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Barack Obama on 5 Days That Shaped His Presidency - New York Magazine
https://apple.news/AOvc4xK2gQmKvGgpYIgKAbQ
The other 4 days are discussed in the link
There's a lot of questions in this interview, but these are the questions that identify the days which he answers
https://apple.news/AOvc4xK2gQmKvGgpYIgKAbQ
The other 4 days are discussed in the link
On August 25, after a short trip to Baton Rouge to assess flooding in Louisiana and before what will likely be his last visit to China on Air Force One, Barack Obama sat down at the White House to reflect on the past eight years. He led America through a period of dramatic, convulsive change an era that New York Magazine explores this week in its cover story. Before his conversation with Jonathan Chait, he chose five moments that, he believes, will have outsized historical impact. Here is their conversation in full.
Lets start with the time in 2010 when Mitch McConnell publicly says that his No. 1 goal is to make you a one-term president. How did that comment strike you? Was it news?
By that point it was pretty apparent by his actions that it was already his No. 1 goal. He validated what I think most of this town knew. When I came into office, my working assumption was that because we were in crisis, and the crisis had begun on the Republicans watch, that there would be a window in which they would feel obliged to cooperate on a common effort to dig us out of this massive hole. Probably the moment in which I realized that the Republican leadership intended to take a different tack was actually as we were shaping the stimulus bill, and I vividly remember having prepared a basic proposal that had a variety of components. We had tax cuts; we had funding for the states so that teachers wouldnt be laid off and firefighters and so forth; we had an infrastructure component. We felt, I think, that as an opening proposal, it was ambitious but needed and that we would begin negotiations with the Republicans and they would show us things that they thought also needed to happen. On the drive up to Capitol Hill to meet with the House Republican Caucus, John Boehner released a press statement saying that they were opposed to the stimulus. At that point we didnt even actually have a stimulus bill drawn up, and we hadnt meant to talk about it. And I think we realized at that point what proved to be the case in that first year and that second year was a calculation based on what turned out to be pretty smart politics but really bad for the country: If they cooperated with me, then that would validate our efforts. If they were able to maintain uniform opposition to whatever I proposed, that would send a signal to the public of gridlock, dysfunction, and that would help them win seats in the midterms. It was that second strategy that they pursued with great discipline. It established the dynamic for not just my presidency but for a much sharper party-line approach to managing both the House and the Senate that I think is going to have consequences for years to come.
There's a lot of questions in this interview, but these are the questions that identify the days which he answers
So its January 27, 2009, and you hear Boehner say he is against the stimulus. Ive heard complaints from Republicans about what youre like in these meetings. They say youre didactic and you lecture. In a situation like that, are you trying to discuss Keynesian theory and saying, Do you believe in stimulus? At what level is the discussion held?
Which gets us to a crucial moment on the path to passing the Affordable Care Act. In January 2010, as a congressional vote loomed, there was a special election in Massachusetts to replace Ted Kennedy, and a Republican, Scott Brown, won. Most people said, Its done. So the night of the election, youre seeing the election results come in are you getting phone calls from Democrats?
You shook Raúl Castros hand at Nelson Mandelas funeral. What role did that play in the strategic decision to pursue that opening with Cuba?
On September 30, 2011, a drone strike killed Anwar al-Awlaki, the Yemeni terrorist who was also an American citizen. It was understood here in the States as a surprisingly hawkish move, which reminded me of a moment in your 2008 foreign-policy debate with John McCain when he attacked you for saying you would violate Pakistani sovereignty. The dynamic of the campaign up until then was that you were perhaps not tough enough on terrorism and that he was the hawk. Suddenly, you had switched places and prefigured what your policy would turn out to be. Did you see that as a trap that he would walk into during the debate?