"So our focus has to be on the things that we can control, which is to take the necessary measures working with Congress to ensure that our economy grows, that we create jobs"
About this Quote
“Focus on the things that we can control” is Washington’s favorite spell: it shrinks the world to a manageable frame, then asks you to applaud competence inside it. As a public-facing operator for an administration, Jay Carney isn’t trying to sound poetic; he’s trying to sound bounded, sober, and adult. The intent is to redirect attention away from whatever is roiling beyond the government’s reach (global shocks, market swings, partisan sabotage) and toward a checklist of actions that signal stewardship: measures, Congress, growth, jobs.
The subtext is where the line does its real work. “Control” quietly absolves. If outcomes disappoint, the implied culprit lives outside the perimeter: unforeseeable forces or an uncooperative legislature. The phrase “working with Congress” is especially loaded: it performs bipartisanship as a posture while pre-loading blame for gridlock. If Congress won’t “work,” then the administration still gets credit for trying; if it does, the White House claims pragmatism.
Carney’s language also fuses process with purpose. “Necessary measures” suggests technocratic inevitability, as if policy is less choice than requirement. Pairing “economy grows” with “create jobs” tightens the moral pitch: growth isn’t abstract GDP worship, it’s payrolls and dignity. In the post-crisis political climate this kind of messaging was a defensive art form: promise action without promising miracles, project control without claiming omnipotence, and keep the argument on terrain where governing can still look like governing.
The subtext is where the line does its real work. “Control” quietly absolves. If outcomes disappoint, the implied culprit lives outside the perimeter: unforeseeable forces or an uncooperative legislature. The phrase “working with Congress” is especially loaded: it performs bipartisanship as a posture while pre-loading blame for gridlock. If Congress won’t “work,” then the administration still gets credit for trying; if it does, the White House claims pragmatism.
Carney’s language also fuses process with purpose. “Necessary measures” suggests technocratic inevitability, as if policy is less choice than requirement. Pairing “economy grows” with “create jobs” tightens the moral pitch: growth isn’t abstract GDP worship, it’s payrolls and dignity. In the post-crisis political climate this kind of messaging was a defensive art form: promise action without promising miracles, project control without claiming omnipotence, and keep the argument on terrain where governing can still look like governing.
Quote Details
| Topic | Vision & Strategy |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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