Obama launches 'charm offensive' on Capitol Hill. Does it have a chance? (+video)
President Obama begins meetings with lawmakers Tuesday to discuss everything from deficits to guns. He is not known for cultivating working relationships on the Hill, and at the same time, GOP congressional leadership has been locked in opposition.
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“Everybody knows we need a grand bargain, [and] I think the president’s outreach is a good beginning. It sure beats the heck out of him flying to some place and belaboring us in a campaign rally, then flying back to Washington,” he added, referring to the events Obama has held around the country since the election to promote his policy positions. "So, we appreciate it."
Skip to next paragraphThe reception on the GOP leadership side has been more restrained. At a press briefing last Thursday, Speaker Boehner said that after “months of campaign-style events,” the president is “actually going to try to talk to members.”
“I hope something will come out of it,” he said. "But if the president continues to insist on tax hikes, I don't think we're going to get very far. If the president doesn't believe we have a spending problem, I don't think we're going to get too far. But I'm optimistic."
With Republicans in disarray after 2012 elections, the conspicuous presidential outreach to mid-level Republicans can also be seen as a bid to further divide GOP ranks.
“People desire to be a part of a big agreement, and every time the president dangles that opportunity, even if they’re wary, they feel obligated to pursue it. That’s where we are today,” says Sen. Jeff Sessions (R) of Alabama.
“The president has hinted he would be prepared to do some large things, so it makes sense to talk with him,” he adds. “I do believe the president needs to end secret talks and begin to tell the American people what he thinks is needed to fix our debt problem.”
Recent conciliatory talk and the president’s new outreach isn’t a sign that the dysfunction in Washington is over, says Norman Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington and co-author of "It's Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided With the New Politics of Extremism."
Succeeding in some policy areas requires, among other things, “isolating or neutralizing” opposition in the GOP-controlled House, Mr. Ornstein says. “The only way to do that is first to work assiduously with problem-solvers in the Senate and reach some broad, bipartisan agreement that will capture 70 to 80 votes or more,” he says.
“If you do that in a way that it’s visible and obvious that you have reached out and compromised,” that puts pressure on Boehner to allow the deal on the floor for a vote, he says.
“He’ll have to bring up something, which will pass with some of his own [GOP] votes and a majority of Democrats,” he adds. “That’s the way to progress.”
By law, the White House is required to produce a budget resolution by the first Monday in February. Presidents have often missed that deadline, but this time goes further: The Obama administration is not expected to release its budget for fiscal year 2014 until April, and in the meantime, lawmakers are proceeding with their own budget debates.
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