CBS: Obama Is an ‘Executive Power President Free from the Straightjacket’ of Elections

Obama faces challenges in 2015 not only from Republicans, but also the Supreme Court, which will once again take up ObamaCare

REID (VOICE-OVER): "The White House has often said the president uses his vacations to recharge his batteries, and he plans to use every bit of that stored energy in 2015, according to CBS News presidential historian Douglas Brinkley."

BRINKLEY: "Barack Obama is an executive power president, free from the straightjacket of a midterm election, ready to make the most out of his last two years in office."

REID (VOICE-OVER): "The president says he wants to work with the new Republican Congress on big issues like taxes, trade and infrastructure, but Brinkley says the president's executive actions in the last few months on immigration, Cuba and climate change, for example, suggest that cooperating with Congress is unlikely."

BRINKLEY: "He's starting to learn that he can be like FDR and Theodore Roosevelt, don't worry about Congress just lay down these executive orders."

REID (VOICE-OVER): "Republican leaders have said they plan to pass legislation the president opposes and dare him to use the veto. In six years the president has vetoed only two bills, far fewer than any other president in modern history. But in a press conference before departing for Hawaii he strongly suggested that could change."

OBAMA: "If Republicans seek to take health care away from people who just got it, they will meet stiff resistance from me. If they try to water down consumer protections that we put in place in the aftermath of the financial crisis, I will say, no."

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REID (ON-CAMERA): "Brinkley says the president's biggest worry this year isn't the Republican Congress, it's the Supreme Court, which is expected to rule on a key provision of the president's health care reform law. If that decision goes against the White House it could gut the cornerstone of the president's domestic agenda, and of course the president does not have a veto over the Supreme Court."

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