-Voted YES on TARP (2008) <- A republican initiative
-Voted YES on Economic Stimulus HR 5140 (2008) <- A republican initiative (This was a short term tax cut proposed by Bush, not the Obama stimulus package)
-Voted YES on $15B bailout for GM and Chrysler. (Dec 2008)
-Voted YES on $192B additional anti-recession stimulus spending. (Jul 2009)
-Voted YES on limited prescription drug benefit for Medicare recipients. (Nov 2003) <- A republican initiative
-Voted YES on providing $70 million for Section 8 Housing vouchers. (Jun 2006)
-Voted YES on extending unemployment benefits from 39 weeks to 59 weeks. (Oct 2008) <- Bipartisan at the time, Passed by a republican president
-Voted YES on Head Start Act (2007)
-Voted YES on No Child Left Behind Act (2001) <- A republican initiative
So the list with those things removed:
Voted for the auto bailout
70 whole million dollars for housing aid
Voted for a smaller stimulus bill
Voted for Head Start
Pretty thin.
"Supported by Republicans" =/= "CONSERVATIVE"
Check out how the votes went on TARP, etc and you would quickly find that such things were mostly opposed by conservative Republicans. Hell, just watch some of the older 2012 debates and you'd find candidates attacking each other for ever supporting TARP, Republican backed or no.
Wait, so you're trying to bash Obama for a minor military intervention that had bipartisan support, had huge support from the international community and undoubtably saved many civilian lives because you think he might've slightly gone against a 1973 law (although he probably didn't - the law basically gives you 90 days because you have 30 days to withdraw after that 60 day deadline) that every president since has said is unconstitutional?
Maybe you should stop obsessing over the constitution so much and look at whether things actually have a positive impact.
Uh, the constitution exists for a reason, flawed though it may be. When the US goes around declaring wars on everyone and overthrowing regimes (regardless of whether a Democrat or Republican is doing it, which seems to be the primary distinction between "good" and "evil" for some people), it creates unintended consequences, brand new enemies, and destabilization.
But so far as the positive impact? Well, Gaddafi is overthrown, but internationally speaking he was a harmless and cowardly dictator who didn't even remotely pose a threat to other countries. He was pretty brutal to his own people when they rebelled, but then so are the leaders of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, yet the US sure didn't care when those people asked for help. In fact, the pattern here is that the US is cherry picking the brutal dictatorships and only overthrowing the ones that aren't friendly client states (hence they threaten Syria and, again, ignore Bahrain where the only supporters of the rebels are the Iranians). In Libya itself, the best thing you can say has happened is the elections, in which the westerners were given disproportionate power compared to the people in Cyrenica, who basically boycotted the elections. War crimes were committed, blacks tossed in zoos, there are still Gaddafi supporters running around the desert causing mischief, the country looks ready to split into at least two if not a dozen new ones and the US spent a pile of money that could have gone towards actually helping people rather than blowing them up from afar.