President
Barack Obama is entering the fourth quarter of his presidency, one
marked by partisan divisions that have frustrated most Americans. But
the president, as he makes the turn for the finish line, has already
wracked up an impressive list of accomplishments during his tenure
despite the blindly fierce Republican opposition.
Since
his party's defeat in the midterm elections, President Obama has taken
the initiative. He has announced that the U.S. would normalize relations
with Cuba, as well as an executive order on immigration, and a climate
treaty with China. Each of these announcements is historic in their own
right. And together they signal the president is not going quietly into
the night.
President
Obama has enjoyed a great deal of good news these past six weeks.
Government estimates show that the U.S. economy grew at a spectacular 5
percent, and the Dow Jones stock index reached record highs, fueled in
part by corporate profits, which have been up year-over-year for 12
straight quarters.
Unemployment is at 5.8 percent,
the lowest rate since the president took office. Total nonfarm payroll
increased by 321,000 in November, led by professional and business
services, retail trade, health care, and manufacturing. Meanwhile, fuel
prices continue to drop as the price of gas has fallen for 89
consecutive days. AAA says that this is the longest streak on record,
and that prices have fallen 36 percent since last April.
Falling
gas prices have hit both Russia and Iran hard, along with U.S. led
sanctions. Just a few months ago Republicans were praising President
Vladimir Putin for his leadership traits as Russia annexed Crimea and
caused unrest in parts of Ukraine. Now Putin is struggling mightily to
keep his economy afloat. Those same Republicans criticized the president
for attempting to negotiate a nuclear treaty with Iran. Yet falling gas
prices and tough sanctions have brought the Iranians closer to making a
deal than any saber rattling ever did.
The
president's strategy for handling ISIS has stopped that group's
momentum. The president formed a coalition of countries to launch
targeted air attacks, and he helped nudge the failing Iraqi government
back from the brink. He has also kept America safe from terrorism, and
he made the killing of Osama bin Laden a top priority.
North Korea posed a serious threat with its alleged cyber-hacking of SONY's emails. This in response to a movie, The Interview,
which is a comedy focused on North Korea's leader. But it has been
reported that President Obama, who promised a proportional retaliation,
discussed the matter with China. Suddenly, North Korea lost its Internet
connection. Now the movie will be released after all on Christmas Day.
And
the president's singular greatest legislative success, the Affordable
Care Act, aka Obamacare, has expanded healthcare to millions of
uninsured Americans, and it has helped significantly lower the rate of
growth of health care costs. His 2009 stimulus package put the breaks on
the crashing economy, and his auto bailout preserved thousands of jobs.
Today, the U.S. auto industry is healthy. Each of these initiatives was
done in spite of furious opposition from Republicans.
Lately
President Obama has looked like that confident leader American voters
thought they elected way back in 2008. Since his first day in office he
has been attacked continuously by conservatives. He has been accused by
many of his Republican opponents of being born in Kenya, a Muslim, an
emperor, disengaged, distant, a liar, and ill-prepared for the office.
On the very day the president was first sworn into office, Republican
leaders vowed, in a secret meeting, to do all they could to block,
delay, denounce and defeat him. For them it was war.
Throughout
his first six years in office, the president has remained persistent,
while being buffeted by the partisan winds, and the thunderous
exhortations of so-called experts and conservative political pundits. Of
course, in today's media landscape, anyone can be a critic and get
airtime.
Even
his supporters sometimes express frustration because the president has
refused to act for the sake of acting, shoot from the hip, or jump to
conclusions. His approach, no matter the issue, has been measured,
studied, thoughtful, cerebral and yes, lawyerly.
Beginning
in January, Republicans will be the majority party in both houses of
Congress. They will try to repeal Obamacare, undo the president's
immigration order, stop normalization of relations with Cuba, pass the
Keystone Pipeline, cut federal social programs,and spend taxpayer
dollars re-investigating Benghazi and the IRS. There will be the usual
shrill denunciations of the president, and some GOP members may move to
impeach him.
Of course, for President Obama, it'll be just another day at the office.
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