Informed Vote 2012: Obama's pulpit is bully, but GOP keeps charging

By Charles Babington Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) -- Running for re-election, President Barack Obama is employing powers not available to his Republican challengers. Just last week he held town halls in three states, arriving in grand style on Air Force One and granting coveted interviews to local TV news anchors. He doesn't have the field entirely to himself and his poll numbers are sagging a bit as he feuds with Republicans over spending and deficit cutting. With Congress in recess, dozens of GOP lawmakers are holding their own events to tell constituents why they believe they have a better plan for cutting spending and revamping social programs. Obama's approval ratings are among the lowest of his presidency. Ratings for Congress, and for his potential Republican challengers, appear even lower. In at least one area -- the ability to reach voters through an array of methods and outlets -- the president holds a clear advantage. "No member of Congress, no speaker of the House, no senator can command the public's attention the way a sitting president can," said Joel Johnson, a lobbyist and former top aide to President Bill Clinton. Obama is using two main techniques: question-and-answer sessions outside Washington and local TV interviews in the White House Map Room. As with most first-term presidents, the events overwhelmingly target states that will be election battlegrounds. On Monday, Obama submitted to four one-on-one interviews with TV affiliate stations, a format that often generates several days of near-breathless coverage in key markets. Three of the stations were from states that Obama won in 2008 and hopes to win again: Indiana, North Carolina and Nevada. The fourth station was from Dallas. Obama has little hope of carrying Texas next year. But it's an important fundraising state for both parties, and Democrats have long-term hopes for Texas as its Hispanic population soars. Obama's other favorite forum is the town hall. As he often did during his 2008 campaign, Obama visits a school or workplace, makes opening remarks and then takes several questions from an audience that's usually, but not always, friendly. Last Tuesday, Obama told a cheering crowd at Northern Virginia Community College that he welcomed the chance "to get out of the immediate environs of Washington and hear directly from voters." In fact, he was barely outside the Capital Beltway, and a short drive from the White House. Obama touted his plan to reduce deficit spending by $4 trillion over 12 years, in part by raising taxes on households making more than $250,000, after 2012. Republicans oppose such tax hikes. The Republicans' plan to convert Medicare to a voucher program, Obama said, would require retirees to pay twice as much for health care. "That is the wrong way to go," he said. Even with all his powers, a president can control only so much. Obama, for instance, sometimes gets hostile or maddeningly arcane questions at town hall meetings. And on Monday, at least one of the local TV interviews was far from ideal. Brad Watson of WFAA in Dallas interrupted so many times that when they finished, an unsmiling Obama said: "Let me finish my answers the next time we do an interview, all right?" Watson's questions had included, "Why do you think you're so unpopular in Texas?" The Dallas Morning News wrote about the exchange, and it circulated widely on Tuesday. Obama held a town hall meeting Wednesday at the Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., then attended a Democratic fundraiser in San Francisco. On Thursday he attended another a town hall in Reno, Nev., and a fundraiser in Los Angeles. In this age of Twitter, YouTube and dwindling viewership of broadcast evening news, a president must use every resource available, said White House press secretary Jay Carney. "It's a mix of traditional media, new media, national media, regional media," Carney told reporters. "You've got to reach Americans where they are." Republicans acknowledge that Obama's 2008 campaign bested them at using social media to raise money and fire up supporters. Dana Perino, press secretary to former President George W. Bush, says Republicans are catching up in that area. Jennifer Palmieri, who was a press aide to Clinton, said Obama is smart to use all the media tricks in his bag, but nothing will keep Republicans from fiercely attacking him. They just might have to work a bit harder. In 2005, Democrats blocked Bush's bid to partly privatize Social Security, largely because Bush had failed to persuade the public that the program was in trouble. Now, with voters more concerned about deficit spending than usual, Obama can't afford to say that Medicare, Medicaid and eventually Social Security cannot be touched. He simply has to convince them that his ideas for change are better than the Republicans'. Published: Tue, Apr 26, 2011