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newyorker:

Barack Obama, Post-Partisan, Meets Washington Gridlock

Each night, an Obama aide hands the President a  binder of documents to review. After his wife goes to bed, at around  ten, Obama works in his study, the Treaty Room, on the second floor of  the White House residence. President Bush preferred oral briefings;  Obama likes his advice in writing. He marks up the decision memos and  briefing materials with notes and questions in his neat cursive  handwriting. In the morning, each document is returned to his staff  secretary. She dates and stamps it—“Back from the OVAL”—and  often e-mails an index of the President’s handwritten notes to the  relevant senior staff and their assistants. A single Presidential  comment might change a legislative strategy, kill the proposal of a  well-meaning adviser, or initiate a bureaucratic process to answer a  Presidential question.
If the document is a decision memo, its  author usually includes options for Obama to check at the end. The  formatting is simple, but the decisions are not. As Obama told the Times,  early in his first term, Presidents are rarely called on to make the  easy choices. “Somebody noted to me that by the time something reaches  my desk, that means it’s really hard,” he said. “Because if it were  easy, somebody else would have made the decision and somebody else would  have solved it.”

- In  this week’s issue, Ryan Lizza provides an in-depth look at the first  three years of Obama’s Presidency, and through dozens of interviews with  White House insiders and hundreds of pages of internal White House  memos—which have never been released to the public—with Obama’s  handwritten notes, reveals how the President struggles with important  decisions:  http://nyr.kr/wXU5Ha

newyorker:

Barack Obama, Post-Partisan, Meets Washington Gridlock

Each night, an Obama aide hands the President a binder of documents to review. After his wife goes to bed, at around ten, Obama works in his study, the Treaty Room, on the second floor of the White House residence. President Bush preferred oral briefings; Obama likes his advice in writing. He marks up the decision memos and briefing materials with notes and questions in his neat cursive handwriting. In the morning, each document is returned to his staff secretary. She dates and stamps it—“Back from the OVAL”—and often e-mails an index of the President’s handwritten notes to the relevant senior staff and their assistants. A single Presidential comment might change a legislative strategy, kill the proposal of a well-meaning adviser, or initiate a bureaucratic process to answer a Presidential question.

If the document is a decision memo, its author usually includes options for Obama to check at the end. The formatting is simple, but the decisions are not. As Obama told the Times, early in his first term, Presidents are rarely called on to make the easy choices. “Somebody noted to me that by the time something reaches my desk, that means it’s really hard,” he said. “Because if it were easy, somebody else would have made the decision and somebody else would have solved it.”

- In this week’s issue, Ryan Lizza provides an in-depth look at the first three years of Obama’s Presidency, and through dozens of interviews with White House insiders and hundreds of pages of internal White House memos—which have never been released to the public—with Obama’s handwritten notes, reveals how the President struggles with important decisions:  http://nyr.kr/wXU5Ha

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  9. inbonobo reblogged this from newyorker and added:
    the downside of being literate: more time spent in the “decider” cape
  10. songforcrow reblogged this from newyorker
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  12. jennygdc reblogged this from newyorker and added:
    Very interesting…
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  16. clinejj reblogged this from newyorker and added:
    great read over at the newyorker:
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  21. onandonandon reblogged this from newyorker and added:
    Since the president is arriving at the poly airport today… This article seems appropriate… It would be so cool to meet...
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