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Monthly Archives: November 2014

Obama’s health-care legacy will survive even if the Supreme Court guts Obamacare

13 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by Tod Lindberg in New Republic

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New Republic

he first time the Supreme Court took a case on Obamacare, most supporters of the law responded with derision. Who could take seriously the argument that the “individual mandate” was unconstitutional? In fact, the conservative Supreme Court majority could—though Chief Justice John Roberts ultimately spared the law by reconstruing the penalty for failing to comply with the mandate as a tax within the power of the Congress to impose.

This time, however—now that the Court has decided to hear a challenge to the subsidies available for insurance purchased on the federal exchanges—the reaction among supporters has been different. “Panic” might go a little too far—until you reckon in the equally urgent calls among supporters for everyone not to panic. Continue reading →

Big Sticks

11 Tuesday Nov 2014

Posted by Tod Lindberg in Columbia Magazine

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Columbia Magazine

Maximalist: America in the World from Truman to Obama
By Stephen Sestanovich

When Lyndon Johnson assumed the presidency in 1963 after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, his top priority was the large-scale program of domestic-policy reform that he would call the Great Society. As his term progressed, however, he found his attention and that of his advisers increasingly commanded by the war in Vietnam. In Stephen Sestanovich’s telling in Maximalist: America in the World from Truman to Obama, while Johnson was deeply skeptical about the utility of increased US involvement, his advisers largely were not: they unanimously favored escalation, differing only on the degree. Thus, the leader of the free world ended up feeling trapped in a policy he didn’t really believe in, one that would ultimately consume his presidency.

The intimate relationship between presidents and their closest foreign-policy advisers is Sestanovich’s subject in Maximalist. This is not a conventional history, nor a diplomatic history, but an extended interpretive essay. The questions Sestanovich asks are straightforward and revealing: What did these presidents want to achieve in office with regard to national security and foreign policy? To what extent did events and external circumstances constrain them? How did their closest advisers influence them? And finally, were they successful, in achieving their objectives and in doing well by the country they led? Continue reading →

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