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Robert L. Borosage

Robert L. Borosage

Posted: July 14, 2010 04:03 PM

Voters are in a surly temper. The economy stinks. Jobs are scarce. Wages are under pressure. One in 4 homes with mortgages is underwater. Retirement savings have been butchered; pensions are at risk. Bailed out bankers are paying themselves record bonuses. The oil keeps fouling the Gulf. And the jobs aren't coming back. It is ugly out here.

Not surprisingly, faith in Obama is starting to flag. According to a recent Washington Post poll, a startling 58% have only some or no faith that he will make the right decisions about the country's future. Congressional Democrats fare worse. Republicans would be salivating, only folks overwhelmingly don't want to rehire them either. A staggering 72% have little or no trust in congressional Republicans on the country's future.

And now the election season starts. Last weekend, President Obama traveled to Missouri in support of Senate candidate Robin Carnahan and delivered rousing speeches framing the choice the voters must make this fall. Republicans, he scorned, have "got that 'no' philosophy, that 'you're on your own' philosophy, the status quo philosophy -- a philosophy that says everything is politics and we're just going to gun for the next election, we don't care what it means for the next generation. And they figure if they just keep on saying no, it will work for them, they'll get more votes in November -- because if Obama loses, they win; if we can stop him then we'll look better."

This election, the president said, will offer a choice: "It's a choice between the policies that led us into this mess and the policies that are leading us out of this mess. It's a choice between falling backwards or moving forward."

His critique of Republicans has the advantage of being true. With unparalleled discipline, Republicans voted with virtual unanimity to obstruct every major reform offered by the president, breaking all records on filibusters along the way. To the extent that they offer any program, it is a retread of the very policies that drove us off the cliff -- top end tax cuts, deregulation, drill, baby drill, ardent defense of corporate subsidies and multinational trade accords. Their solution to health care, as Rep. Alan Grayson gibed, is don't get sick. Their solution to unemployment, as Republican Sen. Kyl and others have argued, is starve or work. (Kyl opposes extending unemployment benefits, so people will be desperate enough to take jobs that pay far less, assuming they exist.)

Will voters vote for party of no -- or as John Boehner ranted, in a health care screed immortalized in a YouTube video, the party of "hell no, you can't?"


Well polls suggest that they just might. Off-year, low-turnout elections are the occasion to cast a protest vote. Voters aren't really voting for an opposition candidate or her or his policies, they are voting against. And that clearly is what Republicans are counting on.

Can a compelling choice be posed in midterm elections held in a bad economy?

The president would really like to campaign for credit for one of the most productive congressional sessions in decades. Against Republican obstruction, the White House and Democrats in Congress have passed the largest recovery act in history, the largest increase in student aid since the GI Bill, the most significant health care reform since Medicare, the greatest expansion of community service since Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s, the biggest investment in renewable energy ever. This week the Congress will pass, again, over virtually unified Republican opposition, the largest reform of finance since the 1930s. The White House will roll out studies on the benefits of the health care bill, the millions of jobs created by the stimulus, the consumer protections in financial reform. They'd like a little credit. If only people understood what we've done, they strongly believe, they'd reward us at the polls.

These statements are true but largely irrelevant... As dramatic as the reforms have been, they have not been sufficient to the crisis. And, at the end of the day, what matters is jobs and the economy. House Minority leader John Boehner's response to Obama's argument is simply "Where are the jobs?" Many Americans may think the real choice is between those advocating the policies that got us into the mess and those advocating policies that have failed to get us out.

George W. Bush survived a jobless midterm, but only because of 9/11. In 1994, the economy was actually beginning to generate jobs, but Clinton and Democrats were punished, and the Gingrich Congress was elected. The last president to survive a bad economy in an off-year, first term election was Ronald Reagan. He cut taxes, ran up military spending and exploded the deficit. Despite a deep recession, Reagan got Republicans to unite on a message of "stay the course." He pounded relentlessly from the first day of his administration on the failure of liberalism, on government as the "problem, not the solution," blaming Democrats constantly for the downturn. Democrats made gains, but Reagan survived to go on to re-election.

Obama's message parallels Reagan's. We've begun to create jobs, stay with the policies that "are getting us out of the mess," rather than going back to those "that got us into the mess."

That might work if the economy continues to show ever greater signs of life. But this economy is in real trouble -- and even the slow growth we've had is threatened by the premature turn towards deficit reduction. The IMF estimates that the tightening in the public budget will equal 4.6% of GDP over 2009-2011. States and localities are enacting brutal cuts in the coming months. Growing trade deficits will subtract another 1% of GDP at least. We may not descend into a new recession, but it's hard to see what generates jobs and growth to make up for the fiscal tightening already underway.

The White House and Senate Democrats seem intent on continuing to push a multifaceted reform agenda. On tap is the START Treaty, comprehensive energy legislation, the war supplemental, unemployment insurance extension, the Kagan confirmation to Supreme Court, possibly immigration reform, and more.

Some of this is unavoidable, but the White House would be better advised to focus as much as possible on jobs, even at the risk of aggravating liberals and constituency groups. The president needs to speak directly and repeatedly on where we are, explaining the reality that while the recovery act did stop the freefall and generated millions of jobs, the crisis was far worse than predicted. He should be calling for more action to create jobs. Raise the ante with a bold package of measures -- including direct public hiring, aid to states and localities, use the money paid back by the banks to give small business access to lower interest loans, call for a an infrastructure bank to mobilize private capital to rebuild America. Shelve the free trade agreements and challenge China and Germany, stating flatly that the US will not allow a return to the old global imbalances. Call on states and localities to pass and enforce domestic content legislation to ensure that taxpayers dollars create jobs here rather than abroad. Push the elements in the energy bill that generate jobs -- from retrofitting public buildings to permanent tax credits for renewable energy sources. Push passage of jobs creating transport and infrastructure appropriations.

The conservative noise machine already argues that the president, having run up record deficits with a failed stimulus program, now wants more of the same. Virtually all of these measures will be opposed -- as everything else has been -- by Republicans. Little of it will survive the inevitable Republican filibuster in the Senate.

Why propose what is unlikely to pass? Because these measures are needed, and at least will clearly define the choice for this fall. Why propose measures that will increase the deficit that people are said to be freaked out about? Because the majority of Americans, if forced to choose, make the right choice - for focus on jobs over deficits. So pose the choice between a White House and Democratic Congress still pushing for action on jobs, and an opposition focused on deficits and wedded to the policies that drove us off of the cliff.

 

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11:25 AM on 07/21/2010
No one answer. "Made In America" created "Jobs In America". Stockholders, etc. are more concerned with personal gain. It might cost $2 to produce an item in America instead of $.02, but the ends would justify the means. The same people losing their homes are people who were holding jobs no longer available in this country.There would be tax advantages. Besides, only salaried people have no tax advantages. I'm a Baby Boomer, most of us have parents whom survived The Depression. We were taught to "save, save, save". We had savings accounts which gave more interest than now. Interest rates on current savings do not motivate savings. We participated in 401K plans only to reach retirement to find out the money isn't there, or someone wants to change the rules and say, "oh that retirement formula was too high". After 9/11, insurance companies stated, "we must go up on premiums because we lost money due to our portfolios having hotels and airlines". There are so many doctors walking away from their practices because they can't afford malpractice insurance.
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unionave
Old Codger
06:26 AM on 07/21/2010
The big difference between now and the 1930's is there was a united electorate . It was so united FDR would still be President if he were alive . The next Repub President invented Presidential term limits to keep that from happening again . RMN figured out the unification of the electorate and began the division with his "silent majority" plan which is still in the play book of the Repub party and is being played today by Rush and his cohorts . The 1930's did not have the media of today nor the professional rhetoric propagators whose only job is to divide the electorate . And many of the electorate of today enjoy the division to the point of ignoring the pain caused by those that are guiding them in to the division . During the time when the electorate was united very important programs were passed by Congress that favored the American public and not the corporations . Banking regulation . Social Security . Public protection programs ! We the electorate can fix today's problem also . Just take the few dollars Wall Street is supposed to be holding for us away from Wall Street and do what the old folks did . Put it in U.S. Treasury bonds . That would end the power of Wall Street and Congress would then listen to us again .
07:36 PM on 07/20/2010
The "voters" that you talk about did not see a lousy economy in 2007 and 2008. They did wake up in a rage when it "dawn" on them that a talented black man was in the white house and that incompetence and at best mediocrity could no longer be compensated by skin color. Where was this outrage, Mr Borosage, when the jobs were outsourced to the tune of seven million and the only ones making ends meet was the upper one percent millionaires? Call it for what it is PLEASE.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim303
05:59 PM on 07/20/2010
Good one
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Liberal and Proud of It
01:46 AM on 07/20/2010
President Obama is a voice crying in the wilderness.

The single most powerful man in the world is up against forces that have been entrenched in Washington, New York City, and elsewhere for decades. He is up against media empires that are almost entirely corporate owned and are largely spineless, self-serving, and corrupt. He is up against an almost inconceivably corrupt GOP which is well served by these empires. He is up against tens of millions of uninformed and ill informed Americans--many, if not most, of whom have little understanding of the world they live in. He is up against tens of millions of Americans who are physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually ill due to the fact that they are living against the laws of nature and held hostage by corporations on all sides. We Americans consume bizarre "food" (laced with GMOs, pesticides, herbicides), we “consume” television much of the day, and we often have no hope even as we clutch our Bibles.

God help us.
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Pumpsie
06:19 PM on 07/20/2010
Obama has been dutifully doing the work of the economic elites, the banksters, and the multi-nationals from Day One. He gives pretty speeches, which you, obviously believe, and then does the complete opposite. Wake up. Obama is part of the problem in DC, not the solution. Watch his feet, not his lips.
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PenGoddess
We are the Universe
08:41 PM on 07/20/2010
Fan #1, liberal and proud of it. And yes, God help us but we also need to help ourselves. I believe you are right in your assertion that Obama is up against forces that have been entrenched for years. I just wish her were a little stronger in his stance against them. As you point out, he may be the most powerful man in the world but he is, after all, only one man. I do think it would do wonders for the American psyche if we all got off of the fat, sugar, and salt diet we have been on for forty years. I think the mood of the general public would improve dramatically. IMHO.
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RKTesq
Commercial Litigator, San Francisco
08:15 PM on 07/17/2010
From my perspective, the past 15 months in Congress have been marked by:

1) Republicans refusing to cooperate with anything in hopes they can derail the economy and win seats on that ground;

2) Democrats trying very, very, very hard to make it appear they are trying to do something for the people, when they actually don't wish to do anything more than the Republicans. I have never, ever seen a group work so hard at accomplishing so little.

I received a fund-raising call from the DNCC recently. When I explained I did not intend to support any Congressional Democrat this year, the response was, "Well, you don't want Republicans to win, do you?" That's the crux of the problem, isn't it? We are trampled upon by two corporate-owned parties, both of which know that if we don't support them, our only other option is even more repugnant.
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indy100
02:10 PM on 07/19/2010
Correct on all three points!
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Pumpsie
06:21 PM on 07/20/2010
Here, here! RKTesq summed it up in a nutshell. The people are getting a royal screwing from BOTH parties who are both on the take from the economic elites. God save us all.
04:22 PM on 07/16/2010
We are severely f'd to the third degree. Our political system is a networking platform to meet powerful people not a public service. US Politics has become a selfish game, helping citizens occasionally is an accidental bi-product. The BP oil leak disaster was due to failed policy but we do nothing but litigate a moratorium. Currently change of policy is only done in response to a catastrophic event so we currently wade in muck waiting for another event to signal policy change. So until all of the wildlife in the gulf is extinct no change in policy as our Government blinded by capitalism is content to say it is against the law to stop oil companies from drilling in the gulf and polluting the environment. With each disaster America is in worst health so we see no real progress. America can not stand another BP disaster, the already struggling Gulf economy after BP is in shambles. How many other companies is our Government willing to allow to do risky business at the expense of public health for a Corporate profit? We are then left to argue Repub or Dem leadership when neither is helping future direction. Politicians arguing for a year on what is the best band-aid for the Constitution is counterproductive, the quickest I have seen an amendment past is when Congress was requesting to give tax dollars to the too big to fail Corporations. I voted for CHANGE.
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indy100
02:11 PM on 07/19/2010
Me too, and I've yet to see any change.
11:48 PM on 07/28/2010
Blame the party of NO change.
04:22 PM on 07/16/2010
The great asymetry in U.S. politics is that elected Republicans articulate their base's authoritarian, illiberal, pro-haves ugly American (Pottersville) worldview and advocate (Wall Street oriented corporatist and world policing) policies in line therewith, whereas elected Democrats reject their base's humanitarian, liberal pro-have-lesses decent American (Bedford Falls) worldview and fail to advocate (Main Street everyday-people oriented civil libertarian neo-isolationist idealistic) policies in line therewith.

Obama's attacks on Republicans' ("'you're on your own' ... status quo philosophy") are hot air. What matters is that Obama and all Democratic elites LOOK and ACT like political quislings who privately support the Republicans' worldview and policies, albeit sans the "rough edges". Indeed Obama and his entire team ardently promotes this image.

This capitulation to the premises of the rightist movement goes all the way back to the days following the end of Franklin Roosevelt's Democratic Party leadership (in 1945) and the decline of Eleanor Roosevelt's influence in the 1950s.

A progressive third party -- a "choice not an echo" to the "bad cop" Republicans and the "good cop" Democrats -- could work a realignment of American politics by combining Rooseveltian liberalism at home (favored by coastal liberal Democrats) with traditional "Mid-western" isolationism in foreign and defense policy (favored by the majority of Americans in the "flyover" states).

The British Liberal Democrats have given American progressives a blueprint to roughly emulate. If not us, who? If not now, when?

Eric C. Jacobson
Public Interest Lawyer
Culver City, California
http://www.libdems.us
12:50 PM on 07/18/2010
i would have to agree. the powers that be control us by giving us essentially no choice through 2 parties, "the lesser of two evils" philosophy. we're accustomed to try to arrest the wrong, but there's no one championing the good, something that would inspire and impassion us to strive for. it's time to form a third party and just put our votes there, no matter how seemingly insignificant, or discounted by the media. a party that champions main st (where all the politicians have to cater to get voted in) there's so much apathy and anger in politics because there's no real choice...how about the "people's constitutional party" for a name? we'll always feel cheated if we buy into the notion that our vote doesn't matter or that there's no choice...voting our conscience has to come back, we can make that happen, just by choosing to so do...u might google "invisible empire" though a long movie, it makes some striking points
12:03 AM on 07/29/2010
The experiment has failed. Time to CHANGE and HOPE we can make the CHANGE. Obama is cleverly steering in between the opposites (not pleasing either extreme) because that's where the TRUTH is to be found. He thankfully questions all assumptions and refuses to be of any particular economic,political,social,philosophical, predetermined school of thought but is guided by a higher principle of what's best for the most of us, America, at this time. Towards that he's not governed by anybody's ideals but his own and that is the secret of understanding the man. Beware he's a man of steel tampered from his own life's experience. He's more than what we bargained for. He's the proverbial counterpuncher.
nothing2fear
They only call it Class War when we fight back.
01:02 PM on 07/16/2010
It is well to remember that those trillions represent money borrowed in the name of our nation and it will be the tax payers and their children and their grandchildren and so on who are expected to pay the interest which of course detracts from the economy as well. I have not seen an effort to pay down the debt and so I assume there will never be such an effort. What else would the wealthy and China invest in that was as secure as our debt?
03:04 PM on 07/16/2010
it's the trillions the Bankers took that is the problem. Not infrastructure spending.
nothing2fear
They only call it Class War when we fight back.
04:08 PM on 07/19/2010
I agree whole heartedly with you, unemployment does not cost trillions only billions. It is corporate welfare that will destroy us not unemployment in a time that was created by corporate greed.
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indy100
02:16 PM on 07/19/2010
And were you worried during the disasterous Bush years as the administration borrowed billions from China to finance two unwinable and fabricated wars? MY children and grandchildren will be stuck with those bills and we NEVER supported them, still don't. I'd much rather we borrow to finance unemployement (since I have two unemployed children) and safety net programs than wars.
nothing2fear
They only call it Class War when we fight back.
04:13 PM on 07/19/2010
I was very angry with the way everyone caved into those lying corporate stooges. I have no problem with unemployment extensions I just wish we could make all those creative bankers foot the bill. They created the unemployment and in the past (1991 they played with the world food supply causing hunger for profit, read the July Harper's, it is disgusting that our governing body is so lost that they have no idea as to what the people of this nation are going through. my comments were always point at the investment banker and politicians that have no clue.
nothing2fear
They only call it Class War when we fight back.
12:58 PM on 07/16/2010
Well from my point of view they should not have given the trillions to the people who creatively created this mess they should have given these trillions to small businesses and possibly the people who actually spend their money in the economy. But politicians are obligated and as long as they are obligated we will get the government we have.
12:57 PM on 07/16/2010
Well, Jim, now you know how Michael Savage feels.
12:51 PM on 07/16/2010
L@@K my dear friends, The fact is Simple. Obama has not been in office long enough to be responsible for all of the Cr@p that is wrong with our Country. We can blame Bush for Stuff, We can blame Clinton for left over stuff, Bush Sr.... It goes on.

It is also a fact that Obama has not been in office long enough to even BEGIN to fix what is wrong with this country. Especially when he has to keep putting out new fires, and fighting with so called other "American" Politicians that he can not fix what is broken.

The average American will never know what kind of progress the President has made because the media, the GOP, the Tea Party, etc. are all so D@m disrespectful and degrading to the office of our president.

There is no patriotism in the higher offices of our country anymore. (love and devotion to ones own country) Where is the desire to make this country great again?? I think Obama has it, I think the rest are trying to squash it.
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UnaBohemia
Ask a Latina
05:09 PM on 07/16/2010
F/F Good job!
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Cathy Wilheim
06:17 PM on 07/17/2010
Hear! Hear!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tdpubs
Content publisher for small business marketing
12:31 PM on 07/16/2010
Finally the Tea party people and the small government folks will get their wish. We'll get to see what small government is like when big business owns us lock, stock and barrel. I don't think this country can survive another Republican Congress.
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JewellB
Organic gardening - healthy land & people
12:13 PM on 07/16/2010
Since there is no clear path to economic redemption in this article or among the comments so far, permit me to propose a brilliant idea. Statistics show that 10 % of Americans own 90% of the wealth, then the 10% wealth holders should be paying 90% of ALL taxes. They should be paying not just 90% of income taxes, but social security and medicare, excise taxes, etc. Just imagine what a boost to our economy would follow if the working poor suddenly had a 15.3% increase in income since both their portion and the employer's portion of social security and medicare is switched to the 10% of Americans who own 90% of the wealth! I think it is possible to get to ecomomic justice in this courntry, starting with the low wage earners not bearing any portion of taxes.

(http://www.businessinsider.com/22-statistics-that-prove-the-middle-class-is-being-systematically-wiped-out-of-existence-in-america-2010-7#83-percent-of-all-us-stocks-are-in-the-hands-of-1-percent-of-the-people-1),
07:02 PM on 07/16/2010
The tax code is already progressive. The top 50% of wage earners pay 96% of the tax revenue (this is stated by the the CBO). All I have to do to put job creation into perspective is to look back at how many of my employers in my career were poor- 0. Redistribution of wealth does nothing more than create a dependent society and hamper job growth. By the same token, creating uncertainty for small businesses strangles new job growth. Not knowing how much the new health care program will cost, not knowing how much taxes will be raised and not giving small business any financial incentives to create jobs has put everyone into a holding pattern until it shakes out.
The current Congress and the administration with their progressive change has created a hostile environment for business. The media painting profit as evil has labeled those few slices of our economy that are profitable as mercenary.
Until the current economic/ political environment changes this economy is going nowhere.
09:18 PM on 07/17/2010
Businesses may be afraid and unsure of what will happen - but it really doesn't have much to do with the reforms that have been passed. They just don't know about how the economy is going to play out. Stop with the same old talking points.

The rich are not stimulating the economy. They are holding on to their big bucks so they don't need the tax cuts renewed.

98% of people got a tax cut last year. It might not have been noticed much but it was done.

The only "hostile" environment is being created for those who truly deserved it - the greedy big corporations - the banks, the health insurance companies, big oil. They should be afraid and hostile. People are calling them on their "stuff" otherwise known as bs.
09:18 PM on 07/17/2010
Maybe people should look at the figures. No public jobs were created under the Bush administration. That's right - 0.
10:29 AM on 07/16/2010
The press keeps everyone so confused, people want less government, less government intrusion in the private businesses, but you want jobs. Nobody can make these private businesses hire unless they want to. All the tax credits in the world will not change these greedy business owners.

The people at the top hate what Obama wants to do in order to help creat jobs due to their not wanting to be regulated, so please tell me what this man is supposed to do? Why does everyone hate him but thinks he can fix the world.

This man is working hard for the regular folks, not they lazy but the hardworking folks who have been overlooked with all types of hatred, criticism, obstruction. The American people have become narcissistic, greedy, selfish and it's ruining the country. Obama can't tell these businesses to hire and he's already offered tax credits. If you keep listening to the press you will never have anything straight as to what's really going on.