Ryan Urges 'United Front'

Ryan says that he is very frustrated with how President Obama has handled the negotiations, especially in how he has painted Republicans as intransigent. Recent presidential press conferences, Ryan says, have notably soured the White House's relationship with the House GOP, perhaps to the point of no return. Such a development, he sighs, is unfortunate for the country, which wants the president to work with Congress. ... "[Obama] has made it harder to establish trust, which will make it harder to find compromise," Ryan says. "As much as he wants to come off as a leader, every time he talks about Republicans holding out to save fat-cat corporate-jet loopholes — which he knows is false — or leaks alleged spending cuts to the press, he reduces his leadership. He knows how that damages his credibility up here. Yet he continues to spin." Indeed, in almost every sense, Ryan says, Obama has been "fundamentally un-presidential" throughout the summer, "dragging his feet, failing to address the looming debt crisis — which he knows is coming — because he remains committed to his ideology." "This is, unfortunately, the way he operates," Ryan says. "This is his pattern of behavior, this is his personality. For the next 18 months, it will probably be like this. It'll be in-your-face class warfare, with bitter appeals to envy, fear, and anxiety, plus the demonization of the other side's motives." ... "Whenever I hear him speak now, I just shake my head and think, there he goes again," Ryan says. "When it comes to actually governing, leading and fixing fiscal problems, he is not in the game."