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Five things you didn't know about Obama as President | A new portrait of US President Barack Obama that has emerged collectively from three books on his presidency reveals less-known secrets of the Obama administration. Penned by three authors who have written books about his
presidency - Bob Woodward, Jonathan Alter and Steven Rattner, the combined
1,235 pages about Obama's 20 months in office offer five insights: 1. Obama's world
is more dramatic than he would like us to think - The notion that Obama's tenure was
clear of conflicts is better brushed aside, wrote Woodward, reports The Politico. He
revealed that National
Security Council staffers privately thought of the Obama administration as populated
by 'tribes,' - a 'Hillary tribe' at the State department, a 'Chicago tribe' centered
on Obama political strategist David Axelrod and Emanuel and a 'campaign' tribe
within the NSC, led by two former Obama aides. And Gen. David Petraeus balked
at administration efforts to keep him on message. "They're f--ing with the wrong
guy," he told an aide, according to Woodward, after the White House put the kibosh
on a press release he wanted to send out. 2) They're pretty unabashed about
discussing
the politics of national security - According to Woodward, Obama's senior advisers
habitually mulled the political implications of military options considered for
Afghanistan. Emanuel called the war "political fly paper" that would get stuck
to the president and couldn't peel off, and he made clear his unhappiness with
Obama's decision to send 30,000 more troops last year. 3) White House discussions
about the auto industry were politicized, too - Rattner wrote how Democratic
lawmakers
from the key industrial states impacted by auto-related bankruptcies pressed the
administration to get involved, as did the unions. But Axelrod presented polling
data at multiple meetings warning that the public hated bailouts. When experts
made a presentation to Emanuel about the impacts of a possible Chrysler
bankruptcy,
they gave him a map of facilities that identified one plant in Kokomo, Ind., as
being in Republican Dan Burton's district. Eventually the administration went
ahead with what would be locally popular but nationally unpopular bailout. Rattner
says the White House initially tried to have the news come from outside the White
House. He called the idea "insane" and said such a big policy pronouncement needed
to come from the president. "We never learned the origin of the original rollout
plan but assumed it was advisers leery of political fallout from such a controversial
set of announcements," wrote Rattner. 4) The boss is cerebral or aloof, depending
on your perspective - Alter writes about how Obama is more likely to become silent
and give blank stares than throw a temper tantrum when he gets upset. He
emphasizes
the President's push for comprehensive health reform when his staff wanted to
compromise after the Massachusetts special Senate election, a part of what Obama
calls a "philosophy of persistence." "His cool, wry temperament - his moods famously
never seemed to go too high or too low - could be perplexing," Alter wrote. "It
had a mellow yet restless cast, a peculiar mix of calm, confidence, and curiosity."
"I found President Obama's decision-making style to be consistent with his 'no
drama Obama' reputation and on par with the best CEOs I had spent time with on
Wall Street," Rattner wrote. 5) Obama's campaign staffers watch each other's backs
- Woodward writes of the frustrations by top members of Obama's national security
team that the campaign people stay tight with the other campaign people - the
ones National Security Adviser Jim Jones derisively called "the water bugs." This
manifested itself when Emanuel - who didn't work on the Obama campaign but
seamlessly
joined the inner circle - would come to visit Donilon, Jones' deputy, instead
of Jones. Alter attributes the insularity to Obama's lack of a deep background
in Washington. Of a meeting the morning after the election, a transition aide
told Alter that he was taken aback by how few top Democratic policymakers
Obama
knew well. The former Clinton aide guessed that all the names could fit on one
index card. Rattner faults the Obama transition team for not working more closely
with Bush and for being slow to fill the ranks beyond senior West Wing staff.
"Obama's 'one president at a time' stance may have been good politics, but if
his team had linked arms with the outgoing administration, as President Bush's
advisers had proposed, billions of dollars could well have been saved," he wrote.
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