Obama (finally) plays recess hardball
The president ignores GOP obstructionism and appoints Richard Cordray as chief consumer finance watchdog
Topics: Barack Obama, News
President Barack Obama, accompanied by Richard Cordray, speaks during his visits with William and Endia Eason, not pictured, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2012, at their home in Cleveland, Ohio. (Credit: AP/Haraz N. Ghanbari)On a day when political reporters and Republicans feverishly convulsed in an orgy of Iowa-caucus post-mortems, President Barack Obama made a clear campaign statement of his own on Wednesday. While visiting Ohio, sure to be a crucial battleground state in November, he announced the recess appointment of Ohio native son Richard Cordray as director of the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau.
Republicans immediately denounced the move as ” an extraordinary and entirely unprecedented power grab” that “would have a devastating effect on the checks and balances that are enshrined in our constitution.” The GOP’s ideal solution is to nullify the CFPB from existence, and Obama is refusing to accommodate them. So liberals are cheering. The Corddray appointment is a smart move. No matter how pissed off the GOP gets, it is difficult to imagine that the current state of political gridlock could get any worse. Meanwhile, with one swift decision, Obama has encouraged his own base, continued to double down on his recent populist emphasis, and signaled that while Republicans bicker their way through a primary fight, the president is going to govern as he sees fit. He’s also standing by one of the signature pieces of legislation passed in his term, the Dodd-Frank bank reform bill. That’s all good.
Republicans are particularly annoyed because Obama has decided to ignore GOP maneuvers designed to pretend that the Senate had never technically gone into “recess” long enough to allow a recess appointment. The administration effectively said “neener, neener”: we don’t care what you say, we’re making our appointment anyway. Partisans will decide for themselves which party has made more of a mockery of constitutional checks and balances, but there’s probably even good legal justification for Obama’s move.
But if you’re wondering just how wild and reckless Obama is acting, a review of the facts is eye-opening: Cordray marks only Obama’s 29th recess appointment, which puts him far, far behind every president since Ronald Reagan. George W. made 171 such appointments, Clinton made 139, George H. W. made 77, and Reagan made a whopping 243. In the face of an opposition party more determined to block the agenda of a sitting president than any we can recall in living memory, Obama has been by far the most restrained chief executive in response.
Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard.




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