In a sharp column entitled "The Pundit Delusion," The New York Times' Paul Krugman recently (and rightfully) lamented that the White House seems often to care more about looking like it supports elite pundit consensus than about championing empirically good (and widely popular) policy. This is undoubtedly true, as evidenced by the administration's deficit fetishization that Krugman cites. To be focused on deficit reduction instead of job creation right now is both ludicrously bad economic policy (as evidenced by history) and wildly unpopular (as evidenced by numerous recent polls - including one even from Fox News).
But you don't have to look at particular policies to know that the Obama administration is more obsessed with attracting approval from out-of-touch Washington pundits than with meritorious policy and/or attracting approval from America at large. You can look at this recent lead in a New York magazine profile of the avatar of the insulated and oft-discredited Beltway Punditocracy:
Every Monday and Thursday, as his deadline approaches, Brooks gets a call from someone in the White House - "I'm not going to say who," he says, which means Rahm - asking if tomorrow is going to be a good day...Write this off as trivial anecdote at your peril. When couplDavid Sirota: The Roots of Obama's "Pundit Delusion"Obama's team has courted Brooks assiduously. Emanuel once arranged for Obama to swing by a meeting he and Axelrod were having with Brooks...At (a) meeting with journalists, Brooks sat next to Obama, who would periodically turn to Brooks and point out that the policy being discussed was quite Burkean. "You could tell he was really conscious of his presence," says his Times colleague Gail Collins.
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