Newsweek's Krugman Cover Story: Obama's Loyal Opposition

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Huffington Post   |   April 10, 2009 at 02:53 PM

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Paul Krugman And Obama

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been one of the most vocal critics of the Obama administration's bank bailout plan. As the Financial Times noted Friday, Krugman is one of the "many prominent left-leaning economists" who is leading what the article referred to as "the liberal backlash" against Obama. For example, in a widely-read post on his blog "Conscience of a Liberal" last Saturday, Krugman criticized Geithner's plan for the banks, declaring that "the zombie ideas have won." His critique quickly echoed around the blogosphere and beyond.

This week's issue of Newsweek highlights, and perhaps helps solidify, Krugman's status as arguably the most prominent, influential and prescient critic of the administration on the left by featuring him on the magazine's cover alongside the headline "OBAMA IS WRONG: The Loyal Opposition of Paul Krugman." (SCROLL DOWN FOR IMAGE OF COVER)

As Newsweek editor Jon Meacham writes in his letter to the magazine's readers about the Krugman article:

Every once a while, ... a critic emerges who is more than a chatterer--a critic with credibility whose views seem more than a little plausible and who manages to rankle those in power in more than passing ways. As the debate over the rescue of the financial system--the crucial step toward stabilizing the economy and returning the country to prosperity--unfolds, the man on our cover this week, Paul Krugman of The New York Times, has emerged as the kind of critic who, as Evan Thomas writes, appears disturbingly close to the mark when he expresses his 'despair' over the administration's bailout plan. [...]


There is little doubt that Krugman--Nobel laureate and Princeton professor--has be come the voice of the loyal opposition. What is striking about this development is that Obama's most thoughtful critic is taking on the president from the left at a time when, as Jonathan Alter notes, so many others are reflexively arguing that the administration is trying too much too soon.


Read the full article by Evan Thomas here.

From the article:

Krugman is having his 15 minutes and enjoying it, although at moments, as I followed him around last week, he seemed a little overwhelmed. He is an unusual mix, at once nervous, shy, sweet and fiercely sure of himself. He enjoys his outsider's power: "No one has as big a megaphone as I have," he says. "Aside from the world going to hell, it's great." He is in much demand on the talk-show circuit: PBS's "The NewsHour" and "Charlie Rose" on Monday last week, ABC's "This Week With George Stephanopoulos" this past Sunday. Someone has even cut a rock video on YouTube: "Hey, Paul Krugman, why aren't you in the administration?" A singer croons, "Hey, Paul Krugman, where the hell are you, man? We need you on the front lines, not just writing for The New York Times." (And the cruel chorus: "All we hear [from Geithner] is blah, blah, blah.")


Krugman is not likely to show up in an administration job in part because he has a noble--but not government-career-enhancing--history of speaking truth to power. With dry humor, he once told a friend the story of attending an economic summit in Little Rock after Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992. As the friend recounted the story to NEWSWEEK, "Clinton asked Paul, 'Can we have a balanced budget and health-care reform?'--essentially, can we have it all? And Paul said, 'No, you have to be disciplined. You have to make choices.' Then Paul says to me (deadpan), 'That was the wrong answer.' Then Clinton turns to Laura Tyson and asks the same questions, and she says, 'Yes, it's all possible, you have your cake and eat it too.' And then [Paul] says, 'That was the right answer'." (Tyson became chairman of Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers; she did not respond to requests to comment.) Krugman confirmed the story to NEWSWEEK WITH a smile. "I'm more tolerant now," he says. But at the time, he was bitter that he was kept out of the Clinton administration.


New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been one of the most vocal critics of the Obama administration's bank bailout plan. As the Financial Times noted Friday, Krugman is one of the "many prominent...
New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been one of the most vocal critics of the Obama administration's bank bailout plan. As the Financial Times noted Friday, Krugman is one of the "many prominent...
 
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- politicky I'm a Fan of politicky 14 fans permalink
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Jon Meacham wrote "As the debate over the rescue of the financial system--the crucial step toward stabilizing the economy and returning the country to prosperity--"

Does he mean the one that the business interests with the collusion of the puppet govt dismantled and sold to China?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 AM on 03/29/2009
- noesis I'm a Fan of noesis 65 fans permalink
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Because I'm too lazy at the moment...C­arol, who's on the panel of econ advisers, besides Summers, Orszag and Romer? Anyone from the progressive side of the aisle?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 AM on 03/29/2009
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

Geithner's chief of staff: Mark Patterson/Goldman Sachs lobbyist; Obama deputy National Security council advisor for international economic affairs: Michael Froman/Citigroup CFO; Froman's deputy: David Lipton/Citigroup CFO; Obama economic advisory board: Robert Wolf/UBS

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 AM on 03/29/2009
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

Paul Volcker does not agree with Summers/Ge­ithner/Rom­er, but I've never seen him described as a progressive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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They are many of the same people who brought us Clintonomics (or Rubinomics), and other like-minded folks. To head his economic team, Barack Obama chose Jason Furman. Furman is well known by labor activists for writing a 2005 article defending Wal-Mart as a “progressive success story.” Furman is tied closely to Robert Rubin, a Wall Street insider and Clinton economics guru. AFL-CIO Secretary Treasurer Richard Trumka has said of Rubin, that it’s hard to tell the difference between he and Republican Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

William Daley, chairman of Bill Clinton’s NAFTA task force (who still strongly believes in NAFTA), is advising Barack Obama. Michael Froman, a Citigroup executive, and former Rubin chief of staff is advising Obama on economic issues. Jeff Liebman, who has supported partial privatization of Social Security, is an economic adviser to Barack Obama. David Cutler, who has written about the positive effects of ballooning health care costs, is an adviser to Obama. Even George Will’s favorite ‘Democratic’ economist is advising Barack Obama, Austan Goolsbee. Salon.com, hardly an online journal of the far left, summed up Obama’s economic philosphy as follows: “Obama appears to be pushing a relatively market-friendly agenda that does not map neatly onto liberal Democratic traditions­.”

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Michael-Moore-Will-You-Ca-by-Sean-Fenley-080906-356.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 AM on 03/29/2009
- noesis I'm a Fan of noesis 65 fans permalink
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thanx

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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A wrap-up on those people here:

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Michael-Moore-Will-You-Ca-by-Sean-Fenley-080906-356.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 AM on 03/29/2009

Right out of the liberal playbook. If someone has a different opinion, trash him. What class.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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I see. Different opinions not welcome in your world?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 AM on 03/29/2009

You liberals make me laugh. With all the Obama screw ups in the first 65 days, about 10 Dem Senators forming their own anti OBama group and now Paul Krugman sheding light on Obama's sure to fail policies, don't you ever get it? All Obama cares about is pushing his radical liberal power grabbing spending agenda. He must have lots of people to pay back for the election. This is no joke what he is trying to do, this is scary. Come on liberals, he is going to screw up your country too. Speak up and show some class for once.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 AM on 03/29/2009
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

"All Obama cares about is pushing his radical liberal power grabbing spending agenda. "

And YOU want to talk about class? You're delusional. Don't try to blend your neo-con paranoid alternative reality insanity into a real discussion about legitimate policy differences.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 AM on 03/29/2009

Delusional? How about Barney Frank (one of the primary culprits of the economic collapse) bringing up the idea of government having the power to control financial firms that are not in financial trouble but are deemed heading for trouble.

What is next? on Mondays we are allowed to wipe with our left hands only.

Maybe if the Democrats didn't push and push all those ill advised loans over the past decade and then block the necessary oversight of Fannie & Freddie when GW Bush and J McCain were screaming that Fannie & Freddie were going to bring down the economy, these firms wouldn't need help. Go to www.youtub­e and search Barney Frank Fannie Mae and you will see the real story and not what rags like the NY Obama Times print.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 AM on 03/29/2009
- nomobull I'm a Fan of nomobull 45 fans permalink
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did you when bush was setting the country on fire. if not then you need to show some class and shut up or help put out the fire . those 10 should be ashamed not of standing up but of waiting to someone comes along to put out the fire. and attempting to strep on the water hose. as for krugman like many say it's easy to criticize when you aren't responsible for the result.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 AM on 03/29/2009
- JustLucky I'm a Fan of JustLucky 17 fans permalink
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Oh, give it up - Krugman doesn't feel the president is *far enough* to the left. But President Obama is doing just fine and gathering more support all the time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 AM on 03/29/2009
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

Wonder if his opinions about the banks and Wall Street have anything to do with his decision to leave CNBC?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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Good question.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 AM on 03/29/2009
- vgirl1 I'm a Fan of vgirl1 54 fans permalink

Krugman finally achieved his narcissistic goal in landing this cover of Newsweek. Krugman for Krugman, not for the nation.

His "loyal" opposition without presentation of concrete alternatives show just how much he should be ignored in this instance, Nobel prize winner or not. After all his prize was not for macroeconomic excellence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 AM on 03/29/2009
- marthlois I'm a Fan of marthlois 27 fans permalink

I'm curious. Has Krugman ever served in any Presidency in a cabinet or advisory position? Perhaps he does not work and play well with others? Maybe he's pi*ssed that he's never been asked. I don't know what his deal is, but it doesn't do any of us any good for Krugman to have an almost daily 'mine's bigger' column going on. It's getting old. I might suggest he call our fine President for a meeting to share ideas rather than this bs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 AM on 03/29/2009
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

Why do you act like you're personally threatened by Krugman? Do you honestly think this is a game for him?

It's sad that you don't understand how his opposition IS serving us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 AM on 03/29/2009
- nomobull I'm a Fan of nomobull 45 fans permalink
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then why isn't he in washington.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 AM on 03/29/2009
- JustLucky I'm a Fan of JustLucky 17 fans permalink
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Threatened? Another way to look at is that people are just annoyed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 AM on 03/29/2009
- ekoorb I'm a Fan of ekoorb 8 fans permalink

Supposedly for Reagan for about a year, may-be on Council of Economic Advisers (it's late). He's said he's not a good fit for a White House job. Also advised Enron in the late '90's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 AM on 03/29/2009
- UNCLEJOE I'm a Fan of UNCLEJOE 56 fans permalink
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Krugman's opposition to Geithner's stimulus plan does not come up with a concrete viable alternative; whereas Professor Nouriel Rubini of NYU does present a logical solution to the financial meltdown that not only is humane but has been successfully employed by FDR during the 1929 Great Depression:

Nouriel Roubini's plan for Recovery as he stated on the Charlie Rose interview recently was to bailout the homeowners first with government funds, reduce the face value of homes foreclosed on, refinance those homes at a lower monthly mortgage rate affordable for home owners and extend the length of time of the mortgage; this would give the banks liquidity, remove the TOXIC home loans from bank inventories and stop the down spiralling of home values and boost the economy with banks now having the liquidity from the home owners saved from foreclosure and would losen the bank credit.

And Rubini could also be an excellent replacement of the Wall Street darling, Timmy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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Stocks Will Drop; Banks Will Go Belly Up - Roubini

http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22302.htm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 AM on 03/29/2009

Didn't know this guy could ever be right. He is this time!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 AM on 03/29/2009
- KofTX I'm a Fan of KofTX 22 fans permalink
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The point is, NO ONE can get on their high horse and claim they have THE solution to this. History has provided no perfect example of how to handle this. I find it striking that the people who say they oppose giving more power to the Fed are the very same ones that tout Krugman's nationalization idea as economic gold.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 AM on 03/29/2009
- noesis I'm a Fan of noesis 65 fans permalink
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Agreed, we don't know THE solution, but we have a fair idea what is most equitable to ALL parties involved..­.not just the financial sector.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 AM on 03/29/2009

Dear Knowitall,

I'm no kid..at 60, a million bucks sounds great to me after a good portion of my life savings was wiped out by Wall Street shenanigans. And I was pretty conservative too!. Nope, a million dollars, my house paid off, even if I do have to buy an American car-an Escape hybrid maybe? I'll take the million in a heartbeat.

Enough with economic theory and Milton Freidman. Too big is no good for corporations, financial institutions. Democracy and free enterprise only works when there's competition, not monolithic institutions too big too fail.

Maybe they could even throw in the car if it's a hybrid. I've worked hard all my life. See ya at the beach

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 03/29/2009
- Sandmanj I'm a Fan of Sandmanj 37 fans permalink

Your post reads like I almost wrote it myself.

Except: I'll be 64 in a month, with 4 mil wiped down to 2 mil, and I don't need a car yet. When I do, I hope it'll be electric. This "free-market" crap Reagan and the Bushes saddled us with is the worst sort of ideological garbage and it's destroying all of our lives.

Aside from that, I'm wishing these days Krugman would be a bit more helpful and far less caustic, because he sounds too much like someone who's "bitter that he was kept out of the [Obama] administration". Beyond his recent comments, which seem a bit emotional and not as informative as usual, he's the only economist who's had it all right all along.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 AM on 03/29/2009

Hey Sandmanj,
1) if you lost 50% of your portfolio it is time to get a new financial advisor. If someone past age 60 lost more than 20% of their portfolio either you invest on your own (and your inflated ego that you can do it on your own) or your financial advisor is useless. I manage $190 million and not one client over age 60 lost more than 20%.

2) free market??? when the Democrats try to increase home ownership up from 64% to 70% by pushing and pushing ill advised loans and then blocking many attempts by GW Bush and the Republicans to create the necessary oversight of Fannie and Freddie, it is no longer a free market. We are in this mess primarily because of government intervention. Free market my behind. Wake up. GW Bush started beating the drum in 2002 that the DEMOCRATIC GSE's were economic time bombs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 AM on 03/29/2009
- KofTX I'm a Fan of KofTX 22 fans permalink
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While there is definitely a need for different viewpoints, I find opposition for opposition's sake is just as counterproductive as blind loyalty. Have an opposing opinion on the basis of merit. Don't be afraid to highlight the positive policy pronouncements and learn to oppose those that you disagree with without being overtly critical. Accept the fact that, in spite of your strong convictions, you just might be wrong.

SOME DEMS AND MEDIA COMPONENTS LOOK BACK AT THE LAST EIGHT YEARS AND USE THE FACT THAT BUSH LACKED STRONG OPPOSITION AS AN EXCUSE IN BEING RADICAL AND PRESUMPTUOUS IN THEIR CRITICISM.

THEY DON'T ACKNOWLEDGE THAT THE TRUE FAILURE OF THE LAST EIGHT YEARS WASN'T THE LACK OF OPPOSITION TO AN INCOMPETENT PRESIDENT.­....

IT WAS ELECTING AN INCOMPETENT PRESIDENT!!!!
We didn't make that mistake this time. So stop treating Obama like he's Bush. He's not some ideologue that can't think for himself. His ideas are merit-based. Criticism of his ideas should be as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 AM on 03/29/2009
- marthlois I'm a Fan of marthlois 27 fans permalink

way to go KofTX! Great post. Everyone want to think they have the answer. Such heros right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 AM on 03/29/2009
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

His ideas aren't so "merit-based" when it comes to banking. Obama is NOT an economist. He is therefore allowing Geithner and Summers to guide him, and is not being exposed enough to opposing ideas.

Nobody is being "radical" in their criticism. They are being sane. Stop buying into the criticism = smearing bologna. We are at a critical juncture and what you're doing is trying to stifle dissent. Dissent is called for when our very system of democracy is threatened.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 AM on 03/29/2009
- noesis I'm a Fan of noesis 65 fans permalink
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A majority of the opinions, being expressed against the administration's economic positions, have been merit-based. The usual Rush bots, being the exception.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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Roubini: Even if Geithner's Plan Works, It Won't Work

http://wonkroom.thinkprogress.org/2009/03/26/roubini-geithner/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 AM on 03/29/2009
- noesis I'm a Fan of noesis 65 fans permalink
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Thanx Carol. Did ya see this one? Read the last two paragraphs. I'm inclined to agree with this solution.

http://robertreich.blogspot.com/2009/01/how-to-keep-banking-system-in-private.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 AM on 03/29/2009
- ekoorb I'm a Fan of ekoorb 8 fans permalink

I recently posted something like this in a response to Carol but can't remember where. I hope we can get to the point that authorities can impress upon the holders of credit default swaps that there's a catastrophic clause being invoked and they're expected to deal with it by taking a reduced settlement. That couldn't be done last fall because Bush was clueless and the situation was a true crisis. WIth things settled down and the President being able to still swing the prospect of nationalization, may-be this could be unwound. The bankers who were negligent in due diligence shouldn't expect default insurance to be available either. A lot of these guys knew they pushing crap.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 03/29/2009
- ekoorb I'm a Fan of ekoorb 8 fans permalink

FOR SOME BANKS. That makes sense. Establish a market for toxic assets. Do a stress test. Deal with the banks that are deemed insolvent, perhaps by nationalizing. Isn't Krugman advocating blanket nationalization?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 03/29/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 367 fans permalink
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Krugman:

“It may be necessary to temporarily nationalize some banks in order to facilitate a swift and orderly restructur­ing.” I agree.

The case for nationalization rests on three observations.

First, some major banks are dangerously close to the edge — in fact, they would have failed already if investors didn’t expect the government to rescue them if necessary.

Second, banks must be rescued. The collapse of Lehman Brothers almost destroyed the world financial system, and we can’t risk letting much bigger institutions like Citigroup or Bank of America implode.

Third, while banks must be rescued, the U.S. government can’t afford, fiscally or politically, to bestow huge gifts on bank shareholders.

And once again, long-term government ownership isn’t the goal: like the small banks seized by the F.D.I.C. every week, major banks would be returned to private control as soon as possible. The finance blog Calculated Risk suggests that instead of calling the process nationalization, we should call it “preprivat­ization.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/23/opinion/23krugman.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 03/29/2009
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Thank God for Krugman. Every administration needs an intelligent "loyal opposition" to keep it on the straight and narrow. The Republicans certainly aren't doing the job with their insane an inane spokesmen. He may be right or he may be wrong, but at least he is making people think instead of just knee jerk support or opposition to the administration. We certainly had enough of that under Bush. Keep up the good work Paul!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 AM on 03/29/2009
- NickCatal I'm a Fan of NickCatal 2 fans permalink
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And Krugman agrees with a lot of what Obama has done, but he has been saying for quite awhile now that the Bad Bank idea is HORRIBLE. And, no offense Obama administration or any other 'left' groups, when it comes to whose opinion I lean towards I'm gonna go with the guy who won a freaking nobel prize in the field.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 AM on 03/29/2009
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