I really am not sure what to make of this article. The title brought me in. The substance seemed almost like a Fox News type description of the interaction in the White House. After so much was accomplished, in spite of GOP 100% obstructionist stance one would expect an article of this type analyzing how with such obstacle how so much substantive legislation got passed.
The internal grumbling is nothing new and is a part of human relationships. To state that human relationships were somehow to blame for the failures of focus on unemployment seems contraindicative when much of the stimulative policies that were actually initially discussed stood no chance of passage.
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Some revelations about the Obama administration detailed in the new epilogue to the upcoming paperback release of Jonathan Alter’s bestseller, "The Promise," probably won’t please too many folks at the White House. Alter claims that a dysfunctional relationship between top White House aides hurt the administration’s policy on job creation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was almost dropped from financial reform legislation and was only reinstated after complaints by Elizabeth Warren, and Bill Clinton continually grumbles about being disrespected by the administration.
The Obama administration’s perceived failure to take laser-like aim at the unemployment crisis was partly due to the dysfunctional relationship between White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel, top economic adviser Larry Summers and senior adviser David Axelrod, specifically the intransigence of Summers, according to Alter:
"The inability to pivot in 2010 to a single-minded focus on jobs was a by-product of what one senior aide called "dysfunction" between Emanuel, Summers, and Axelrod. Rahm had always admired Larry, but he was becoming exasperated with his failure to give him a jobs plan he could sell. ‘Week after week, Rahm would say, ‘Let’s explore this’ or ‘How about that?’ and Larry would slow-walk everything,’ recalled one senior advisor. ‘He basically doesn’t believe in the government helping small business’."
Alter writes that the CFPB survived certain death only because of Warren’s commitment:
"The most popular provision of Dodd-Frank almost didn’t happen. In late 2009 Elizabeth Warren learned that a proposed bureau of consumer financial protection had been dropped from the bill. She went to the White House to object, and the bureau, to the dismay of predatory lenders, was reinstated."