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President-elect Barack Obama won’t have much time to savor his
historic victory as the 44th president of the United States. It
may be an exaggeration to say that becoming the first
African-American president of the United States was easy compared to
what comes next, but there’s much truth in it.
Obama and his aides have been quietly planning the transition
and the first 100 days for weeks, hoping to use the superb
organizational skills that helped win the election to get a new
administration up and running in record time.
Obama must now move quickly on several fronts. He must reach
out to reassure Republicans, independents and those Democrats who
didn’t think he was up to the job. He’ll move to restore public
confidence and signal his intentions in Iraq and Afghanistan. The
freshness of his election will probably boost optimism among the
huge number of Americans eager for change, and Obama will try to
channel that into a mandate for many of the things he wants to do.
Mandates are easier claimed than realized, however, even with large
Democratic majorities in the House and Senate, as Obama will find
when he tries to tackle the 10 big challenges he’ll face first.
1) Naming his economic, foreign policy and defense and security
team. He’ll move on this very soon, perhaps within days. The aim
is to send a message to the markets and to foreign leaders that a
smooth transition – even if it brings a host of policy changes – is
coming.
2) The economy. The economy will dominate Obama’s first year,
and maybe his entire term. He’ll start to put his imprint on the
issue within days by urging Congress to pass a stimulus bill in a
lame duck session in November. Obama has called for another round of
rebates, aid to states, an extension of jobless benefits, new
spending for roads and other infrastructure needs and a new tax
credit for domestic hiring. The president-elect will have to decide
how far to go in pushing for what he wants even before taking office
and how much to compromise with Republicans, who favor a smaller
package.
3) Financial market fix. Obama’s economic team will get
involved quickly with the implementation of the $700 billion debt
rescue plan. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has said he wants to
involve officials of the new administration in the debt rescue
effort as soon as possible. Obama supports giving the Treasury
Department and the FDIC wide latitude to move rapidly where needed
to save teetering institutions and promote credit lending. The
unprecedented government intervention will be a major headache for
months, if not years.
4) Economic summits. President Bush will consult with Obama
on plans for the world economic summit on Nov. 15. The aim of the
meeting is to set out goals for a new worldwide financial regulatory
framework and foreign leaders will want to be sure that Obama and
Bush are on the same track. The meeting will bring to Washington two
dozen world leaders, many of whom may get a chance to meet privately
with the president-elect.
5) Naming remaining cabinet. Immediately after naming his
economic and national security teams, Obama will set to work on the
rest of the Cabinet. His transition team has already narrowed the
list of potential picks and relatively early decisions are likely.
He’ll name some Republicans to show he’s serious about wanting to
end the partisan divides that infect Washington. All in all, Obama
has about 5000 political appointees to name, as well as ambassadors.
About one in five requires Senate confirmation, a process that takes
time.
6) Iraq and Afghanistan. Obama will meet soon with military
commanders and the Joint Chiefs of Staff to plan an orderly
reduction of troops from Iraq and an increase of troops in
Afghanistan. General timelines will be mentioned, but no firm
deadlines will be set. The U.S. will have a significant presence in
Iraq for a few years yet.
7) Regulatory environment. Obama will try to reverse many
late Bush initiatives and then set to work on several changes aimed
at tightening regulations at the SEC for investment banks, hedge
funds and credit rating firms.
8) Setting a legislative agenda. Obama’s first challenge will
be to unify Democrats behind his agenda, rather than be pulled along
by congressional leaders, who have a long list of pent-up
priorities. Obama will have to decide whether to move quickly on
major issues such as health care, climate change, energy and tax
plans or aim lower initially and get some legislative wins under his
belt on less controversial issues such as children’s health care,
stem cell research and a new federal aviation law. Best bet is that
Obama will try to set a bold agenda, but move cautiously to rack up
some early wins. Republicans will want to cooperate to some extent
rather than risk getting tagged as obstructionists, but they will
stick together and block some moves, lest they appear irrelevant to
their supporters.
9) Dealing with the deficit. It will haunt his domestic
plans, requiring him to scale back on investments in green
technology research, student loan assistance and possibly a middle
class tax cut. He won’t scrap his ideas, but some will be pared back
and delayed. It’s possible a staggering $1 trillion deficit will be
on the books next year, due to the financial and housing market
rescue.
10) Foreign relations. Obama is unlikely to start with a
flurry of foreign trips, but he will need to establish good initial
communications and relations as president-elect with allies the
world over. He’ll turn early to the Palestinian issue, as well as
with the threat of a nuclear Iran.
L