Opinion & Analysis

The Obama Corollary

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US President Barack Obama. Photo/REUTERS

US President Barack Obama. Photo/REUTERS 

By MACHARIA MUNENE  (email the author)
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Posted Tuesday, November 3 2009 at 00:00

Throughout American history, presidents have made major pronouncements or taken some action that make them stand out or be remembered for having set direction.

Some pronouncements are derived from experience or clear analysis of existing situations and have long lasting impact and are considered so crucial to the setting of policy that they are nicknamed “doctrine”.

Those that are perceived to be derived from “doctrines” are occasionally labelled “corollary”.

Corollaries are improvements to a given doctrine that are issued by a future president in responding to prevailing conditions.

The latest of the “doctrines” appears to be the “Bush Doctrine” that is seemingly reinforced by what can be termed the “Obama Corollary.”

Not all important pronouncements that influence policy are termed “doctrine” or “corollary”.

For instance, Washington’s “Farewell Address” which he gave on his way out of office after two terms was a reflection, and a warning, on the hazards facing a young country.

Noting the tendency for political factions to obstruct national focus, he advised against development of what would become political parties, the Americans ignored him.

He also noted the danger of his country being beholden to any foreign power and warned against trusting, or having permanent alliances with, any other country.

For roughly 150 years, the Americans tried to follow this injunction.

There was Abraham Lincoln’s 1863 Gettysburg Address in the midst of the civil war, which gave the North a moral high ground.

Lincoln redefined the objective of that war from simply being preservation of a union to one of promoting the cause of freedom so that a government of the people by the people and for the people that was conceived in liberty would not perish from the face of the earth.

Although the union was maintained, it took a long time before any of the liberties could be enjoyed by many of the people who had been slaves.

This necessitated the civil rights movement led by Douglass, Du Bois, Randolph, and King.

Along the way, civil rights had to contend with Woodrow Wilson who rapidly acquired the presidency seemingly without having mastered nuances of American domestic politics.

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