Obama asks Congress to meet him half way

AUSTIN, Texas — Taking a page from Harry Truman’s successful 1948 campaign against a “do-nothing Congress,” a loose and acerbic President Barack Obama on Thursday challenged Republicans in Congress to “do something.”

“If you’re mad at me for helping people on my own, let’s team up,” Obama said before an adoring crowd of nearly 1,300 people who packed the Paramount Theatre in downtown Austin for his speech. “Let’s pass some bills. Let’s help America together. It is lonely, me just doing stuff. I’d love if the Republicans did stuff, too.”

“And I want to work with them,” Obama insisted. “I don’t expect them to agree with me on everything, but at least agree with me on the things that you used to say you were for before I was for them. You used to be for building roads and infrastructure. Nothing has changed. Let’s go ahead and do it. Ronald Reagan passed immigration reform, and you love Ronald Reagan. Let’s go ahead and do it.”

Obama’s midday speech was the emotional high point of the president’s two days in Texas, which was focused on raising money to help Democratic candidates nationally heading into November’s midterm elections.

He had arrived in Austin from Dallas at 9:40 p.m. Wednesday and headed straight to filmmaker Robert Rodriguez’s castle-like home in Pemberton Heights for a high-dollar fundraiser. Just before the stroke of midnight, he was at his hotel – the Sheraton downtown. Thursday began with another Democratic National Committee fundraiser at the West Austin home of Aimee Boone Cunningham. While reporters were able to listen to Obama’s remarks at Wednesday night’s event, Thursday’s was closed to the media.

Obama took a lot of heat from Republicans and some Democrats for not taking time while in Texas to visit the Mexican border to see first-hand the repercussions of the massive influx of unaccompanied minors from Central America.

“This isn’t theater,” Obama said Wednesday in Dallas, rebuffing the calls for him to go to the border. “This is a problem. I’m not interested in photo ops.”

But Obama’s performance at the Paramount was great political theater.

Maybe it was the palpable mutual affection with his Austin audience.

“We love you,” were the first words shouted at him when he bounded onto the stage, sans jacket, his shirt sleeves rolled up.

“That’s because I love you,” the president replied. “Everybody knows I love Austin, Texas.”

Or maybe it was the particular political moment – six years into his presidency, frustrated with Washington gridlock and Republicans threatening to take control of the Senate.

Whatever it was, in his speech at the Paramount, Obama got his 2008 campaign groove back.

“It is great to play at the Paramount,” the president said. “I think I finally made it.”

Gone was any trace of an aloof or professorial president wallowing in a second-term slump.

Obama appeared weary — he admitted to being tired from his exhausting schedule — and exhilarated, leaning into his remarks and reviving themes of hope and change that had catapulted him into history. But now they were being delivered by a president, his hair well-flecked with gray, with the tempered edge of hard experience, laying into congressional Republicans who, he said, are more intent on breaking him than bettering America.

“I’m just telling the truth now. I don’t have to run for office again, so I can just let her rip,” Obama said.

The good news, he said, is that Republicans haven’t shut the government down this year, “but, of course, it’s only July.”

Republicans, he said, are furious with him for going it alone after they have scuttled what he considers simple ways to ease people’s struggles.

“Now, I don’t know which things they find most offensive – me helping to create jobs, or me raising wages, or me easing the student loan burdens, or me making sure women can find out whether they’re getting paid the same as men for doing the same job,” he said. “I don’t know which of these actions really bug them.”

“Maybe it’s just me they don’t like. I don’t know,” Obama said. “Maybe there’s some principle out there that I haven’t discerned, that I haven’t figured out. You hear some of them – ‘sue him,’ ‘impeach him.’ Really? Really? For what? You’re going to sue me for doing my job? OK.”

Obama drove the point home with a little Martin Scorsese.

“There’s a great movie called ‘The Departed’ – a little violent for kids,” Obama said. “But there’s a scene in the movie where Mark Wahlberg – they’re on a stakeout and somehow the guy loses the guy that they’re tracking. And Wahlberg is all upset and yelling at the guy. And the guy looks up and he says, ‘Well, who are you?’ And Wahlberg says, ‘I’m the guy doing my job. You must be the other guy.’ Sometimes, I feel like saying to these guys, ‘I’m the guy doing my job, you must be the other guy.’”

Throughout his speech, the president’s words were met with shouted affirmations from the audience — “Come on now,” and “Come on with it.”

“I felt like we were in church,” said Frank Alexander Sr., 79, of Cedar Creek, whose daughter, Debbie Alexander-Lucas of Pflugerville, had stood in line overnight with her daughter and cousin to get tickets, and, because it was one to a customer, paid two homeless people to stand in line with them so she could get a pair for her elderly parents.

“It was like a Baptist preacher’s sermon,” her father said. “Yes sir. Obama set it on fire.”

For her part, Alexander-Lucas was in tears.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Traffic idles while waiting for the lights to change along 33rd Avenue West on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Lynnwood seeks solutions to Costco traffic boondoggle

Let’s take a look at the troublesome intersection of 33rd Avenue W and 30th Place W, as Lynnwood weighs options for better traffic flow.

A memorial with small gifts surrounded a utility pole with a photograph of Ariel Garcia at the corner of Alpine Drive and Vesper Drive ion Wednesday, April 10, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Death of Everett boy, 4, spurs questions over lack of Amber Alert

Local police and court authorities were reluctant to address some key questions, when asked by a Daily Herald reporter this week.

The new Amazon fulfillment center under construction along 172nd Street NE in Arlington, just south of Arlington Municipal Airport. (Chuck Taylor / The Herald) 20210708
Frito-Lay leases massive building at Marysville business park

The company will move next door to Tesla and occupy a 300,0000-square-foot building at the Marysville business park.

FILE - A Boeing 737 Max jet prepares to land at Boeing Field following a test flight in Seattle, Sept. 30, 2020. Boeing said Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023, that it took more than 200 net orders for passenger airplanes in December and finished 2022 with its best year since 2018, which was before two deadly crashes involving its 737 Max jet and a pandemic that choked off demand for new planes. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)
Boeing’s $3.9B cash burn adds urgency to revival plan

Boeing’s first three months of the year have been overshadowed by the fallout from a near-catastrophic incident in January.

Police respond to a wrong way crash Thursday night on Highway 525 in Lynnwood after a police chase. (Photo provided by Washington State Department of Transportation)
Wrong-way driver accused of aggravated murder of Lynnwood woman, 83

The Kenmore man, 37, fled police, crashed into a GMC Yukon and killed Trudy Slanger on Highway 525, according to court papers.

A voter turns in a ballot on Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2024, outside the Snohomish County Courthouse in Everett, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
On fourth try, Arlington Heights voters overwhelmingly pass fire levy

Meanwhile, in another ballot that gave North County voters deja vu, Lakewood voters appeared to pass two levies for school funding.

Judge Whitney Rivera, who begins her appointment to Snohomish County Superior Court in May, stands in the Edmonds Municipal Court on Thursday, April 18, 2024, in Edmonds, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Judge thought her clerk ‘needed more challenge’; now, she’s her successor

Whitney Rivera will be the first judge of Pacific Islander descent to serve on the Snohomish County Superior Court bench.

In this Jan. 4, 2019 photo, workers and other officials gather outside the Sky Valley Education Center school in Monroe, Wash., before going inside to collect samples for testing. The samples were tested for PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, as well as dioxins and furans. A lawsuit filed on behalf of several families and teachers claims that officials failed to adequately respond to PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, in the school. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
Judge halves $784M for women exposed to Monsanto chemicals at Monroe school

Monsanto lawyers argued “arbitrary and excessive” damages in the Sky Valley Education Center case “cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny.”

Mukilteo Police Chief Andy Illyn and the graphic he created. He is currently attending the 10-week FBI National Academy in Quantico, Virginia. (Photo provided by Andy Illyn)
Help wanted: Unicorns for ‘pure magic’ career with Mukilteo police

“There’s a whole population who would be amazing police officers” but never considered it, the police chief said.

Officers respond to a ferry traffic disturbance Tuesday after a woman in a motorhome threatened to drive off the dock, authorities said. (Photo provided by Mukilteo Police Department)
Everett woman disrupts ferry, threatens to drive motorhome into water

Police arrested the woman at the Mukilteo ferry terminal Tuesday morning after using pepper-ball rounds to get her out.

Bothell
Man gets 75 years for terrorizing exes in Bothell, Mukilteo

In 2021, Joseph Sims broke into his ex-girlfriend’s home in Bothell and assaulted her. He went on a crime spree from there.

Allan and Frances Peterson, a woodworker and artist respectively, stand in the door of the old horse stable they turned into Milkwood on Sunday, March 31, 2024, in Index, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Old horse stall in Index is mini art gallery in the boonies

Frances and Allan Peterson showcase their art. And where else you can buy a souvenir Index pillow or dish towel?

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.