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Richard (RJ) Eskow

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A President On the Verge of a Political Breakdown

Posted: 07/08/11 06:42 PM ET

This isn't the first time the White House has floated the idea of Social Security cuts as part of a 'grand bargain' with Republicans, and it's not the first time there's been a groundswell of opposition. But that opposition has never crystallized so quickly into something deeper and more threatening to the President's political fortunes.

Liberal pundits are turning against him and Democrats on the Hill are taking the fight directly to him. With a new poll confirming that Social Security cuts would alienate the other side's base and independents, this "grand bargain" doesn't look like much of a bargain anymore.

Sen. Bernie Sanders already laid the responsibility for unpopular cuts squarely at the President's feet on a phone call with reporters today: " We thought Social Security was off the table," said Sanders, "but by reopening this issue the White House is not only going to take on these changes, but will open the door to whatever else Republicans want."

In other words: If something bad happens to Social Security, you own it, Mr. President.

The timing couldn't be worse for a new austerity pose. Today's jobs numbers show that we're in an ongoing economic emergency. Yet instead of pushing for the spending that's needed, the President keeps reinforcing Republican arguments instead. According to the AP he told reporters in the Rose Garden that "uncertainty over whether lawmakers will raise the nation's debt limit is keeping businesses from hiring." (What was keeping them from hiring before that?) Economic advisor Austan Goolsbee evaded the issue of badly-needed stimulus funding as well as anyone could - that is, not very well at all - while repeating that ill-advised 'business confidence" mantra.

The net result is a Democratic Administration that's either afraid to speak up for government's role in fixing the economy or doesn't believe it has a role. Most people disagree, according to the polls. Now it looks like the Administration seriously overplayed its hand with this Social Security misstep (or trial balloon, or a double-triple-fakeout, or whatever this story was). That leaves it with the dual challenge of walking the story back and at the same time repairing a frayed bond between the President and many of his supporters.

The political logic's hard to fathom. Yet another poll was released this week confirming what we already knew: When voters are given a choice between reducing the deficit and maintaining benefits for Social Security and Medicare, they overwhelmingly choose benefits. Even today, after a relentless year-long drumbeat for austerity economics, 60 percent of Americans want these programs protected. That includes 72% of Democrats, which accounts for all the stories today about "Obama's problem with his base." But most Republican voters feel that way, too.

The controversy began two days ago with a Washington Post story that seems to have come from White House sources. That story was both definitive and, in keeping with the Post's ideological leanings, openly supportive of such a deal.[1] The White House only issued twisted non-denial denials like Press Secretary Jay Carney's comment that " while Social Security is not a major driver of the deficit, we do need to strengthen the program." (It doesn't affect the deficit at all.) That followed an earlier Carney remark that recycled the Administration's evasive language about the President not wanting to "slash benefits."

(That leads to another, parenthetical concern: Do they really believe that this kind of slippery politico-speak is good for the President's image?)

The generally pro-Democratic pundits who serve as a political Distant Early Warning System for Obama's base are signalling "DefCon 4" over this latest maneuver. Ed Schultz, who can usually be relied upon to defend Obama's left flank, said last night that Obama will be a "one-term President" if he makes a deal to cut Social Security. Paul Krugman's now openly speculating that the President is secretly an economic conservative whose "compromises" actually reflect his own beliefs.[2]

This morning a coalition of 300 groups sponsored a phone call with Sen. Sanders and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse. Eric Kingson, Co-Director of the nonpartisan group Social Security Works [3], called the proposal an "outrage." Sen. Sanders was even more blunt about the political backlash if a "piece of crap" deal is sent to the Senate for approval. Sanders dismissed the chained-CPI proposal (Washington's preferred benefit-cutting method) as "about politics and not Social Security," and pointedly reminded the President of his own unequivocal pledge not to change the cost of living adjustment or raise the retirement age as McCain had proposed.

"Let me be clear," candidate Obama said in 2008. "I will not do either."

"Elections matter," said Sanders pointedly. "What the candidates say matters." To underscore his point, Sanders added that the President "made a promise to the American people. It is important that he keep his promise." Sen. Whitehouse said he "worried that the White House was taking Senate Democrats for granted," adding: ""I don't know how strong a hand the White House needs to have to play poker with these guys."

In two short days the tone of many private conversations among Democratic and progressive activists and leaders has turned from "how to we persuade the White House ..." to "how do we defeat the White House." This backlash could move beyond tactical or policy disagreements and begin to undermine the trust between Democratic voters and the White House.

Republicans won't be thrilled, either. The"chained-CPI" calculation would also affect tax brackets, giving it the dual effect of dramatically cutting Social Security benefits while at the same time raising taxes on the middle class (but not the wealthy who are already in the top bracket.) The White House finally achieved that longed-for bipartisan consensus today, as lawmakers from both parties expressed their opposition to the chained CPI proposal . [4]

Some of the President's new allies, like the business-funded and right-leaning Democratic group Third Way, are putting out the usual (decisively rebuttable) attacks on the President's critics. The President's position with the base will only get worse if he's forced to rely on attack pieces from groups that represent the Lanny Davis/Joe Lieberman wing of his party.

The stakes couldn't be higher for the President. The GOP's pursuing a strategy that excites and energizes its base, while he pursues one that depresses and discourages his own. Obama's approval ratings are still high among Democrats but, as Nate Silver demonstrates, next year's election will hinge on turnout.

Silver's piece is entitled "Why the Republicans Resist Compromise." It doesn't tell us why the President doesn't - even, as in the case of Social Security, when compromise apparently wasn't on the table.

The President and his team have a clear choice: They can either retreat from this position and fight aggressively for Social Security, or they can stake his re-election on a misguided roll of the dice. Those are the only two options. In politics, as in life, sometimes there's no "third way."

_________________________

[1] From the Post: "The White House is now seeking a plan that would slash more than $4 trillion from annual budget deficits over the next decade, stabilize borrowing, and defuse the biggest budgetary time bombs that are set to explode as the cost of health care rises and the nation's population ages. That would represent a major legislative achievement ..."

Who would consider that "a major legislative achievement," besides the reporter herself? We're not told. Who has determined that an aging population of one of our two "biggest budgetary time bombs" - as opposed to unemployment or slow growth, for example? We're not told that, either.

[2] The "closet conservative" theory may sound conspiratorial, but there's some evidence for it. The President's key - and now apparently only - economic advisor is former Republican Tim Geithner, who has been a hardcore fiscal conservative throughout his tenure. (The non-ideological explanation for some of the White House's actions is that they've made a number of false moves that only coincidentally benefited economic conservatives.)

[3] This post was produced in conjunction with Strengthen Social Security and Social Security Works.

[4] The link takes you to a Bloomberg story that accurately reflects lawmakers' positions but makes a clear misstatement of fact. It says that "the 'chained consumer price index' has been endorsed by economists, who say the current inflation measure exaggerates how much prices increase." Many economists feel the current inflation measure understates the cost of living for seniors, and even the "chain gang's" own economists don't argue that it's a better measure of "how much prices increase." They base their proposal on changes in buying patterns that result from those price increases. (More on the chained CPI argument here.)

 

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This isn't the first time the White House has floated the idea of Social Security cuts as part of a 'grand bargain' with Republicans, and it's not the first time there's been a groundswell of oppositi...
This isn't the first time the White House has floated the idea of Social Security cuts as part of a 'grand bargain' with Republicans, and it's not the first time there's been a groundswell of oppositi...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
09:54 AM on 07/11/2011
Face it Mr Pres, you have been out flanked. Now the Republicans can not only cut Social Security and Medicare, but you will be blamed by the American people. You better step back from this, unless you want to be a one term president. Do the math. No matter what you do, how many Republicans will vote for you? Not many. Now how many indepenents, liberals and progressives will you lose if you can be fingered for cutting Social Security and Medicare? How many senior voters will you lose? In my humble opinion you and congress should have let the Bush tax breaks expire. Then maybe we wouldnt' be in this position.
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Mississippi Red
Stoke City: ugly football that works
08:57 AM on 07/11/2011
I really do not understand why the Republicans do not nominate BHO for reelection. The man negotiates by caving in at the beginning and falling right into line with Republican policies. Have the Republicans lost on ANY major policy issue since 2008? Would Administration policies be any different under Bush?

The Democratic Party needs to nominate someone to run next year- let BHO run as an independent or go home and get that corporate job he's earned.
06:53 AM on 07/11/2011
Spot on as usual. Obama's recent stealth attack on SS wasn't surprising. He cut the SS tax last December, hurting SS in the long run, and he was itching to talk about cutting SS in his state of the union address until Dems pushed back. Obama has completely bought into the voodoo economics of the Repubs, and he listens to no one but Wall Street insiders and Republicans (Immelt). In a way Obama is more dangerous than Bush, since Obama fragments and confuses Dems, while Dems and other progressives were highly focused and unified while W was in office. Obama is a Trojan Horse for the plutocracy pure and simple, but because of his position, no Dem primary challengers have appeared, so the Dem party is now in crisis.

The situation will change if Dems are galvanized by Obama's outrageous attempt to pass huge, unnecessary, counterproductive, and hurtful austerity cuts, including attacks on SS. Dems will not stand for this, and the country in general will not reelect someone who stands by and does virtually nothing to fight horrendous unemployment. And unemployment will grow worse because austerity will tank the economy next year. At the present level of unemployment, Obama has no credibility with anyone and can't win in 2012. Choosing a Dem primary challenger is surely the only way the Dems can win the WH next year.
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The Lone Stranger
Yes, I am a lousy typist. OK!
12:36 AM on 07/11/2011
Any time Obama takes part ina negotiation the poor and middle class lose.

He just is not competent at essential tasks that any upper echelon executive leader ought to be expected to have mastered.
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angryoldman
No1 told me when 2 run I missed the starting gun
06:35 PM on 07/10/2011
President Obama has committed the equivalent of Jimmy Carters' " lust in the heart" faux pas in putting social security and medicare on the sacrificial alter for the Republicans. He owns his offer even though it has been ( at least) temporarily refused. Et tu Brute?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brian Novotny
What happened to Democracy?
06:29 PM on 07/10/2011
When he came first was elected, he mentioned the fact that he was willing to be bi-partisan and that was willing to work with the GOP. The GOP played nice at first, but they are not anymore since gaining control of the house. They are now leveraging him against his own party with their outrageous demands. What he needs to do is remember where he came from. He is interested in a government that works together I imagine, but it does not work the way he would like. He will need to step up and play hardball with those that wish to destroy him. He is starting to show some kahunas, but will it last? Let's just hope he doesn't cave into the fear monger party and stand up for his party and his beliefs. Unfortunately this is not the time nor the place to be attempting to please both sides of the table. If the GOP wasn't so radical about their demands, and their attacks on him, maybe it would be a different story, but they becoming like sharks in the water and smell blood as the next election cycle approaches. Hang in there Mr. President, and don't let the sharks get to you!
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The Lone Stranger
Yes, I am a lousy typist. OK!
12:40 AM on 07/11/2011
Let's be real. The GOP have never played nice with Obama.

Obama made a classic rookie type mistake in that he failed to grasp that his best course of action was to move forward on his agenda of change. Instead he abandoned this infavor of an absurd goal of meaningless wimpy pointless bipartsanship, which emboldened his enemies while leaving his own party without clear leadership and functionally in complete disarray.
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kokobell616
Your micro-bio is pending approval
04:30 PM on 07/10/2011
Bernie Sanders for President 2012
05:35 AM on 07/11/2011
Yes! Fan! And Elizabeth Warren for VP!
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kokobell616
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:58 PM on 07/11/2011
Winning ticket for 2012 in my view
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wayne the pain
02:06 PM on 07/10/2011
Krugmans assessment of the Presidents economic beliefs are accurate. Bernie Sanders could not be more correct. It appears the President has set the Democrat house on fire and now the evacuation has begun. It is slowly dawning on Democrats that the President has not been faithful to his campaign promises and inferences. He may pay a heavy price in 2012. To a large degree that depends on the Republican nominee.
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06:27 PM on 07/10/2011
This time Krugman swallowed the Kool Aid from the unattributed, factless sources. There is not a moment's worth of truth in these assertions. Every time the president breathes, we progressives go into paroxysms of End Times babbling - and nothing we fear ever comes true. How about waiting for EVIDENCE?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wayne the pain
08:01 PM on 07/10/2011
That is what Germans were sayin in Berlin in 1934! How about three wars, no public option health care, Bush education policy, extension of tax breaks for wealthy and the Patriot Act, no prosecution of Bush war crimes, Gitmo still open, etc., etc.
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Mississippi Red
Stoke City: ugly football that works
09:02 AM on 07/11/2011
We are still in Afghanistan and without a purpose.
We have done NOTHING about climate change.
BHO STILL isn't focused on job creation.
BHO flubbed health care.
Wall Street is still too big to fail and knows that Washington will bail them out when the next bubble bursts.
The Patriot Act is still on the books and the BHO administration is abusing it.
BHO is gonna take a BILLION dollars from international corporations to try to buy back the Whitehouse.

Many thing I fear are true. You are deluded.
Joel Smithis
Small business owner
12:52 PM on 07/10/2011
I agree, rather than get trapped into this silly political game of who is winning the argument, The President should go forward and tell the truth, and let the politics start from there.

My understanding is that American public is wakenning up for this and President has a clear advatage there!
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Gestas
Mountain Man
11:14 AM on 07/10/2011
I would much rather see and support a great one term President than a BAD two term President...This is something we should have learned from the Bush/Cheney Mess.
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charon
Censorship is the betrayal of democracy
09:44 PM on 07/10/2011
Yes, and Obama is leaving his base demoralized. This was, I think, a primary aim of the Republicans, to get Obama to betray his base, and they succeeded.
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kemstone
Traveler, thinker, writer.
04:18 AM on 07/11/2011
They had plenty of help from Rahm Emanuel, Tim Geithner, and the rest of Obama's closest advisers.
madkoz
Dog is my co-pilot
08:33 AM on 07/10/2011
After seeing Obama in action I have to say having the ability to be a "decider" is a good skill to have when being President.
05:46 AM on 07/11/2011
I think Obama is actually a decider. He has long ago decided that he represents the plutocracy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
08:06 AM on 07/10/2011
I suppose the question turns on what Obama actually believes. Since his election his actions have drifted farther and farther from his campaign rhetoric. The possibilities include everything from his playing Zen chess to his being the worst negotiator in history. My take is a bit more complicated. He is hermetically sealed inside Beltway group think and he thinks he's playing to the independents by triangulating. His disdain for the "professional left" leaked out a while back, although at the time no one could quite make sense of it. Finally, he's got the Jackie Robinson syndrome--don't do "angry black man." The net result is inauthenticity. His credibility has degraded to the point that his base is insisting, "Don't tell me; show me." It's time to stand up to the bullies and make it clear that he won't give in to extortion.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
desidid
02:03 PM on 07/10/2011
I have already fanned you in the past so I guess I'll just have to fav this one.
05:52 AM on 07/11/2011
I used to think like this. But after watching Obama carefully, I've concluded that he actually is being authentic to his base. But that base is not us. It is the urban, slightly liberal wing of the plutocracy.
04:20 AM on 07/13/2011
There is nothing liberal about Obama.
05:38 AM on 07/10/2011
If the Obama camp believes he cannot win a 2nd term, this Bush 3 candidate (Obama) will give everything the GOP wants to either win another term, or simply give them all they want which is Social Security funding and privatization. They have been whining about its destruction for decades and this will be their best shot in getting their hands on all of it. Obama has betrayed all of us and it is clear (See what is happening in Minn with the Republican majority) the GOP doesn't care about us as citizens, or this country as a whole.
05:54 AM on 07/11/2011
Interesting! Fan! You may be right. I want to follow your future posts and seriously think about this.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
desidid
04:53 AM on 07/10/2011
There was a great article on a black site about how we blacks have long been educated to the fact that we can't do what white people do. Though our President wasn't raised by black people I believe he got the memo and it has been a blessing and a curse for him. It helped elevate him to his position and it keeps him from rocking any boats for fear of it becoming about his race and not his ideology. This country is far from ready for a black president because if he were to flex some muscle instead of it being considered a leadership quality it would be translated as thuggish. That's what happens when you live in a media driven world that has worked overtime at endowing each minority group with certain attributes. Chinese are smart, Koreans are entrepreneurs, Blacks are lazy and criminal, Hispanics are hard working with family values. When you have all the forces of the media driving the same images regularly it becomes second nature for people to associate certain behaviors as group behaviors. In his efforts to rise above the group identification I think he has been neutered, so his strength becomes what he sees as compromise, but what has rather become capitulation.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
desidid
02:09 PM on 07/10/2011
Interesting now responses to my comments are for my eyes only.
06:12 PM on 07/10/2011
Its not about being black. Its about breaking promises.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
desidid
04:58 PM on 07/11/2011
You know how I can tell you are not black? Because you missed the point of the post which is our reality is quite different from yours, then responded in a way that proved my point. THANK YOU sir or madame you make it so easy for me.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Manx
02:56 AM on 07/10/2011
Obama and his chief advisers have bought Third Way's specious positions on Medicare and Social Security, hook, line and sinker. Both William Daley, Obama's chief of staff, and Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council, are disciples of Third Way. You can read their political case for cutting both Medicare and Social Security on their website, thirdway.org, titled, "The Case For Taking Up Entitlement Reform." Their strategy is to portray cuts in both programs as a way to "save" them. They also believe that the most important issue facing the nation is the budget deficit, trumping unemployment. Their arguments are pure sophistry and the polls they cite on these issues conflict drastically with polls taken by national news organizations. Obama's rhetoric resembles the talking points published on their website. Check it out. Neither Obama nor Third Way can explain how cutting the deficit will help the unemployment problem, which they hardly mention. My response to Obama and Third Way is No Way.
06:00 AM on 07/11/2011
Spot on! Fan! Very interesting. And both Daley and Sperling are from Wall Street, as are Bowles and Geithner and Immelt. This White House doesn't just represent Wall Street in Washington. It *is* Wall Street on the Potomac. I'll check out the web site. Please keep the information coming!