Vacation’s over.
After a week-long family getaway in Martha’s Vineyard, President Obama is back in Washington D.C. And while he was expected to take the rest of August to pick up on his economic agenda, it looks like the world has other plans for him.
Obama is mired in foreign policy and national security drama. A bloody crackdown by security forces in Egypt on protest camps of those loyal to ousted President Mohammed Morsi last week has left as many as 800 people dead. And though the Obama administration has condemned the violence, the fate of the more than $1 billion America gives Egypt a year in aid languishes in review.
Adding to Obama’s foreign-affairs headache, the Washington Post recently published a damning internal National Security Agency audit leaked by former contractor Edward Snowden. It showed the government agency violated thousands of privacy rules since 2008, including – mostly unintentionally –the interception of private communication via email and phone calls without proper authorization.
Obama is expected to embark on a bus tour later this week through New York and Pennsylvania – in which he’s supposed to talk about the economy and strengthening the middle class. It’s an area he needs to improve on, with the 2014 midterms fast approaching. According to a new Gallup poll, Obama’s economic approval is a meager 35% — down from 42% in June. And while it’s supposed to be just the latest in a series of economic speeches he’s set to give, the commander-in-chief may instead be facing growing questions on Egypt and the NSA.
It’s not a story Obama’s unfamiliar with. Over the summer, he kicked off a Middle Class Jobs and Opportunities tour. He focused on the economy and housing, even calling on winding down mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in Phoenix. He also reaffirmed his commitment to “rebuild the middle class” with a series of speeches in Galesburg, Ill., Jacksonville, Fla. and Chattanooga, Tenn.
However, much of the attention turned away from his domestic agenda and onto his foreign and national security one after Russian President Vladimir Putin granted temporary asylum to Snowden, which resulted in Obama canceling his Moscow summit with the Russian leader. Obama also announced plans to pursue reforms on the NSA’s surveillance programs.
And now, Obama’s economic agenda seems to have taken a backseat once again.
The Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza said the commander-in-chief had the “worst week in Washington.”









