WSJ editorial paints Obama as Bush’s ideological heir

Given John McCain’s record, and rhetoric, Republicans are clearly worried about how voters are going to react to the argument that McCain offers the nation “Bush’s third term.”

In fact, conservatives are so worried about it, the misguided ideologues at the Wall Street Journal editorial page have decided to make a novel argument: it’s Barack Obama, not McCain, who’s actually “running for … Bush’s third term.”

Take the surveillance of foreign terrorists. Last October, while running with the Democratic pack, the Illinois Senator vowed to “support a filibuster of any bill that includes retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies” that assisted in such eavesdropping after 9/11. As recently as February, still running as the liberal favorite against Hillary Clinton, he was one of 29 Democrats who voted against allowing a bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee reform of surveillance rules even to come to the floor.

Two weeks ago, however, the House passed a bill that is essentially the same as that Senate version, and Mr. Obama now says he supports it. Apparently legal immunity for the telcos is vital for U.S. national security, just as Mr. Bush has claimed.

Now, I think Obama’s wrong to accept the FISA “compromise,” and have said so on many occasions. But to suggest that Obama’s position brings him into line with Bush/Cheney/McCain is foolish. Indeed, far from conceding that retroactive telecom immunity is “vital for U.S. national security,” Obama actually said the exact opposite, arguing that he still opposes the provision, and vowing to vote for its removal. The Journal used “apparently” to draw the conclusion it wanted to reach, instead of the one supported by reality.

It gets worse.

Next up for Mr. Obama’s political blessing will be Mr. Bush’s Iraq policy. Only weeks ago, the Democrat was calling for an immediate and rapid U.S. withdrawal. When General David Petraeus first testified about the surge in September 2007, Mr. Obama was dismissive and skeptical. But with the surge having worked wonders in Iraq, this week Mr. Obama went out of his way to defend General Petraeus against MoveOn.org’s attacks in 2007 that he was “General Betray Us.” Perhaps he had a late epiphany.

If I read this on a fringe, right-wing blog, it would be easier to dismiss as nonsense, but the Journal was a respected national newspaper. The WSJ argues, seriously, that Obama is running for “Bush’s third term,” because he “will” support Bush’s Iraq policy, as evidenced by his discomfort with the “Betray Us?” ad. I’m actually feeling kind sorry for how ridiculous the Journal’s editors are making themselves appear.

Mr. Obama has also made ostentatious leaps toward Mr. Bush on domestic issues. While he once bid for labor support by pledging a unilateral rewrite of Nafta, the Democrat now says he favors free trade as long as it works for “everybody.”

In this reality, Bush and Obama don’t agree on trade at all; McCain and Bush do.

Back in the day, the first-term Senator also voted against the Supreme Court nominations of John Roberts and Samuel Alito. But last week he agreed with their majority opinion in the Heller gun rights case, and with their dissent against the liberal majority’s ruling to ban the death penalty for rape.

Agreeing with two justices on two cases does not make Obama an acolyte of the Federalist Society.

This week the great Democratic hope even endorsed spending more money on faith-based charities. Apparently, this core plank of Mr. Bush’s “compassionate conservatism” is not the assault on church-state separation that the ACLU and liberals have long claimed.

This is total nonsense. Obama’s policy bears no real resemblance to Bush’s, and Obama intends to protect the very safeguards that Bush’s faith-based initiative sought to eliminate. It’s the difference between a constitutional policy and an unconstitutional policy. Even a cursory glance at Obama’s speech makes that clear, which makes the Journal’s argument unusually intellectually dishonest.

The WSJ editorial helps demonstrate the flaw in starting with the answer and working backwards. Sensitive to McCain’s political problems, the Journal seems to have decided, “Let’s argue that Obama is running for Bush’s third term.” The editors then scrambled to come up with evidence to bolster the conclusion, ignoring inconvenient facts and details along the way.

If this sounds vaguely familiar, it’s evidence that the Bush White House has had an even greater influence on the Wall Street Journal than previously thought.

Post Script: By the way, to hear some of the unhinged corners of the right tell it, Obama is both a radical liberal and a Bush clone. Conservatives really are going to have to pick one.

yeah, well, the WSJ is spouting nonsense, but honestly I would have a lot more sympathy for Obama on this one if he hadn’t provided the grain of truth underlying the lies — the grain of truth that will make it more likely that some of them stick.

the WSJ stretched and spun, but isn’t it true that Obama flopped on FISA, movign toward Bush in the process?

isn’t it true that Obama — and if anyone should know better it is a community organizer from Chicago — pandered on guns and the death penalty, moving right because of the perceived political necessity to do so?

hasn’t he toned down his emphasis on Iraq lately? and since he won the “Edwards prize” and has his Michigan joint appearance, hasn’t he toned down his talk in terms of a purely progressive position on trade?

All of these things are true. It remains true as well that even with these moderations he is miles and miles from being “Bush’s Third Term,” and McCain remains substantively much closer to Bush than Obama on his worst days. I’m not saying that WSJ isn’t taking liberties or reaching preposterous conclusions. but it really would be nice if Obama were keeping the contrasts a little more sharply drawn and loudly declared.

  • Let’s get this straight, the most liberal senator in the US congress is running for Bush’s third term?

    The best thing this article could do is goad Obama into pushing for the retroactive immunity removal.

  • isn’t it true that Obama β€” and if anyone should know better it is a community organizer from Chicago β€” pandered on guns and the death penalty, moving right because of the perceived political necessity to do so?

    False as to the death penalty. Obama was, IIRC, on record supporting it for child molestation before he even announced he was running for president.

  • Post Script: By the way, to hear some of the unhinged corners of the right tell it, Obama is both a radical liberal and a Bush clone. Conservatives really are going to have to pick one.

    Why? Repeat it thrice and, bam, it’s true! Why pick when you can lie?

    Does anyone know what the readership of the WSJ is since Murdoch took it over? I am curious as to readership now vs. 18 months ago.

  • Take a kernel of truth or something resembling it… twist it around three times… add a sprinkling of MSM Magical Magnifying Powder… And voila! The new “truth” has dawned, on the other side of the looking glass.

    All WSJ has done, is take Our Mary’s recipe for the anti-Obama poop-cookies πŸ™‚ Actually, it’s an old, old technique, taught in Commie Propaganda 101.Since the current US system seems to be borrowing so much from those times and countries (wiretapping, torture manuals), why not the propaganda techniques?

  • The WSJ is Fox News in print. I dropped my free subscription (frequent flyer miles) early. I couldn’t stomach it anymore.

  • The WSJ editorial helps demonstrate the flaw in starting with the answer and working backwards.

    Heh. I saw it as helping demonstrate why “running to the center in the general election” was a silly-assed chicken strategy that wouldn’t work any way. Look! Somehow the rabid right didn’t get the memo that Obama’s recent hard tack rightward is supposed to immunize him from such specious attacks.

    Guh. He should have stayed true to what he’d been saying.

  • The new and improved Wall Street Journal – Now with all the credibility of Fox News!
    Perhaps they will soon include a “Page 3” girl for their readers. I would suggest a Bay Bucannon cheesecake shot.

  • …Obama is both a radical liberal and a Bush clone. Conservatives really are going to have to pick one.

    Um, why? These guys don’t care about coherency, it’s all about throwing muck and seeing what sticks. It’s not like they actually have to believe two contradictory things at the same time (though they can do that in a pinch), it’s just a question of throwing enough muck around and letting people believe the parts they want to believe.

    And since Obama’s a centrist (an unapologetic centrist, I might add) it’s not going to be that difficult to find positions where he agrees with Republicans – especially if you’re allowed to twist those positions the way “Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal ™”‘s editorial page is allowed to do. It’s always better to wrap your lie around a grain of truth than it is to make up something whole cloth. With a grain of truth you force the subject to resort to nuance to explain it away. And nuanced explanations are the death of a presidential campaign. Witness John “Fer it before he was agin’ it” Kerry’s death march in 2004.

    This will probably be a good tactic for conservatives to take with low information voters. I can only assume that this appears on “Rupert Murdoch’s The Wall Street Journal ™”‘s editorial page to lend it credibility when it gets e-mailed to low information voters by their slightly more plugged-in Republican friends and relatives. After all, the low information voter is unlikely to know that the WSJ’s editorial page has always been a haven for conservative partisan hackery, since the WSJ brand has a certain amount of prestige around it (which is of course why Murdoch wanted it in the first place).

  • when you can successfully convince people that Obama is a muslim, AND has had a bad pastor for 30 years, why choose?

  • If Obama represents Bush 3, then wouldn’t that make McCain—um—Satan’s evil twin Skippy?

    Desperation leads to massive McCain f***up. Details at 6 and 11….

  • what Bernard said at 7.

    this totally reminds me of Lucy, Charlie Brown, and the football.

    “C’mon, Democratic Candidate – if you just espouse some right-sounding things, I promise this time I wont say bad things about you. Really, this time I mean it.”

    we make one-sided bargains, and no matter what the attacks still come.
    this is how we lose every 4 years.

  • Post Script: By the way, to hear some of the unhinged corners of the right tell it, Obama is both a radical liberal and a Bush clone. Conservatives really are going to have to pick one.

    Actually, something I’ve been hearing quite a bit from Conservatrons is that Bush was such a failure because he was too liberal and that McCain is a real conservative.

    I wonder how ‘President Legacy’ feels about this tactic?

  • The WSJ’s editorial page has always been conservative, even before being bought. It has never been respected the way the rest of the paper was.

    If Obama is going to run to the right, this is what he is going to get.

  • You know they won’t have to pick one.

    Just like he’s an elitist snob because he has a big house and a terrorist muslim scary black guy from the street.

    *sigh*

  • I laugh at this nonsense. And of you who are saying “this is what he gets for running to the right” make me laugh harder because it only shows your ignorance.

    The best part of the column was the end when they argue that even though Obama is Bush Part 3, he is not being honest about what he truly believes…

    So they are trying to scare us into not voting for him because he is a carbon copy of Bush but we should also be scared that he is lying about it and is the exact opposite of Bush??

    HAHAHAHAHA. These guys should call they psychiatrist’s and ask for their money back.

  • Bush was right about Iraq. McCain would not surrender. Obama is for Bush’s 3rd term and would surrender. So vote for McCain to change the policy that’s working. Vote against Obama who would continue the unpopular war we support. By withdrawing. Unlike McCain. Which is what makes him different. Obama would be more of the same. Which is what we want.

    Vote McCain.

  • This Gallop poll says that 68% are “somewhat” or “very concerned” that Hon. Sen. McCain would pursue policies that are too similar to what President* Bush has pursued. Note that the other 30% aren’t unconcerned, they’re the ones who think the President is doing just fine. So exactly zero people think that Senator McCain as President wouldn’t equal President Bush, but 30% see this as a feature and 70% see it as a bug.

  • Notice how the WSJ manages to ignore the most important issue to the electorate in its assessment – the economy. More specifically, tax policy. How can you make the argument that Obama is Bush’s ideological heir without reference to tax policy?

    Ah yes, because that would involve two things: (a) acknowledging that on the most pertinent matter McCain is following the Bush agenda and Obama isn’t and (b) McCain has performed one of his trademark flip-flops on the issue.

    Of course, convincing arguments always work best when you pick the facts that suit your case.

  • I’m not quite sure what the point of this is, other than to make the WSJ editorial board look like a bunch of damned fools.

    Oh, and to make it clear that even they don’t want four more years of George Walker Bush and Richard Cheney.

  • I have no problem with the WSJ doing that – I have a millionaire aquaintance who simply loves Bush AND subscribes to the WSJ – if Obama can get his vote, I’m happy.

  • The Obama-army is in real panic. It argues that Obama now favors gay marriage. He does not. All he has stated is that he is against the November anti-gay marriage initiative of California. So is California’s governor Schwarzenegger who is a Republican. If you wonder what Obama’s real position is, go back to the primary debates where he clearly stated that he will not accept gay marriage. On this one he has not flip-flopped. Jim Wallis does not allow him to flip-flop on gay marriage.

  • The same could be said for this article…you are trying to move Obama away from Bush ideas, but as he keeps talking, he is changing and moving to the old song of politics….the change is gone out of him..all that is left is his ego and the desire to win,,

  • Comstock@11 got it.

    Contradiction is not an obstacle for McCain supporters.
    It can’t be! If it were, their heads would explode like martians listening to Slim Whitman.

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