The American Spectator
It’s the End of the Obama Era in America. Good Riddance.
The public is exhausted with being censored, name-called, canceled, and propagandized by the same old crew.
Scott McKay
November 7, 2024
Excerpt:
Those of you familiar with my work know that I’ve written two political books — , which was a treatise of sorts on how conservatism needs to undergo a bit of a rebranding and learn to develop an uptempo political offense, and .
I made the argument, surrounding the latter title, that it wasn’t a history book. I said that Barack Obama was the most consequential figure in American politics, and had been since 2008.
Greatly to our detriment as a country, without a doubt.
But now, after the results of Tuesday night, I think that can finally change.
I think my Obama book might be historical after all. Finally.
In yesterday’s column, I said that Trump’s reelection signaled Obama’s denouement, and upon reflection, I think that’s going to prove true.
There are a number of data points that suggest this. One of which was a story that popped Thursday morning at Politico about how Joe Biden’s people and Obama’s people are at each other’s throats over Kamala Harris’ loss. You might have to push aside your gloating in order to drill down on this one, but:
The thing to understand is that Kamala Harris’ team was Obama’s team. Biden’s team was mostly Obama veterans, but those were the guys left behind when Obama and Nancy Pelosi engineered the coup that got rid of Biden from the Democrats’ ticket.
The whole thing is hilarious, really, because it was Joe Biden who, in his dying political breath after Obama and Pelosi had killed his reelection hopes, endorsed Harris and thus stuck them with her.
And Biden then repeatedly sabotaged Harris’ campaign with gaffes and more, er, purposeful actions.
Would Team Obama have opted for Harris as their puppet of choice had Biden not saddled them with a cackling nincompoop San Francisco communist who’d slept her way to the middle and DEI’ed her way to the top? It’s possible, but one can’t help but harbor doubts. There were rumblings that Obama liked Mark Kelly, the ex-astronaut Arizona senator, better as a front man for their operation.
But Democrats have a lot of trouble telling a black woman no at this point. That’s part of what Obama brought to the table, and it’s part of why the Team Obama project has collapsed into a steaming heap.
Kamala Harris wasn’t qualified to be president, for crying out loud. She wasn’t qualified to be vice president either. She spent four years proving that, and then they launched an utterly ridiculous campaign so contemptuous of the rubes they think the American people are that it was breathtaking to watch.
spectator.org
It’s the End of the Obama Era in America. Good Riddance.
The public is exhausted with being censored, name-called, canceled, and propagandized by the same old crew.
Scott McKay
November 7, 2024
Excerpt:
Those of you familiar with my work know that I’ve written two political books — , which was a treatise of sorts on how conservatism needs to undergo a bit of a rebranding and learn to develop an uptempo political offense, and .
I made the argument, surrounding the latter title, that it wasn’t a history book. I said that Barack Obama was the most consequential figure in American politics, and had been since 2008.
Greatly to our detriment as a country, without a doubt.
But now, after the results of Tuesday night, I think that can finally change.
I think my Obama book might be historical after all. Finally.
In yesterday’s column, I said that Trump’s reelection signaled Obama’s denouement, and upon reflection, I think that’s going to prove true.
There are a number of data points that suggest this. One of which was a story that popped Thursday morning at Politico about how Joe Biden’s people and Obama’s people are at each other’s throats over Kamala Harris’ loss. You might have to push aside your gloating in order to drill down on this one, but:
But the momentum advisers insisted she’d built [during her convention] failed to materialize. She never sufficiently buried Biden’s ghost, severely hamstringing her ability to sell voters on the idea that hers was the turn-the-page candidacy.
It happened, simply, because Harris refused to make a clean break from the last four years when voters indicated that’s what they wanted. Worse, she hesitated to draw any daylight between herself and her boss on Biden’s biggest vulnerability — his stewardship over the economy — nor identify any specific way her presidency would be different from his tenure beyond naming a Republican to her Cabinet.
The thing to understand is that Kamala Harris’ team was Obama’s team. Biden’s team was mostly Obama veterans, but those were the guys left behind when Obama and Nancy Pelosi engineered the coup that got rid of Biden from the Democrats’ ticket.
The whole thing is hilarious, really, because it was Joe Biden who, in his dying political breath after Obama and Pelosi had killed his reelection hopes, endorsed Harris and thus stuck them with her.
And Biden then repeatedly sabotaged Harris’ campaign with gaffes and more, er, purposeful actions.
Would Team Obama have opted for Harris as their puppet of choice had Biden not saddled them with a cackling nincompoop San Francisco communist who’d slept her way to the middle and DEI’ed her way to the top? It’s possible, but one can’t help but harbor doubts. There were rumblings that Obama liked Mark Kelly, the ex-astronaut Arizona senator, better as a front man for their operation.
But Democrats have a lot of trouble telling a black woman no at this point. That’s part of what Obama brought to the table, and it’s part of why the Team Obama project has collapsed into a steaming heap.
Kamala Harris wasn’t qualified to be president, for crying out loud. She wasn’t qualified to be vice president either. She spent four years proving that, and then they launched an utterly ridiculous campaign so contemptuous of the rubes they think the American people are that it was breathtaking to watch.
It’s the End of the Obama Era in America. Good Riddance. - The American Spectator | USA News and PoliticsThe American Spectator | USA News and Politics
Those of you familiar with my work know that I've written two political books — The Revivalist Manifesto, which was a treatise of sorts on how conservatism
