, saying he would issue a statement on it today citing
"the need for both parties to find common ground and take steps together
to help our economy grow and create jobs, which is critical to solving our
debt."Concern about US fiscal problems after Obama's re-election
contributed to a decline in global financial markets.World shares turned lower
and Wall Street stocks, which had been expected to rise on relief over the
clear election outcome, opened lower partly due to fears over economic weakness
in Europe.Obama also faces international challenges like the West's nuclear standoff
with Iran, the civil war in Syria, the winding down of the war in Afghanistan
and dealing with an increasingly assertive China.Romney, a multimillionaire
former private equity executive, came back from a series of campaign stumbles
to fight a close battle after besting Obama in the first of three presidential
debates.But the former Massachusetts governor failed to convince voters of his
argument that his business experience made him the best candidate to repair a
weak US economy.The nationwide popular vote remained extremely close with Obama
taking about 50% to 49% for Romney after a campaign in which the candidates and
their party allies spent a combined $US2 billion. But in the state-by-state
system of electoral votes that decides the White House, Obama notched up a
comfortable victory.Yesterday, Obama had 303 electoral votes, well over the 270
needed to win, to Romney's 206. Florida's close race was not yet declared,
leaving its 29 electoral votes still to be claimed.Romney, 65, conceded in a
speech delivered to disappointed supporters at the Boston convention centre.
"This is a time of great challenge for our nation," he told the
crowd. "I pray that the president will be successful in guiding our
nation."He warned against partisan bickering and urged politicians on both
sides to "put the people before the politics."In Boston there would be
"plenty of soul-searching for the Republicans over the next few weeks to
find out exactly what when wrong".The party is expected to look
particularly closely at how it has alienated Hispanic voters, an important
constituency in Obama's victory."The fact is Republicans are going to have
to do a lot of rethinking at the presidential level," Newt Gingrich, a
former House speaker who lost the Republican nominating race to Romney. In the
election aftermath, there were indications that partisan gridlock would persist
in Washington.Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell gave no sign that he was
willing to concede his conservative principles, signalling potential
confrontations ahead."The voters have not endorsed the failures or
excesses of the president's first term, they have simply given him more time to
finish the job they asked him to do together with a Congress that restored
balance to Washington after two years of one-party control," McConnell
said.Obama's win puts to rest the prospect of wholesale repeal of his 2010
healthcare reform law, which aims to widen the availability of health insurance
coverage to Americans, but it still leaves questions about how much of his
signature domestic policy achievement will be implemented.Obama, who took
office in 2009 as the ravages of the financial crisis were hitting the US
economy, must continue his efforts to ignite strong growth and recover from the
worst downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s. An uneven recovery has
been showing some signs of strength but the country's jobless rate, currently
at 7.9%, remains stubbornly high.Obama's re-election puts him in the company of
three of his past four predecessors whom voters granted a second term. He now
faces the need to reshuffle his cabinet, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton planning to step down soon.In keeping
control of the 100-member Senate, Democrats seized Republican-held seats in
Massachusetts and Indiana while retaining most of those they already had,
including in Virginia and Missouri.The Republican majority in the 435-member
House means that Congress still faces a deep partisan divide as it turns to the
fiscal cliff and other issues."That means the same dynamic. That means the
same people who couldn't figure out how to cut deals for the past three
years," said Ethan Siegel, an analyst who tracks Washington politics for
institutional investors.British Prime Minister David Cameron also said Britain
and the United States should make finding a way to solve the Syrian crisis a
priority following Obama's re-election.
What to expect in Obama's second term
US President Barack Obama is expected to pursue
an active trade agenda during his second term, centred on tough final negotiations
of a new free trade pact in the Asia-Pacific region and continued challenges
posed by China.
Here is a glimpse of what's ahead:
Trans-Pacific
partnership agreement
Talks on the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership
pact date back to the administration of Republican George W. Bush, but the
Obama administration relaunched negotiations in March 2010 and has overseen
their expansion to 11 countries: the United States, Australia, New Zealand,
Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Chile, Peru, Brunei, Canada and Mexico.A final
deal could come in 2013, with negotiators just now beginning to grapple with
the most politically sensitive issues. For the United States, the pact could require opening up protected sectors like dairy, sugar
and textiles in exchange for new US export opportunities.Other
countries such as Japan and South Korea could join the talks.
US-EU
trade agreement
The United States and the 27-nation European
Union are expected to announce a decision by the end of this year to negotiate
a comprehensive trade agreement.US Trade Representative Ron Kirk, who is a
member of the president's Cabinet, and EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht
have led an effort over the past year to explore how to expand the already huge
US-EU bilateral trade and investment relationship to create new jobs and
economic growth.They are expected to release recommendations in December. Negotiations
on the landmark agreement would likely start in early 2013 and take one to two
years to complete.
China
Trade with China is expected to remain
contentious during Obama's second term, with US manufacturers irritating
Beijing by filing additional petitions for anti-dumping and countervailing
duties on Chinese products.The Obama administration is likely to file more
cases against China at the World Trade Organization, and will likely face
continued pressure from US companies to confront growing competition from
China's state-owned and state-supported enterprises.Early this year, Obama created
a trade enforcement unit to bring together resources from across the executive
branch to make sure China and other countries follow the rules.The Obama
administration has filed eight WTO cases against China since January 2009,
compared with seven by Bush in the previous five years.Obama is likely to
continue to put pressure on China to allow its currency to rise more rapidly in
value, but stop short of taking any provocative move like declaring China a
currency manipulator or authorizing the use of countervailing duties against
undervalued currencies.
Trade
promotion authority
Trade Promotion Authority, also known as
"fast-track" trade legislation, allows the White House to negotiate
trade agreements it can submit to Congress for straight up-or-down votes within
90 days and with no amendments.The Bush administration used fast-track
authority to negotiate trade deals with 16 countries in Latin America, the
Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region before it expired in June 2007.Obama
has not sought to renew the legislation, which is generally considered
essential to encouraging other countries to make their best offers in trade
talks with the United States.For four years, administration officials have said
they would seek the authority "at the appropriate time." While the
business community would like Obama to make an early push to renew the
legislation, union groups oppose it and the White House has yet to signal when
it might move forward.
Obama’s plans to fix US economy
President Barack
Obama, who has convinced Americans to give him another four years in office,
now faces the tough task of getting the US economy to grow more quickly.Gross
domestic product has struggled to expand by more than 2% a year since the
2007-09 recession and unemployment remains high at 7.9%. About 23 million
Americans are either unemployed, working part-time because they can’t find
full-time work, or want a job but havegiven up the search.Here are Obama’s key
plans for the economy:Obama has said his jobs plan would strengthen
manufacturing, help small businesses, improve the quality of education and make
the country less dependent on foreign oil.He envisions 1 million new
manufacturing jobs by 2016 and more than 600 000 jobs in the natural gas
sector, as well as the recruitment of 100 000 math and science teachers.Repairing
and replacing old roads, bridges, airport runways and schools are part of his
plan to put Americans back to work. Half of the money saved from ending the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would be used to fund infrastructure projects.Unlike
at the start of his first term, when a Democrat-run Congress approved Obama’s
$840bn in stimulus, the president will struggle to get any new major spending
plans approved by the House, which remains under Republican control.Obama has
proposed cutting the government budget deficit by more than $4 trillion over
the next decade by allowing tax cuts for upper-income Americans enacted during
the George W Bush administration to expire, and by eliminating loopholes. The
goal is to balance the budget down the road.Obama backs cutting the top
corporate income tax rate to 28% from 35%. He has offered a long list of
corporate tax breaks to end, ranging from inventory accounting to interest on
overseas profits and tax provisions benefiting oil and gas companies. He wants
to eliminate tax breaks for companies that send jobs and profits overseas.Half
of the money saved from ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would be used
to reduce the deficit.Obama may want to offer Ben Bernanke a third term in
charge of the central bank but Fed watchers say the former Princeton professor
has probably had enough after eight grueling years in the job. Bernanke’s term
as chairperson expires on January 31, 2014.Fed vice-chairperson Janet Yellen is
viewed as a leading candidate to succeed Bernanke and would be at least as
ready to keep monetary policy ultra-stimulative until the labour market has
improved substantially. Obama is likely to stick to the path he laid out in his
first term, which included a broad reform of Wall Street in response to the
financial crisis that blew up in 2008. Regulators are due to put in place the
small print of the so-called Dodd-Frank financial reform law. Obama has
promoted efforts to help troubled borrowers refinance their mortgages and
benefit from record low interest rates but far fewer American homeowners have
been helped than originally planned.Obama has locked horns with the regulator
of government-controlled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Edward DeMarco, failing to
convince him to allow the mortgage finance firms to reduce principal for
borrowers who owe more than their homes are worth. Resolution of the standoff
is unlikely any time soon.Democrats and Republicans agree that the government’s
outsized presence in the US mortgage market through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
needs to be curtailed. Fannie and Freddie account for about 60% of the mortgage
market.
Re-elected Obama faces fiscal cliff
Barack Obama won
re-election on Tuesday night, but the US president faces a
fresh challenge confronting the "fiscal cliff," a mix of tax
increases and spending cuts due to extract some $600bn from the economy barring
a deal with Congress. At stake are two separate issues individual tax cuts due to expire at year's
end and tens of billions of dollars in across-the board federal spending cuts
due to kick in the day after New Year's Day. Failure to prevent a dive off the
cliff could rattle US markets, and push the US economy into a
recession, which could have global implications. How Obama fares with a
familiar set of challenges most notably a Republican-controlled House of
Representatives could colour his second term.Obama, who defeated Republican
challenger Mitt Romney based on television projections, will want to strike a
deal with Washington lawmakers before December 31 or risk a recession in the
first half of 2013, budget experts and Democratic aides say.His backers say his
win gives him a mandate for an elusive "grand bargain" he sought in
his first four-year term. Such a pact would raise new revenue, make changes to
popular programs like the Medicare health program for the elderly and pare the
federal deficit. "They have signalled that they want a big deal and I
think Obama will be aggressive about getting it," said Steve Elmendorf, a
former House Democratic senior adviser and now a lobbyist.Obama and most
Democrats are at odds with Republicans in Congress over the stickiest issue whether to let low tax rates for the
wealthiest Americans expire on December 31.The president and most Democrats
want to raise taxes on income earned above $250 000; Republicans want to extend
the current low rates for all income levels. Financial markets and the business
community crave long-term certainty and that is what a major deal envisioned by
Obama is intended to tackle.A big X-factor is how congressional Republicans
will respond to an Obama win. The hard line against raising revenue taken by
many Republicans in the House may not abate after the election.House Speaker
John Boehner said this week that his Republicans would stand firm on their
position opposing any tax increases, even for millionaires, though he was
speaking before the election results.Republicans kept control of the House, as
expected, and Democrats were projected to maintain control of the Senate.An Obama
victory "takes a lot of air out of the room for Republicans", Jim
Walsh, a former Republican representative, who retired in 2009, predicted
before the election. The odds of a grander deal with increased revenue though
not in the form of higher tax rates goes up with an Obama victory, he said.Former
Democratic representative Bart Gordon was unsure whether more conservative
elements of the party, associated with the Tea Party movement, would go along
so easily. "Those folks don't need much of a reason to fight," Gordon
said.
Violence erupts in Athens over austerity measures
Greek police fired teargas and water
cannons to disperse thousands of protesters who flooded into the main square
before parliament today in a massive show of anger against lawmakers due to
narrowly pass an austerity package.The violence erupted as a handful of
protesters tried to break through a barricade to enter parliament, where Prime
Minister Antonis Samaras is expected to barely eke out a win for the
belt-tightening law despite opposition from a coalition partner.But the
parliamentary session was briefly interrupted when parliament workers went on
strike and opposition lawmakers walked out of the chamber in protest. Outside
parliament, loud booms rang out as protesters hurled petrol bombs and police
responded with teargas and stun grenades. Smoke and small fires could be seen
on a street next to parliament.That came after a sea of Greeks braved a steady
downpour holding flags and banners saying "It's them or us!" and
"End this disaster!" stood before riot police guarding parliament.In
all, nearly 100,000 protesters - some chanting "Fight! They're drinking
our blood" - packed the square and side streets in one of the largest
rallies seen in months, police said.Protesters held aloft Italian, Portuguese
and Spanish flags in solidarity with other southern European nations enduring
austerity."These measures are killing us little by little and lawmakers in
there don't give a damn," said Maria Aliferopoulou, a 52-year-old mother
of two living on 1000 euros a month."They are rich, they have everything
and we have nothing and are fighting for crumbs, for survival."Public
transport was halted, schools, banks and government offices were shut and
garbage was piling up on streets on the second day of a two-day nationwide
strike, called to protest against the vote.Backed by the leftist opposition,
unions say the measures will hit the poor and spare the wealthy, while
deepening a five-year recession that has wiped out a fifth of the country's
output and driven unemployment to a record 25%.
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