Barack Obama
Matt Rourke  /  AP
President Barack Obama pauses while making remarks at Gamesa Technology Corporation in Fairless Hills, Pa., on Wednesday.
By
updated 4/7/2011 8:25:41 AM ET 2011-04-07T12:25:41

Suddenly everyone in Washington wants to be an adult.

President Barack Obama says he wants to have an adult dialogue on the budget. Republican lawmakers contend they're the ones trying to have a grown-up talk. Both sides are pointing fingers yet both have agreed to repeated delays in completing a budget to keep the government open for the last six months of the fiscal year.

The bickering might seem, well, childish, but the stakes are high as each side tries to win public opinion and display the leadership qualities to attract voters at the ballot box through 2012 and beyond.

The rhetoric heated up this week with Republicans and Democrats jockeying furiously for advantage as the prospect of a government shutdown Friday grew more real. Each day that passes with no deal seems to bring more talk of who's an adult and who's not.

  1. Other political news of note
    1. IRS official Lerner placed on leave

      Lois Lerner, the IRS official who oversees the agency’s division in charge of tax-exempt organizations, has been placed on administrative leave, a source told NBC News on Thursday.

    2. Heckler repeatedly interrupts Obama speech
    3. Immigration advocates steel for Senate slog
    4. Obama reframes counterterrorism policy with new rules on drones
    5. Reid signals delay in potential fight over Senate rules change

Obama on Tuesday emerged from a meeting with Democratic and Republican leaders and proposed "that we act like grownups."

Story: Obama: Progress, but no deal to avert shutdown

That same day House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., released a budget plan calling for dramatic cuts and laid down a challenge to Obama: "Americans are ready for honest talk. They're ready to be spoken to like adults."

When the White House attacked Ryan's plan, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, jumped in to criticize the president.

"If he wants to have an 'adult conversation' about solving our fiscal challenges, he needs to lead instead of sitting on the sidelines," the speaker said Wednesday.

Story: Poll: Democrats want compromise, Republicans prefer resolve

Then the Republican National Committee added its voice, accusing Obama of ducking a meeting on the budget. "Adults don't say one thing and do another," the committee said.

Trying to get above the fray
Later Wednesday it was Obama trying to seize back the adult mantle at a town hall meeting in Pennsylvania. Voters, he said, want politicians to "act like adults, quit playing games, realize it's not just 'my way or the highway.'"

For Obama, who first called for an adult conversation on long-term fiscal issues at a press conference in February, it's an attempt to put himself above the partisan fray, demonstrate firm leadership in a chaotic world and remind voters of his promise to change the way politics works in Washington.

For their part, Republicans are trying to set themselves up as the ones who can tackle the tough issues of leading Washington through the economic recovery and bringing down debts and deficits over the long term.

To voters, though, it might sound like the typical Washington back-and-forth, not adult behavior at all.

Yet perhaps for a politician the only thing worse than not acting like an adult, is acting like one, said Jack Pitney, a politics professor at Claremont McKenna College in Southern California.

"Most people would agree that politicians should act like adults by making tough choices even when they are unpopular. So it's popular for politicians to say that they'll do the unpopular thing. But when they actually do the unpopular thing, they are ... unpopular," Pitney said. "The lessons of adulthood are seldom happy ones."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Video: Federal shutdown looms as talks crawl

  1. Closed captioning of: Federal shutdown looms as talks crawl

    >> you. we've got john boehner saying there's progress but no deal. harry reid saying he's expressing confidence. the president is expressing confidence. how hopeful is the white house ?

    >> reporter: it's very touch and go. make no mistake about it. this is not one of those faux government shutdown threats. this very well could happen. one positive sign is some of that public recrimination and sparring isn't happening the way it was happening 24 hours ago, the same people who were grousing on the phone yesterday won't do so today. that suggests people are working toward a deal. the number crunchers were here well past midnight . there are really just a fill billion apart, which in the context of a $3.5 trillion budget it's not that much. it's also what the republicans feel strongly about, the defunding of the planned parenthood . ultimately the deal could break down over those kind of issues.

    >> so if the government is shut down, there'll be political price to pay. we're hearing a lot of guessing games are about where that blame will go. where does the white house calculate in that regard?

    >> reporter: i think it's clear the president doesn't want a shutdown. i think the leaders don't want a shutdown for the simple reason nobody knows who the american people would ultimately blame. back in the '90s the republicans got the blame. our own nbc " wall street journal " poll shows that the blame kind of gets spread around equally. i'll say one thing. the president knows that if the government is shut down and there's some kind of problem with the recovery, that it affects the economic recovery. he will get blamed for that, and that's one reason the white house is working very hard to avoid this outcome.

    >> thanks very much.

Interactive: Budget brinkmanship

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

Most active discussions

  1. votes comments
  2. votes comments
  3. votes comments
  4. votes comments
  1. Barack Obama
    Matt Rourke / AP
    Jump to text

    Suddenly everyone in Washington wants to be an a...

  2. Jump to video

    Federal shutdown looms as talks cra...

  3. Jump to interactive

    Budget brinkmanship

  4. Jump to discussion

    In Washington, squabbling over who's an adult