Long gone are the days when President Obama would gift House Speaker John Boehner a pricey bottle of Tuscan wine to celebrate his birthday — or invite his chief Republican adversary to join him for a round of golf.
And these days, with the 2014 midterms approaching and House Republicans planing to sue the commander-in-chief, Boehner is letting loose more anti-Obama rhetoric these days than at anytime in recent memory.
Seventeen of Boehner’s past 50 tweets — a full one-third — criticize Obama on a host of issues, including healthcare, the nation’s debt, the president’s “war on coal” and immigration. “Do your job, Mr. President,” Boehner writes. Press releases and his “Speaker’s blog” are inundated with criticism too, with headlines like “10 reasons ObamaCare is ‘more unpopular than ever,’” “Will President Obama follow through on his promises to veterans?” and criticizing what he sees as a lack of leadership, strategy in Iraq, and job creation.
It seems like for every Obama action, there is an equal and opposite Boehner reaction. Of course, it’s nothing new for a president and speaker of an opposite party (We’re looking at you, Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich) to be in constant battles with one another. But these days, Boehner’s preoccupation with Obama seems reflexive, vehement, and all-encompassing.
What is President Obama’s #Iraq strategy? http://t.co/BtzEt8mtgJ
— Speaker John Boehner (@SpeakerBoehner) August 12, 2014
According to a recent survey, #ObamaCare is "more unpopular than ever." Here’s why: http://t.co/Akt9cxuRy8
— Speaker John Boehner (@SpeakerBoehner) August 11, 2014
Wrote an op-ed featured in @Politico today entitled, "Do your job, Mr. President" → http://t.co/oU2VJEu6KI
— Speaker John Boehner (@SpeakerBoehner) August 8, 2014
It all boils down to one thing: the 2014 midterms. Boehner is hoping to capitalize on Obama’s flagging poll numbers ahead of the November contests since the GOP is the odds-on favorite not only to comfortably keep the House, but to potentially win back the Senate, too.
“Most midterm elections are a referendum on the president and I think the Speaker is rightfully turning attention to the president’s job performance,” said Republican strategist John Feehery, a longtime top aide to former GOP House Speaker Dennis Hastert.
However, GOP strategist Roger Stone, who worked for both the Nixon and Reagan administrations, said the increased Boehner attacks on Obama seem personal in nature and that it could backfire.
“There’s enormous risk of sounding unduly partisan. There’s very little credibility in Washington for either party right now,” he said, adding that because the GOP is so fractured, enmity toward Obama may be the only thing the party can agree on.
“There’s enormous pressure on Boehner because he has a very diverse caucus. Getting the Tea Party types to go along with any type of reasonable reform is not easy,” said Stone. Because of that, the GOP has struggled to define what it stands for.








