STAFF BIOS
Ron Fournier
Senior Political Columnist and Editorial Director
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1 p.m.
last Wednesday. From one of the most powerful Democrats in Washington , a
close adviser to the White House, the missive amounted to an electronic eye
roll. "Even I have had enough."
Another Democrat had quit on President Obama.
The
tipping point for this person was the Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl case—not the
soldier-for-Taliban swap itself as much as how the White House mishandled
its obligation to communicate effectively and honestly to Congress and the
public.
More than
that, Obama's team had "DC is hard, and depressing," the Democrat
wrote. "I still believe good comes from government (e.g. 8 million in
ACA). But that Politico story is a cautionary one: good reminder that
you can't go so in the bunker [and] no longer identify legitimate
criticism." That day, Politico had posted a story channeling the White House communications team's
response to the Bergdahl backlash.failed once again to acknowledge its
mistakes, preferring to cast blame and seek .
White House aides were
aware Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl had been tagged a deserter, and that they would be
grilled over not keeping Congress in the loop. But they figured people would be
most outraged over the national security implications.
The White House has been
surprised by how much attention has remained on the questions about Bergdahl,
from the circumstances of his disappearance to the wild beard his father grew
while he was being held that's even led to Bergdahl's hometown canceling a
celebration. All this, Obama aides say, is in their minds a proxy for the
hatred toward the president.
The new approach:
Frame the criticism as another example of Republicans complaining about
something just because Obama was the one to do it.
To this
senior Democrat, the Politico story showed the White House to be both
tone-deaf and arrogant, two vices that are undermining what could have been a
great presidency.
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