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January 23, 2013

Obama's First Term Was Shaped by Clashes With Big-Business Interests

By Lee Fang

For Obama's second term, even with a weaker position given the composition of Congress, he may succeed by returning to his community-organizing roots -- a recognition that social movements are an essential component in advancing progressive reforms over corporate or partisan opposition.

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Cross-posted from The Nation


(AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama begins his second term this week with reporters across the country attempting to size up the lessons from his first.

In assessing his first four years, however, the media are failing to address how much big money has become a reactionary force in American politics. Obama isn't just the first incumbent president forced to deal with a Citizens United election system; he's also faced unprecedented intransigence from America's largest corporations, a K Street culture in DC that seduces the brightest minds with bags of cash, and lobbyists more eager than ever to take policy battles to the grassroots.

The Hill, a Capitol Hill newspaper, says the young president is now aware of "how violently the political pendulum can swing." The conventional wisdom is that Obama came into office with sky-high approval ratings and a popular mandate; spent that political capital on a bruising health reform fight; failed to uphold expectations from his base and lost the House of Representatives in the midterm campaign; then, rallied from the low point of the debt ceiling negotiations to a commanding re-election campaign last year.

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Authors Website: http://thinkprogress.org/author/lee-fang

Authors Bio:
LEE FANG  Lee Fang is a  reporting fellow with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute. He covers money in politics, conservative movements and lobbying. Lee's work has resulted in multiple calls for hearings in Congress and the Federal Election Commission. His book on the campaign to block Obama's domestic priorities is slated for publication this winter.  Lee is a lifelong resident of Prince George's County, Maryland, and holds a B.A. in Government and Politics from the University of Maryland, College Park. Previously, Lee interned with ThinkProgress and worked as a researcher for Progressive Accountability. In college, Lee held internships with Media Matters for America, Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones, and Westin Rinehart.

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