WASHINGTON (AFP) – Elected in 2008 on a
“hope and change” mantra and vowing an end to bitter partisan politics,
President Barack Obama admitted in remarks released Sunday that he had failed
to close the divide.
“Washington feels as broken as it did four
years ago,” Obama said in an interview with CBS television, betraying the fact
that Congress is more polarized than ever between rival Republicans and
Democrats.
The past three-and-a-half years have been
marked by blanket Republican opposition to Democratic initiatives as Obama’s
opponents adopt a policy that any compromise that helps the president must be
snuffed out at all cost.
Democrats, in turn, have refused to budge
on protecting large social programs and insist that the wealthiest Americans
should pay more tax if the poorest are to lose some of their state benefits.
Having struggled to break out of the
stalemate, Obama said the fact that he hadn’t “been able to change the
atmosphere here in Washington to reflect the decency and common sense of
ordinary people” frustrated him most.
“There’s no doubt that I underestimated
the degree to which in this town politics trump problem solving,” he said. “One
of the things you learn in this office is everything takes a little longer than
you’d like.”
Obama, battling stubbornly high
unemployment and slow growth that have hurt his re-election chances, said the
US electorate would decide in November whether he or his Republican opponent,
Mitt Romney, have the best solutions.
“The most important issue we face as a
country is how do we build an economy where the middle-class is strong and
growing, and those who are willing to work hard can fight their way into the
middle-class,” he said.
“The question right now for the American
people is which vision, mine or Mr Romney’s is most likely to deliver for those
folks, because that is where the majority of American people live.”

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