Lost Her Job when She Confronted Obama!

The woman who stood up at a televised town hall meeting and told Barack Obama that she was "exhausted" of defending him — that the change he had promised had not arrived for her family, that her husband had been unemployed for a year, that they were struggling in ways she had not expected to still be struggling — became briefly famous in September 2010 in the way that ordinary people sometimes become famous when they say something publicly that many people are thinking privately.
Velma Hart, a chief financial officer at a veterans' service organization in Washington, had voted for Obama with genuine hope in 2008 and had found herself, two years into his presidency, defending that choice in conversations with friends and colleagues who had grown disillusioned. Her confrontation with the president at the CNBC town hall was not hostile — she framed it as exhaustion rather than anger — but it was pointed in a way that televised presidential events rarely are.
The story that followed was the story of what happens to ordinary people when they become symbols. Hart received extensive media attention, speaking engagements, and the particular kind of celebrity that consists largely of other people finding your personal circumstances useful for their purposes. She spoke at events, gave interviews, was used as evidence by Obama's critics and humanized by his supporters.
Then, a few months later, she lost her job. The organization she worked for cited budget cuts. The timing was noted by commentators who observed, without producing any evidence of causation, that she had become publicly critical of a Democratic president and was employed by an organization with connections to Democratic donors.
The causal claim was not established. The symbolic weight of the coincidence — that the woman who publicly expressed exhaustion at the failure of change had subsequently experienced a change in her own circumstances — was, however, irresistible to a political press looking for narrative.
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