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DorobekINSIDER: Scoring the president’s first term

On the DorobekINSIDER

Your Democratic National Convention Roundup

Nicholas D. Kristof in The New York Times has unveiled Obama’s first-term report card. He says Obama has been disappointing in many ways. The economy gets a B; education, an A-; foreign policy, a B+.

But the real issue is not what he did but how he communicated it: He failed. “A president’s central job is not policy wonk but national team captain,” Kristof writes. “There Obama failed us.”

We want to know what you think. What grade would you give the president for his first term in office? Take our poll.

Bob Woodward’s new book chronicles Obama’s fiscal policy battle with congressional Republicans.

A combination of miscalculations, ideological rigidity and discord within the leadership of both political parties brought the U.S. government to the brink of a catastrophic default during the 2011 showdown over the federal debt ceiling, according to a new book by journalist Bob Woodward. “The Price of Politics,” Woodward’s 17th book, chronicles President Obama’s contentious and still unresolved fiscal policy battle with congressional Republicans that dominated the White House agenda for nearly all of 2011.

Onto the actual convention: Last night President Clinton broke the record for longest Democratic National Convention speech lasting more than 45 minutes.

The Washington Post said, “Former President Bill Clinton presented a lively defense of President Obama. His message: The country is “clearly better off” than it was before Obama took office and many of the country’s ills were “inherited” from Republicans.”

The Post says President Clinton’s speech also recorded almost a half million tweets.

And in some bipartisan action, both sides agree that the Electric grid security needs updated. “Both Republicans and Democrats are advocting for improved cybersecurity in their platforms, an Obama official. The administration has called on Congress to approve new federal authority to manage cybersecurity on the electric grid. The need for mitigating cybersecurity at the electric utility level is urgent, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Jon Wellinghoff said.” Zack Colman in The Hill.

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