Quantcast Centurion
College Media Network

Current Issue:

First year review of Obama

JESSE TROUT

Issue date: 2/23/10 Section: Campus News
  • Print
  • Email

As today's media-driven
society grows increasingly
fascinated with politics, we
also feel the growing need
to choose sides and take a
strong, unwavering stance
either in absolute support of
the president or in complete
opposition to his actions
and decisions.
In President Barack
Obama's first year in office,
he has witnessed firsthand
the effects of this political
"tug-of-war."
FOX News, for example,
caters to conservatives
whereas MSNBC's target
audience is liberals, and
both news outlets stick to
their guns. These stations
have portrayed Obama's
first year as either an epic
failure, which FOX would
like to have you believe, or
as the greatest first year any
President has had since
Franklin Roosevelt,
MSNBC's position.
According to political science
Professor Greg Pezza,
it's still too early to jump to
any type of conclusion:
"Yes, the first year has been
a rocky road at some points,
but it's nothing out of the
ordinary. Even Reagan and
Clinton had similar numbers
after their first years."
While the hosts at FOX
and MSNBC battle to keep their niche audiences, the
reality and truth about
Obama's presidency rests
somewhere in between their
two positions. Pezza
believes that "alarmists"
have made Obama's first
year seem worse than it
really has been. But the
lofty goals he set and his
great ability to inspire could
have caused Americans to
"expect too much, too
soon," resulting in the current
doubt.
During every presidency
there are challenging and
difficult decisions that have
to be made, and Obama's
first year was no different.
Faced with an out of control
economy and two wars, he
had to respond almost
immediately. Pezza feels
that Obama's decision on
the war in Afghanistan has
been the issue he's handled
best thus far. "He went
against his own party (the
Democrats) and made the
tough decision that he felt
was necessary," said Pezza.
Yet he was still getting
ripped from both sides, by
Democrats for sending even
more troops and by
Republicans for not sending
enough troops. Both FOX
and MSNBC played heavily
on this issue.
Another hot-button issue
that has been debated
nationwide since Obama's
first day in office is healthcare
reform. While Pezza
thinks the details of the bill
were acceptable, he feels
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2

Research Paper Writers

posted 3/08/10 @ 3:58 PM EST

Nothin' was, nothin' is and nothin' will be. This is my forecast.

Custom Writing Service

posted 4/22/10 @ 9:00 AM EST

I must admit, great review!

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.