June 25, 2010
By June Melton, III PE
The buck stops …. somewhere
There is little doubt that BP’s behavior in this matter is unjustified, but overcriticizing President Obama for the actions of a major oil company is, in my opinion, beginning to look excessive. After all, just as President George W. Bush had to do, Obama has had to depend on his team of advisors to help him. No one person, especially the President of the United States, can be expected to know all of the details or handle the problems all by himself. If the advisors misdirect the President, he has nowhere else to turn.
Democratic strategist Donna Brazile, appearing on ABC’s This Week June 13, 2010, tried to rebut criticism that President Obama isn’t doing enough to control the response to the oil spill. In a June 20, 2010 article titled “Government Has Power to Take Charge of Spill Response,” Austin American Statesman’s Aaron Sharockman wrote that Brazile had stated “The administration has been constrained by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, which basically gives the responsible party the lead role in trying to not only fix the problem, but contain the problem.” In actuality, the Act gives the president more authority during an oil event, not less, wrote Sharockman.
Thus Ms. Brazile has not helped the president by making the comments she has. Instead, she has given out misinformation that causes even more suspicion of the president’s actions.











