Obama’s no f. D. R. — nor does he have f. D. R. ’s majority

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Every time I read an article like this from the Weekly Standard‘s Fred Barnes: > Is Obama the new FDR? The answer is no. >  > If Franklin Delano Roosevelt were president today […] 


liberal > health care reform would have been enacted already. […] >  > The reason is tied to what is probably the greatest difference > between FDR and Obama. Roosevelt took 


command of Washington. Obama > hasn’t. “FDR became the father of the modern presidency by > moving the Chief Executive to the center of the American political > universe,” John Yoo 


writes in his new book on presidential power, > Crisis and Command. “Roosevelt’s revolution radically shifted > the balance of power among the three branches of government.” > […]


>  > FDR seized legislative authority. The bills that Congress passed in > his first 100 days and beyond were produced by the Roosevelt > administration and ratified reflexively 


by Congress. …I wonder why there’s no mention of this: When F.D.R. took over the Presidency in 1933, the Democrats controlled 64 percent of the Senate seats and 73 percent (!) of the House


seats, counting independents who were sympathetic to the party. And those numbers only increased over the next couple of midterms — during their peak during 1937-38, the Demorats actually


controlled about 80 percent (!) of the seats in both chambers. Obama, by contrast, came into his term with 59 percent majorities in both chambers. That’s not much to complain about by the


standards of recent Presidencies, but is nevertheless a long way from where F.D.R. stood during his first two terms, or for that matter where L.B.J.’s numbers were during the 1965-66 period,


when the bulk of the Great Society programs were implemented. F.D.R. and L.B.J. might have been great cleanup hitters — and you’ll get no argument from me that Obama’s aptitude at


shepherding his agenda through Congress has been mixed, at best. But they basically spent the first several years of their Presidencies playing in the Congressional equivalent of Coors


Field. Considering how dramatic the impact of the loss of just one Senate seat has been on both the perception and the reality of Obama’s agenda, that needs to be kept in mind when drawing


the comparison.