The Scott Pelley Saga Is Over at CBS News, but Not the Melodramatics...
New 'American Options Doctrine' Would Transform US-Israel Relations
The Associated Press Is Married to Protecting Islam at Any Cost
Scott Pelley and Bari Weiss Respond to Pelley's Termination From CBS
You Just Thought You Hated HOAs Before
California’s New Congressional Map May Have Just Backfired on Gavin Newsom
This Democrat Just Stormed Out of Marco Rubio's House Hearing
Michigan Rapper Sentenced to 10 Years for $63M Mail Theft Scheme
Two Foreign NIH Researchers Charged With Smuggling Monkeypox Into U.S.
USDA Finds $13.3 Million in Potential Ohio SNAP Fraud
'Reconciliation 3.0' Is Almost Here – And It Might Include the SAVE America Act
Four Republicans Join Democrats As U.S. House Passes Iran War Powers Resolution
Detransitioner Chloe Cole Testifies on Devastating Effects of Transition
Kansas Woman Sentenced for $450K Benefits Fraud Using Dead Relative’s Identity
Yes, People Still Voted for Eric Swalwell
OPINION

If Expectations Are Everything, Romney Will Win This Election

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
If Expectations Are Everything, Romney Will Win This Election

There are literally umpteen thousand quotes on the Internet about “expectations” and any one of them explains outright why Barack Obama will lose the upcoming election.

Advertisement

Let’s start with Alexander Pope: “Blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed.” I wager the Obama enthusiast from 2008 opining on the magical government checkbook sent forth to pay for her gas and mortgage is a little bit disappointed. Obama may have bought the auto industry outright and bailed out Freddie Mac but he hasn’t really gotten around to divvying out free gas and mortgages – yet.

Let’s hearken back to Epictetus: “People are disturbed not by things, but by the view they take of them.” The infamous White House stimulus jobs graph showing unemployment falling under the weight of massive green and deliciously subsidized government gigs leaves much to be desired as the inverse chart presents a more accurate picture of the current day job market.

Modern-day writer Robert Jordan describes a character in his graphic novel New Spring: “He was swimming in a sea of other people’s expectations. Men had drowned in seas like that.” Speaking of drowning in seas – upon winning the Democratic nomination Obama promised to literally slow the rise of the oceans. Preceding this Moses-like moment, Obama declared that he would “face this challenge with profound humility.” Nothing says humility like defeating anthropomorphic global warming with a single speech.

Let’s throw in some Samuel P. Huntington for good measure here: “Expectations should not always be taken as reality; because you never know when you will be disappointed.” This quote could easily be used to pile on any number of shattered expectations during the Obama administration: dismal jobs recovery; massive debt accrual; wasted political capital on Obamacare; racial divisiveness; stimulus fraud; and the like. And that’s just the complaints from the Right.

Advertisement

The Left has an equal number of grievances including upholding the Bush tax cuts; not closing Guantanamo; an Obamacare that didn’t do enough; lack of immigration reform… the list goes on. Across the political spectrum Obama is suffering the results of high expectations failure.

Let’s get serious. Time for some Peter Drucker: “Checking the results of a decision against its expectations shows executives what their strengths are, where they need to improve, and where they lack knowledge or information.” It seems Obama did not have the toolset to gauge what can be promised and what can be delivered. No doubt Romney studied Drucker and today he has no expectations handicap. Indeed, it seems that Romney makes a point of setting expectations low. Republicans certainly didn’t expect much of him, liberals expect much less, and Romney is in no hurry to correct those biases. Setting the bar low and clearing it handily is always better than knocking the bar down outright.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement