Politics
Anticipating Obama’s re-election game plan
On issues from air pollution to contraception, President Barack Obama has broken sharply with liberal activists and come down on the side of business interests and social conservatives as he moves more to the political middle for his re-election campaign.
Without a Democratic challenger who might tug him to the left, Obama is free to try to neutralize Republican efforts to tar him as a liberal ideologue by taking steps toward the political center
At the same time, he is finding opportunities to boost his standing with his most committed backers. For example, he has appealed to environmentalists by delaying an oil pipeline that would run from Canada to Texas, and to gay rights activists by bolstering gay rights overseas and helping end a ban on gays in the military.
The sometimes seemingly contradictory moves come as Obama maneuvers toward next year’s election. Critical to his success in 2012 is retaining support from independent voters who could be won over by his GOP opponents, given the country’s high rate of unemployment and economic distress.
The White House denies that politics is at play. But as with any president, some of Obama’s most potent campaign tools derive from the powers of his office, from the bully pulpit to decisions on issues that affect people’s lives.
In the most recent example, Obama’s health secretary overruled scientists at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to block sales of the morning-after contraceptive bill Plan B to girls under age 17 without a prescription.
Social conservatives applauded and women’s rights groups were livid, but Obama backed up Health and Human Services chief Kathleen Sebelius.
“As the father of two young daughters, I think it is important for us to make sure that, you know, we apply some common sense to various rules when it comes to over-the-counter medicine,” the president said Thursday.
