Obama Performs Badly And Unethically, Politico Begins Story With Unrelated Attack On Bush
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It’s called turning into gold. In other words, “how do we make him look good when he was just bad?” The solution is called propaganda, certainly not journalism. Also, notice how the stated opinion about Bush is just dropped like an iron fact.
From an earlier story:
The White House said Saturday that Obama remains committed to Daschle’s nominationâ€â€now the second case of a high-level appointee failing to pay taxes, and one in a string of recent Democratic embarrassments on the ethics front.
Sources close to Daschle said they’ve gotten reassurances from the White House that Obama was not wavering.
“They knew it was coming and they’d have to take a hit,” said a source close to Daschle.
Other Democats have also had high profile problems of late that play into this line of attack. New York Rep. Charlie Rangel is under investigation for failing to report rental income on a villa in the Dominican Republic. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardon withdrew his bid for commerce secretary amidst a federal investigation into how political donors landed a lucrative contract.
“If a Bush appointee got rich off of Wall Street in this climate, had a chauffeur from one of his fat cat cronies, had unpaid taxes that amounted to more than what most people make in a year, and then the administration tried to fix it behind closed doors. Democrats would call for his head and would demand ‘accountability,’†said a top Senate GOP aide.
In addition, the Democratic fundraiser who provided the free car and driver to Daschle is Leo Hindery, who founded InterMedia Advisors, where he paid Daschle at a rate of $1 million a year to be an consultant. Hindery was an economic consultant to Obama during the campaign and was believed at one point to have been under consideration for the Commerce secretary post.
So until the heat got too hot, the dishonest and unethical Obama was willing to stand by his initial plans to help Tom Daschle in his PR cover-up of tax evasion, and his own plot of payback to a Team Obama money man.
This after a week where O-idiot spent the whole time trying to send like a pious new Sheriff of Wall Street. Yup, Dems believe in taxes, they just don’t believe in paying them themselves.
And Obama gets no credit for an apology that was issued only because his scam was doomed, not because he regretted scamming.
Politico’s PR Cover-Up For Obama:
George W. Bush was reluctant to admit any mistakes in eight years.
It took Barack Obama just 14 days. And once he started Tuesday, he didn’t stop.
“I screwed up,†Obama told CBS in very un-presidential terms about Tom Daschle, whose nomination for Health and Human Services secretary had imploded a few hours earlier.
Tax problems come and go in Washington, just like dinged-up nominees. But Obama seemed to sense Tuesday that Daschle was different, much more serious  a true threat to Brand Obama that opened him up to charges of hypocrisy.
So in a barrage of five back-to-back television interviews, he said he was willing to “take his lumps.†He complained of a “self-induced injury.†He promised to fix the problem.
And he didn’t even try to talk anyone out of the conventional wisdom  that Daschle and his free limo rides were like the living repudiation of everything Obama campaigned on for two years.
Instead, he tried to get one message across with the force of his contrite words  that he really did mean what he said when he ran for president about cleaning up the capital.
“I’m here on television saying I screwed up. And that’s part of the era of responsibility, is not never making mistakes, it’s owning up to them and trying to make sure you don’t repeat them and that’s what we intend to do,†he told NBC.
On CNN, he went a little further: “Look, ultimately, I campaigned on changing Washington and bottom-up politics. And I don’t want to send a message to the American people that there are two sets of standards, one for powerful people, and one for ordinary folks who are working every day and paying their taxes.â€Â
A story like Daschle is hard to make go away, and that’s plainly the realization that both Obama and the former Senate Majority Leader came to. Yet if Obama had known about Daschle’s tax problems for a month, did he simply misjudge just how sharp the public backlash would be?
Obama’s team might well be asking the same question of Daschle.
It wasn’t until Tuesday morning that the South Dakotan deduced that the furor was not about to ebb, and if anything was intensifying.
But once Daschle, who has been involved in the highest levels of politics since serving as an aide to former Sen. James Abourezk in the early 1970s, did see the storm, he recognized the threat it posed to his mission.
“He understands politics as well as anyone, and he knew that it was going to be virtually impossible to be the health care champion he wanted to be,†said one source close to Daschle. “The issue is bigger than him, and his withdrawal reflects his fundamental loyalty and integrity.â€Â
For all the mea culpas, Obama did leave himself some wiggle room. While Obama’s tone was plainly contrite, there were ambiguities in his comments.
“We’re going to make sure we fix it so it doesn’t happen again,†he told CNN, without explaining precisely what problem he was fixing, nor precisely how it would be fixed.
His plans to fight the impression of a “double standard†clearly don’t involve revisiting the tax issues which dogged Timothy Geithner’s nomination as Treasury Secretary.
In fact, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs suggested that Geithner’s underpayment of about $34,000 in taxes was no longer a proper subject for discussion. The reason: he was confirmed last week, slipping over the finish line just before the back-tax controversies arose over Daschle and Nancy Killefer, Obama’s pick for chief performance officer who stepped aside yesterday as well.
“Mr. Geithner has gone through a process,†Gibbs said at a briefing for reporters. “The process has guided Mr. Geithner to be the Secretary of Treasury of the United States of America.â€Â
One “fix†Obama may have been alluding to could require him being less hasty in publicly naming nominees who have yet to complete the vetting process. In the CBS interview, Obama acknowledged being “very eager†to put Daschle to work on health care.
The former senator’s nomination was announced December 11, apparently before Obama people dug into the ex-senator’s financial affairs. Obama reportedly learned of Daschle’s tax underpayment in early January, but the president professed full support for the nomination until Tuesday.
In a similar turn of events, Obama touted his pick for Commerce Secretary, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson at a news conference in Chicago on December 3 – but Richardson was out by January 5, citing an investigation into alleged pay-to-play contracting in his state.
Still, after sustaining the worst public embarrassment of his new presidency, Obama seemed philosophical, exhibiting confidence he would get back on track. “That’s the nature of this thing,†he told CBS. “We were pretty good about being on message for two weeks.
But it also forced him into saying, less than a quarter of the way into his first 100 days, that he was not acceding to the ways of the capital. “Well no,†he said on NBC of Daschle’s departure, “I don’t think Washington wins.â€Â


