White House nightmare persists
By Edward Luce
Published: January 22 2010 19:21 | Last updated: January 22 2010 19:21
At the end of Barack Obama’s worst week since taking power a year ago, the US president’s fortunes look set only to deteriorate over the coming days. Following the shock defeat of the Democratic candidate in Massachusetts on Tuesday, a move that deprived the president of his 60-seat super-majority in the Senate and left his legislative agenda in tatters, Mr Obama has just four days to reboot the system.
The US president had originally delayed next week’s State of the Union address to Congress in the hope he would get his signature healthcare reform bill enacted in time. That prospect, already waning, was killed dead by the voters in Massachusetts. A growing number of Democrats believe the nine-month effort could collapse altogether.
...
“Nor can Mr Obama rely on unity within his own party, which has been in disarray, if not panic, since Tuesday. For example, Mr Obama’s more populist tack on Wall Street re-regulation failed to attract endorsement from Chris Dodd, chairman of the Senate banking committee, even though he was present when Mr Obama made the announcement.
...
In short, Mr Obama’s nightmare January could easily slip into a nightmare February. “Unless and until the president changes the way his White House, works, things are going to continue to go badly for him,†says the head of a Democratic think-tank. “Heads still have to roll.â€
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/821dce96-0786-11df-915f-00144feabdc0.htmlIt only took him a year to implode. The rookie mistakes have culminated into the collapse of his party. This is so much more than "the majority always loses seats in the mid-term elections", this is epic failure that going forward we will bookmark as supporting evidence to lay claim he is the worst U.S. president in our nation's history.