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Originally published April 26, 2009 at 12:00 AM | Page modified April 26, 2009 at 12:18 AM

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Obama presidential style: pragmatic, partisan, polite

Nearing the 100-day mark, he's putting his own style on the presidency. Opportunistic. Pragmatic. Confident. Deliberate. Polite to friend and foe alike. Partisan. Polarizing. A better talker than George W. Bush. A more disciplined manager than Bill Clinton.

McClatchy Newspapers

100 days

Nothing special?

For an administration that claimed disdain for measuring its progress by an artificial 100-day deadline, it appears to be suddenly embracing the moment with enthusiasm. "A Hallmark holiday," said David Axelrod, President Obama's senior adviser, a moment with no real meaning. And yet, on Day 100 on Wednesday, Obama's top aides are planning quite a show. They have prodded Congress to pass his budget on that day. The president will fly to St. Louis to mark the occasion. That night, he will hold a televised news conference, starting at 5 p.m. PDT. After he announced the news conference last week, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs was asked whether there was significance to its scheduling. "I'll have to get back to you," he deadpanned.

Building a foundation

Much of what U.S. presidents accomplish begins in their first 100 days. Just as the Great Depression allowed President Franklin Roosevelt to quickly lay the groundwork for the New Deal, Obama seized on the economic crisis to frame an ambitious agenda. "So much of what they do is dictated by what they must do," said Terry Sullivan, executive director of the nonpartisan White House Transition Project and an associate professor of political science at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "The first 100 days is about figuring out, 'How are we going to focus on the things we want to focus on?' "

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    WASHINGTON — As he entered office, President Obama made a symbolic bow to frugality, putting off the costly redecorating of the Oval Office that his predecessors had done.

    But if the furnishings have remained largely the same — down to the stain on the big oval rug — the way Obama looks and acts there is different from all those who went before.

    Nearing the 100-day mark, he's putting his own style on the presidency. Opportunistic. Pragmatic. Confident. Deliberate. Polite to friend and foe alike. Partisan. Polarizing. A better talker than George W. Bush. A more disciplined manager than Bill Clinton.

    Some traits he'll maintain throughout his presidency. Some could change over his term. John Kennedy grew skeptical after a disastrous invasion of Cuba early in his presidency, learning to challenge aides and adopting an executive style that saw him through a nuclear showdown with the Soviet Union.

    "He's flexible," George Edwards, a scholar of the presidency and a visiting fellow at Oxford University, said of Obama. "He's still learning."

    Nothing defines his early days as much as the way he's seized the political opportunity provided by economic crisis to push forward an ambitious liberal agenda that otherwise would have little chance of getting through Congress. It includes an explosion of federal spending, the groundwork for universal health care and broad regulation of the environment — and soaring deficits and debt.

    Before he took office, Obama knew he faced a rare moment of crisis, one when a president could push through an agenda dramatically changing the government, and perhaps the country.

    Franklin Roosevelt did it in 1933 at the height of the Great Depression. Lyndon Johnson did it in 1964-65 after Kennedy's assassination. Ronald Reagan did it in the early 1980s at a peak of the Cold War and economic stagflation. George W. Bush did it after the 2001 terrorist attacks.

    Shifting priorities to push through his massive package of spending surges and tax cuts — many already on his or the Democratic agenda — was pivotal, because it's unclear how much Obama could get through Congress absent the crisis. Those who counseled him to wait on the big programmatic priorities and focus first only on fighting the economic downturn misunderstood that, but Obama got it.

    As he seeks to get his way, at home and abroad, Obama has demonstrated a penchant for working people one on one, apparently confident he can win over anyone.

    While he may be laying the groundwork for more civil relations with Republicans and legislative successes later, he won only three Republican Senate votes for his $787 billion stimulus package and none in the House, none from either chamber for his budget; he also failed to persuade European leaders to send combat troops to help in Afghanistan.

    "He has a difficult time persuading people," Edwards said. "He's been very good at maintaining his coalition. What he can't do is bring other people in."

    A careful communicator, Obama relies on the teleprompter more than any other president. When he speaks off the cuff, such as at town-hall meetings, he often pauses as though he's searching for precisely the right words.

    What Obama says is easily more important than how he says it.

    For example, he's shown a readiness to be pragmatic on some things as he's transitioned from campaigning to governing.

    Examples:

    • After talking to commanders, he slowed his proposed drawdown of troops from Iraq.

    • Heading to Turkey in search of help with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, he dropped a campaign pledge to say the killing of Armenians nearly a century ago was genocide.

    • To the dismay of liberals, he echoed Bush and argued that national security was threatened by two lawsuits alleging the torture of a suspected terrorist and the warrantless surveillance of two U.S. attorneys and an Islamic charity.

    Like most who become president, Obama is sure of himself. One example is his willingness to admit a mistake, such as when Tom Daschle, his nominee to be secretary of health and human services, was forced to withdraw after being caught in a tax mess. "I screwed up," Obama said.

    Another is his recent speech at Georgetown University explaining why he was trying to do so many things at once, using a biblical metaphor to say he wanted to make sure the nation's house was built on a solid foundation, on rock instead of sand.

    "The Obama team sensed that the message of him trying to do too much was starting to catch on," said Bruce Buchanan, a political scientist at the University of Texas. "He's very quick at damage control."

    Yet doubts about the size of Obama's agenda persist, and he's governing as a partisan, depending on party-line votes in Congress and particularly support from liberal allies such as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

    At ease with congressional Democrats, Obama defers to them to work out the details. He also set up staff to fire off e-mails to generate grass-roots support from 13 million backers and to attack foes such as Rush Limbaugh. Then he hits the road about once a week to sell the broader message.

    "It still has the look and feel of the campaign," said Michael Franc, a vice president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research organization.

    While Obama talks plenty of policy, he also uses a public-relations strategy to sell the softer side, chatting with Jay Leno, appearing on ESPN to reveal his college basketball picks and walking the new dog, Bo.

    The effect? His base loves him. Republicans, however, still aren't buying his agenda. A recent survey by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center found him with high approval from Democrats (93 percent) and independents (58 percent), but dismally low from Republicans (30 percent), concluding, "Barack Obama has the most polarized early job-approval ratings of any president in the past four decades."

    Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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