Politics | Gulf oil spill Obama Should Channel Eisenhower, Jimmy Carter President can learn from his forebears for his speech tonight By Nick McMaster Posted Jun 15, 2010 2:43 PM CDT Copied President Obama speaks to military personnel at Naval Air Station Pensacola's Naval Air Technical Training Center in Pensacola, Fla., Tuesday. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) Expectations are running high for President Obama's Oval Office speech tonight. James Fallows of the Atlantic proposes three presidential examples with which to evaluate it: Himself: Obama has proven he knows how to use a big speech to "shift political momentum" and introduce long-term thinking about a policy problem. "If the day after the speech we're saying, 'OK, I see where he's headed,' that will be a sign of success.'" Ike: Dwight Eisenhower used the Sputnik launch in 1957 to show Americans how years of mistakes had caught up with them. Obama can use the spill to finally get us thinking realistically about ending our dependence on oil. Jimmy Carter: The "malaise" speech, while not remembered as successful, was actually effective at first. "Carter talked tough about energy policy and government gridlock and was well received for a while. His speechwriters should at least pore over that incident." Read These Next Cruise passenger, reportedly left behind on island, is found dead. Jamie Lee Curtis says her Charlie Kirk comments were misinterpreted. Brigitte Macron's daughter: Gender rumors about her are harmful. The Fed just cut its key rate again. Report an error