Obama Needs Shorter To-Do List: Noonan Prez must fix the economy and keep us safe—and that's it By Kevin Spak Posted Jun 26, 2009 7:22 AM CDT Copied President Barack Obama talks with members of the press after meeting with members of Congress to discuss immigration, Thursday, June 25, 2009, in the State Dinning Room of the White House. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari) Confidence in Barack Obama is fading fast for many reasons, but above all it’s because he's not tending to "The Sentence,” writes Peggy Noonan in the Wall Street Journal. Clare Boothe Luce once said that all great leaders are summed up by a sentence. “He preserved the union and freed the slaves,” for example. Obama is trying to write a paragraph. He wants to be the president who gave everyone health care and reduced income inequality and saved the automakers and so on. “But an administration about everything is an administration about nothing,” Noonan argues. History has given Obama a sentence: “He brought America back from economic collapse and kept us strong and secure in the age of terror.” That’s a great sentence, if he earns it. “He should stop looking for a better one.” Read These Next Negative press coverage should get TV licenses yanked, Trump says. Here's what late-night hosts had to say about Jimmy Kimmel. Autopsy is in for Black student found hanged from tree at college. A judge found Trump's NYT lawsuit was way too long. Report an error