President Barack Obama said he takes 'responsibility' for the Republican-heavy results of the midterm elections, and outlined ways in which he thinks his administration could be more 'successful' when dealing with the other side of the aisle.
'We got beat,' Obama said of Tuesday's results in an interview CBS's 'Face the Nation,' which aired Sunday but was taped Friday. 'As the head of the party, if it doesn't do well, I've got to take responsibility for it,' Obama said, adding that the voters 'know one person in Washington, and that's the president of the United States.'
Obama admitted that sometimes he gets hung up on thinking that if a policy is right, 'that's what should matter,' but he also knows an important component is effectively presenting the idea to the American people and to the 'stubborn' opposition. 'We've got to sell it. We've got to reach out to the other side ... and I think there are times where I think we have not been successful in going out there,' Obama said.
In his last two years in the White House, the president said he plans to 'experiment' with ways to communicate better and reach out to the Republicans 'more effectively.' A big test of any new strategy on this front will be immigration reform, which Obama decided to delay until after the elections. The president has made clear his intention to use executive action to make changes in the immigration system, in order to decrease the deportation rate. But, in his interview, he said if the Republicans pass a bill 'that addresses the problem,' he would change his plans. The president, who will face a Republican-controlled Congress in two months, said he has told the GOP, 'if you can't get it done before the end of the year, I'm going to take steps,' but he would prefer for the House of Representatives to pass a bill on immigration. 'They have the ability, the authority, the control to supersede anything I do through executive authority by simply carrying out their functions over there,' Obama said. 'Nobody's stopping them.'
'I love this job,' Obama said, in the midst of the gridlock, the challenges at home and internationally and his meager approval ratings in his sixth year as president. 'I still consider this the best job on earth, and I'm here to squeeze every ounce of possibility, and the ability to do good, out of this job and these next two years.'

IN-DEPTH SOCIAL
- Elisha FieldstadtFirst published November 9 2014, 9:14 AM
Entities 0 Name: Obama Count: 7 1 Name: White House Count: 1 2 Name: Elisha Fieldstadt First Count: 1 3 Name: Congress Count: 1 4 Name: CBS Count: 1 5 Name: Washington Count: 1 6 Name: United States Count: 1 7 Name: House of Representatives Count: 1 8 Name: American Count: 1 9 Name: Barack Obama Count: 1 10 Name: GOP Count: 1 Related 0 Url: http://ift.tt/1uJrdsQ Title: White House: Obama will act on immigration despite GOP warnings to hold off Description: President Obama firmly rejected advice from top congressional Republicans on Friday that he delay his promised executive action on immigration reform, dismissing calls from critics inside and outside his party to allow Congress to debate the issue next year. Over a two-hour lunch of Bibb lettuce salad, herb-crusted sea bass and pumpkin tart, House Speaker John A.