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Month: July 2013

Blue America chat: Meet Barbara Buono, Chris Christie’s worst nightmare

Blue America chat: Meet Barbara Buono, Chris Christie’s worst nightmare

by digby

My first exposure to Chris Christie was when I saw video footage of him abusively browbeating a school teacher at a town hall meeting for having the temerity to question his education policies. I can hardly begin to explain the depth of my visceral repulsion at his bullying tactics. I can’t imagine ever voting for him after seeing that and I don’t think I’m the only woman in America to react that way.

But it’s not just his vile personality. His record is execrable as well. Tom Moran at the Star-Ledger characterized his time in office this way:

New Jersey’s unemployment rate is the highest in the region, and yet he left $3 billion in federal money on the table when he canceled plans to build a tunnel under the Hudson River. The state’s credit rating has dropped on his watch, thanks to his habit of pushing costs to the future. New Jersey’s foreclosure rate is also among the highest in the nation, and the state’s response among the most inept…Christie opposes abortion rights and closed six Planned Parenthood clinics. He vetoed marriage equality. He vetoed a surtax on millionaires. He has retreated on climate change. And he removed the only black justice from the state Supreme Court.

He’s also on record denying climate change and just last week declared himself the one true heir of Rudy “9/11” Giuliani with a national security speech that would have sounded better in the original German. Only in America would such a man be widely touted by the chattering classes as a voice of “moderation.”

Luckily for New Jersey there is one feisty politician who knows better, State Senator Barbara Buono, the Democrat who’d like to save her state from any more of Christie’s so-called “success” by denying him another term as Governor. Let’s just say her record is as progressive as his is conservative. And there’s no mistaking what she really stands for.

Buono is the daughter of a butcher and a substitute school teacher who put herself through law school. She vividly recalls her own early years of struggle, even having to apply for government assistance at one point. Her compassion for the concerns of average working families led her to politics in the early 90s, working her way up to become the first woman majority leader in the State Senate, where she took on Christie as the Chair of the budget committee. This woman isn’t one little bit cowed by the thuggish Christie.

We know it’s an uphill climb and so does Buono. But we all think that there are a whole lot of New Jersey Democrats, especially women, who will go into that voting booth and decide they just can’t stomach the idea of Chris Christie as Governor again or … gulp … president and put a stop to him. If people get a chance to hear a reform-minded, anti-corruption progressive like Barbara Buono they may just realize they have a better choice.  We’d like to help her get the word out and we hope you will too.

Please come by CrooksandLiars.com today (Monday) at 11 am PT and 2 pm ET to chat with Senator Buono. And if you can donate something to her campaign it will go to not only help a true Blue America progressive but also to stop one of the most odious conservative villains in American politics. A twofer!

QOTD: Rick Perlstein

QOTD: Rick Perlstein

by digby

On Up with Steve Kornacki this week-end:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

I think the reason Obama’s rhetoric and his whole strategic approach to his presidency fails is because going back six years or more, he fundamentally misunderstands the Republican Party. He doesn’t understand they behave, this kind of Leninist cell waiting in the mountains, waiting for the final apocalypse. He claims Reagan as a role model, a transformative presidency. Reagan every day said, “there’s a problem that screwed Americans: the Democratic party and the liberals.”

By drawing that distinction he taught Americans to think that way. Barack Obama is constitutionally incapable of saying, “we have adversaries.” That every time a Democratic president comes in that they handle the government more effectively. Every time a Democratic president comes in, they create more jobs than the Republicans. But to say that would be constitutionally impossible for Obama because he needs to tell this story about reconciliation — there is no Red America, there is no Blue America.

Also too, this:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

The presidency is, in important respects, a rhetorical office it’s a bully pulpit as TR called it. And one of the things Ronald Reagan was very good at was losing well. When he lost lost a fight, let’s say when he had to raise taxes, he was very good at using that to drive home his fundamental message: “I have to raise taxes because those liberals made me do it. That’s just what liberals do.” Ultimately, everything, whether he won or lost, he made that a generational project of telling a story about how the world works that kept on hammering home what he wanted the presidents after him to do. 

And lo and behold, that’s what the presidents after him did, even Clinton and Obama.

Perlstein is working on a big new book on the rise of Ronald Reagan and he knows of what he speaks.

The good news is that if the president is sincere in his desire to repudiate his former zeal for deficit cutting our way to prosperity, he might be able to leave a different imprint. It will cause a lot of dissonance among people like me who have been intensely frustrated by his insistence on framing every liberal initiative in Reaganesque terms, but if he sustains this message and doesn’t take actions to undermine it — or at least resists the temptation to own the compromise as he usually does and instead blames the House lunatics for making him do the things he didn’t want to do as Reagan did — over the long term it could change the legacy he’s made and set the table for a more liberal future.

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The choice in front of white America, by @DavidOAtkins

The choice in front of white America

by David Atkins

Another reminder that the American Dream is still dying, and the economy remains terrible no matter what the stock and housing markets say.

Four out of 5 U.S. adults struggle with joblessness, near-poverty or reliance on welfare for at least parts of their lives, a sign of deteriorating economic security and an elusive American dream.

Survey data exclusive to The Associated Press points to an increasingly globalized U.S. economy, the widening gap between rich and poor, and the loss of good-paying manufacturing jobs as reasons for the trend.

The findings come as President Barack Obama tries to renew his administration’s emphasis on the economy, saying in recent speeches that his highest priority is to “rebuild ladders of opportunity” and reverse income inequality.

As nonwhites approach a numerical majority in the U.S., one question is how public programs to lift the disadvantaged should be best focused – on the affirmative action that historically has tried to eliminate the racial barriers seen as the major impediment to economic equality, or simply on improving socioeconomic status for all, regardless of race.

Hardship is particularly growing among whites, based on several measures. Pessimism among that racial group about their families’ economic futures has climbed to the highest point since at least 1987. In the most recent AP-GfK poll, 63 percent of whites called the economy “poor.”

The racial dynamics are fascinating: lower-income white Americans are losing their privilege, statistically speaking.

While racial and ethnic minorities are more likely to live in poverty, race disparities in the poverty rate have narrowed substantially since the 1970s, census data show. Economic insecurity among whites also is more pervasive than is shown in the government’s poverty data, engulfing more than 76 percent of white adults by the time they turn 60, according to a new economic gauge being published next year by the Oxford University Press.

The gauge defines “economic insecurity” as experiencing unemployment at some point in their working lives, or a year or more of reliance on government aid such as food stamps or income below 150 percent of the poverty line. Measured across all races, the risk of economic insecurity rises to 79 percent.

Marriage rates are in decline across all races, and the number of white mother-headed households living in poverty has risen to the level of black ones.

“It’s time that America comes to understand that many of the nation’s biggest disparities, from education and life expectancy to poverty, are increasingly due to economic class position,” said William Julius Wilson, a Harvard professor who specializes in race and poverty. He noted that despite continuing economic difficulties, minorities have more optimism about the future after Obama’s election, while struggling whites do not.

“There is the real possibility that white alienation will increase if steps are not taken to highlight and address inequality on a broad front,” Wilson said.

Lower-income whites can do one of two things in response to this. They can develop a class consciousness and understand that they have more in common with lower-income persons of color than they do with Mitt Romney and Sean Hannity. Or they can do what they have traditionally done and attempt to preserve their sliver of privilege over their fellows of different races.

Democrats could certainly do a better job of making the class-conscious appeal to recruit these voters. But it’s not entirely clear that they respond any better to Elizabeth Warren’s populist appeal than they do to Barack Obama’s neoliberal one. Leadership helps, but it only goes so far. The onus is on working white America to wake up and realize that minorities are not the enemy; the corporate bosses are. If things continue on their current path, it’s going to be a long, slow electoral trench war until lower-income whites become an electorally near-irrelevant segment in a few decades.

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A Larry Summers joke

A Larry Summers joke

by digby

A friend in Washington told me this last week:

The president, Larry Summers, a dirty hippie and the pope were all on Air Force One when it started to have engine trouble. The pilot opened the door of the cockpit and said with terror in his voice, “The plane is going down, so put on a parachute and jump! I’ll show you how.” The pilot grabbed a parachute from the pile, strapped it on, opened the plane’s door, and took the leap.

After his departure, the four people left were startled to notice there were only three parachutes left in the pile. The president humbly suggested that the other three take the parachutes but the others protest saying, “no, Mr President, the world needs you, you must take one of the parachutes.” After a few minutes of haggling, the president agrees and straps on his chute and jumped.

The remaining three look at each other for a moment at which point Larry Summers says,“there are other smart people, but no one in the world is as smart as I am. The world needs me as much as the President, so I must take one of these parachutes and save myself.” So he jumped, too.

The dirty hippie and the pope sit quietly for a moment and the pope says, “you must take the last parachute, my son, it is God’s will.”

The hippie smiles and replies, “oh don’t worry Your Eminence, we each have a parachute. The smartest man in the world just strapped on my backpack and jumped out of the airplane.”

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Culture of corruption, Island edition

Culture of corruption, Island edition

by digby

This would be shocking if it weren’t so common among these New Dems:

A senior aide to Rep. Colleen W. Hanabusa (D-Hawaii) told his colleagues late last month that the nation’s top drug lobby had agreed to run a campaign supporting the congresswoman’s challenge to Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz and wanted to coordinate it with her strategists.

Such an effort, described in an e-mail obtained by The Washington Post, could run afoul of campaign finance laws, which prohibit candidates and their staff from substantial discussions with interest groups about their independent political activities.

Officials with the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) and Hanabusa’s campaign denied that the group had offered to run such an effort but acknowledged talks about a possible fundraiser for Hanabusa and about the state of the race in general.

Campaign officials blamed the e-mail on a misinformed staffer.

“He made inaccurate assumptions about the type of help PhRMA could provide the campaign,” campaign spokesman Peter Boylan said.

Matt Bennett, a spokesman for PhRMA, said officials there did not offer to do a campaign on Hanabusa’s behalf. But he said the group had “preliminary” discussions about hosting an industry fundraiser for Hanabusa through its political action committee.

He also said that a PhRMA lobbyist had spoken with Jennifer Sabas, a top Hanabusa campaign adviser, but that they had talked only about the state of the Democratic primary campaign in Hawaii.

“They discussed the race and what’s happening on the ground,” Bennett said.

Boylan echoed that, saying Sabas did not provide PhRMA with any information “that would constitute coordination in violation of the law.”

But Clay Schroers, Schatz’s campaign manager, said the arrangement the e-mail outlines “is a deeply troubling situation, and Rep. Hanabusa clearly owes the people of Hawaii an explanation.”

The e-mail was sent June 28 from the Gmail account of Hanabusa’s deputy chief of staff, Christopher Raymond, to Sabas, Boylan and Rod Tanonaka, the congresswoman’s chief of staff. The Post obtained it from a person who received a copy and requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the contents.

The message described a practice that is often suspected but rarely revealed: interest groups coordinating their putatively independent efforts with the candidates they are backing.

“As I’m sure you have heard, PhRMA has committed to pulling together an independent expenditure on CH’s behalf,” Raymond wrote. “Nick Shipley (Government Relations VP) and Bob Phillipone (Senior VP) are the leads on this and would like to be put in touch with folks on the campaign. After having talked with Nick about this a little more, and based on our discussion, I came to the conclusion that is it the three of you the he would like to be in touch with. I am going to give him your email address so he can be in touch. I didn’t feel comfortable giving out your phone numbers.

“Should you be contacted by Nick or Bob please know they are good democrats,” he concluded.

Lulz. “Good Democrats.” That’s funny. More like “Good snake oil salesmen.”

And I’m sure they know that New Dem Hanabusa will remember who her friends are when it comes time to sell out the people of her state. After all, she’s got a proven record of doing that in the House.

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Idiocracy in full effect

Idiocracy in full effect

by digby

On Friday, Fox News invited renowned religious scholar and prolific author Reza Aslan onto the air, ostensibly to discuss his latest book on Christianity, ‘Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth.’

But instead, host Lauren Green launched into an Islamophobic attack on Aslan’s credentials and expressed incredulity that he, a self-professed Muslim, would be able to write about Christianity in a fair and honest way.

Throughout the nearly 10 minute interview, Green inaccurately sought to portray Aslan as a religiously-motivated agitator with a hidden agenda out to discredit the very religion that he himself once practiced:

GREEN: This is an interesting book. Now I want to clarify, you’re a Muslim, so why did you write a book about the founder of Christianity?
ASLAN: Well to be clear, I am a scholar of religions with four degrees — including one in the New Testament, and fluency in biblical Greek, who has been studying the origins of Christianity for two decades — who also just happens to be a Muslim. So it’s not that I’m just some Muslim writing about Jesus, I am an expert with a Ph.D in the history of religions…
GREEN: But it still begs the question why would you be interested in the founder of Christianity?
ASLAN: Because it’s my job as an academic. I am a professor of religion, including the New Testament. That’s what I do for a living, actually.

Undeterred, Green continued by reading aloud from an equally Islamophobic FoxNews.com column by John Dickerson in which he dismissed Aslan’s academic pedigree, referring to him simply as “an educated Muslim” with an “opinion” about Jesus.

Fox remains the most popular cable news network in America.

When the inmates take over the asylum (GOP style)

When the inmates take over the asylum (GOP style)

by digby

Ryan Cooper has a bunch of interesting stuff up at Political Animal this week-end, but I thought I’d just highlight this one and let you click over to read the rest.

He’s referring here to an interview with Tom Coburn in which he discusses the uselessness of trying to defund Obamacare because it is destined to fail and will then demoralize the base:

It really throws into stark relief the extent to which Republicans are driven these days not just by ideological extremism, but also by procedural extremism. Any democratic system (especially the clunky American version) depends on parties accepting basic democratic values. Ideally, when you would like a new program, or don’t like an existing one, then what you do is win some elections and then pass legislation. If you don’t have full control of government, you achieve what you can by cutting some deals while laying the groundwork for when you do take power, when you can then pass your program. This is the 2006 Nancy Pelosi strategy and it works quite well.

Republicans, by contrast, are trying to get their way via threats and hostage-taking even though they lost the last election fair and square. Despite losing the presidency and seats in both houses of Congress, they demand the president kill his signature achievement or they’ll shut down the government.

This is well-trodden ground, but the interesting point that Coburn makes is that behaving like an irresponsible fanatic will backfire even on its own terms. Sarah Kliff followed up this morning:

SK: What do you think happens next with this defunding push?

TC: I don’t know. They’re really rallying all the outside groups. They’re going to spend a bunch of money to just demoralize the base. The only way you get rid of Obamacare is winning the 2016 election. Their worry is that if you get a bunch of people on free health care, you may not be able to do that. But I think costs are going to be so high that those who are not going to get the benefits are actually going to revolt.

SK: What do you think of legislators who say that they’re willing to shut down the federal government over Obamacare funding?

TC: If you’re actually going to do that, and hold it, that’d be fine. The problem is that I know the strength of the backbone of the Senate and House, and as soon as the heat gets hot they’ll fall like wet suits.

They don’t have a microphone. Let me tell you what happens when you shut down the government: You start seeing the consequences. Who controls what is left operating? The president. As soon as the first Medicare bills go unpaid, where do you think the pressure will be? And what’s the likelihood the president will collapse on the most significant legislative accomplishment of his administration?

They have no idea, I was in it. I experienced it.

This is a useful observation. Their ideological extremism has led inexorably to this procedural extremism. They now believe they are doing God’s work and must save the Republic by any means necessary.

And because of that, I don’t think Coburn is right in worrying that losing an Obamacare repeal would demoralize the Republican base. It would do the opposite — it would energize it. They thrive on being the underdog and love to run against both Democrats and their own establishment. It’s what they do.

Here’s conservative movement guru Richard Viguerie after the loss of the congress in 2006:

Sometimes a loss for the Republican Party is a gain for conservatives. Often, a little taste of liberal Democrats in power is enough to remind the voters what they don’t like about liberal Democrats and to focus the minds of Republicans on the principles that really matter. That’s why the conservative movement has grown fastest during those periods when things seemed darkest, such as during the Carter administration and the first two years of the Clinton White House.

Conservatives are, by nature, insurgents, and it’s hard to maintain an insurgency when your friends, or people you thought were your friends, are in power.

Cooper concludes:

This might seem like a minor point here, but I think it’s fairly compelling evidence that the biggest problem with American politics is not the structure of our government (which, I’ll agree, sucks) but the Republican party itself. As goofy and jerry-rigged as the American system is, it could probably accommodate an ideologically extreme party if they just bought in to the basic underlying premises of democratic governance.

Well, sort of. The Republican establishment is afraid of its own voters which is perhaps the most important underlying premise of democratic governance there is. They truly are responding to the will of the people. Unfortunately, their voters have been radicalized by about 40 years of increasingly nihilistic propaganda that’s resulted in the insurgency turning on the system itself. Since men like Coburn are responsible for this, it would be tempting to just sit back and munch on the popcorn as the party implodes, but unfortunately the GOP wields a tremendous amount of power in our two party system, even if it has gone nuts. Their problem is our problem whether we like it or not.

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Big Brother update

Big Brother update

by digby

George Stephanopoulos managed to interview Glenn Greenwald this morning about a new scoop without questioning his journalistic credentials or asking him when he stopped being a traitor. It was rather refreshing.

After all, the story is rather important, particularly in light of the very close vote in the House last week:

Today on “This Week,” Glenn Greenwald – the reporter who broke the story about the National Security Agency’s surveillance programs – claimed that those NSA programs allowed even low-level analysts to search the private emails and phone calls of Americans.

“The NSA has trillions of telephone calls and emails in their databases that they’ve collected over the last several years,” Greenwald told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos. “And what these programs are, are very simple screens, like the ones that supermarket clerks or shipping and receiving clerks use, where all an analyst has to do is enter an email address or an IP address, and it does two things. It searches that database and lets them listen to the calls or read the emails of everything that the NSA has stored, or look at the browsing histories or Google search terms that you’ve entered, and it also alerts them to any further activity that people connected to that email address or that IP address do in the future.” 

Greenwald explained that while there are “legal constraints” on surveillance that require approval by the FISA court, these programs still allow analysts to search through data with little court approval or supervision.

“There are legal constraints for how you can spy on Americans,” Greenwald said. “You can’t target them without going to the FISA court. But these systems allow analysts to listen to whatever emails they want, whatever telephone calls, browsing histories, Microsoft Word documents.”

“And it’s all done with no need to go to a court, with no need to even get supervisor approval on the part of the analyst,” he added.

The good news is that Saxby Chambliss has been on the case and knows for a fact that Greenwald is completely full of it. Because Chambliss asked the NSA and they told him so.

But the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee told Stephanopoulos he would be shocked if such programs existed.

“It wouldn’t just surprise me, it would shock me,” Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Georgia, said on “This Week” Sunday.

Chambliss said he recently spent time with NSA officials and was assured that the programs Greenwald describes have been exaggerated.

“I was back out at NSA just last week, spent a couple hours out there with high and low level NSA officials,” Chambliss said. “And what I have been assured of is that there is no capability at NSA for anyone without a court order to listen to any telephone conversation or to monitor any e-mail.”

Chambliss said that any monitoring of emails is purely “accidental.”

“In fact, we don’t monitor emails. That’s what kind of assures me is that what the reporting is is not correct. Because no emails are monitored now,” Chambliss said. “They used to be, but that stopped two or three years ago. So I feel confident that there may have been some abuse, but if it was it was pure accidental.”

Meanwhile, we had David Gregory fluffing the NSA’s pool boy, Congressman Mike Rogers, on Meet the Press. Rogers  explained at length, without any follow-up,  that the vote this week that came just 6 votes short of dismantling the NSA programs was a result of the public being upset about the administration’s abusive Big Brother IRS and Obamacare which they confused with  the benign NSA that’s doing God’s work.

That is no joke, it’s what he said.  And then he lied repeatedly about other details we already know while the petty little Villager David Gregory (who, like so many others, obviously can’t see past his personal animosity toward Greenwald to the underlying issues) asked him to go on at length about how Edward Snowden is killing people.

And that was it. Rogers was the only guest he had on this subject. They didn’t have time for any opposing views.  They needed to talk about more important issues: Weiner and Filner.

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“A damaging framework in Washington”

“A damaging framework in Washington”

by digby

I just read David’s piece below and I am still in shock.  The President really said this?

In an interview with The New York Times, Obama said the overwhelming focus on cutting spending and trimming the deficit has been a “damaging framework in Washington,” and that there needs to be ample attention given to ensuring upward mobility for all Americans.

Uhm, we know the history here Mr. President:

In the summer of 2009 [only six months into the first term], Geithner was asked by a television interviewer whether tax hikes would be needed to rein in the nation’s debt. Geithner responded it was too early to tell, an early hint of the priority he put on cutting the deficit.

Political strategists at the White House were mortified. Obama had promised not to raise taxes on the middle class. This had been a centerpiece of his election campaign. At a White House briefing a day after Geithner’s remarks, he was publicly chided by Obama’s top spokesman for engaging in a “hypothetical.”

But Geithner already had the president’s ear. Privately, Obama offered reassurance. “I’d have said the same thing,” Obama told him, according to two people familiar with the conversation.

By early last year, Geithner was beginning to gain the upper hand in a rancorous debate over whether to propose a second economic stimulus program to Congress, beyond the $787 billion package lawmakers had approved in 2009.

Lawrence Summers, then the director of the National Economic Council, and Christina Romer, then the chairwoman of the Council of Economic Advisers, argued that Obama should focus on bringing down the stubbornly high unemployment rate. This was not the time to concentrate on deficits, they said.

Peter Orszag, Obama’s budget director, wanted the president to start proposing ways to bring spending in line with tax revenue.

Although Geithner was not as outspoken, he agreed with Orszag on the need to begin reining in the debt, according to current and former administration officials. Some spoke for this article on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

Even before the president had been inaugurated, Geithner had been urging him to set a target for the budget deficit that would require shrinking its size to 3 percent of the U.S. economy. At that level, the national debt would eventually become manageable.

“From the earliest moments of the administration and even before, he clearly had a big focus on long-term deficit reduction and making clear, not just to the markets but for the entire economy, that the government is living within its means,” Goolsbee said in an interview.

The economic team went round and round. Geithner would hold his views close, but occasionally he would get frustrated. Once, as Romer pressed for more stimulus spending, Geithner snapped. Stimulus, he told Romer, was “sugar,” and its effect was fleeting. The administration, he urged, needed to focus on long-term economic growth, and the first step was reining in the debt.

Wrong, Romer snapped back. Stimulus is an “antibiotic” for a sick economy, she told Geithner. “It’s not giving a child a lollipop.”

In the end, Obama signed into law only a relatively modest $13 billion jobs program, much less than what was favored by Romer and many other economists in the administration.

“There was this move to exit fiscal stimulus a lot sooner than we should have, and we’ve been playing catch-up ever since,” Romer said in an interview.

In truth, the president had been with Geitner from the beginning:

I asked the president-elect, “At the end of the day, are you really talking about over the course of your campaign some kind of grand bargain? That you have tax reform, healthcare reform, entitlement reform including Social Security and Medicare, where everybody in the country is going to have to sacrifice something, accept change for the greater good?”

“Yes,” Obama said.

“And when will that get done?” I asked.

“Well, right now, I’m focused on a pretty heavy lift, which is making sure we get that reinvestment and recovery package in place. But what you described is exactly what we’re going to have to do. What we have to do is to take a look at our structural deficit, how are we paying for government? What are we getting for it? And how do we make the system more efficient?”

“And eventually sacrifice from everyone?” I asked.

“Everybody’s going to have give. Everybody’s going to have to have some skin the game,” Obama said.

I certainly agree that this focus on the deficit has been a “damaging framework.” I’d say it’s been especially damaging that it happened in the midst of an epic economic crisis by a Democratic president. In fact, it was inexplicable. And it has had a very deleterious effect on our economy with the only bright spot being that it coincided with a gridlocked congress featuring a right wing faction that hates the president so much they haven’t been able to force themselves to take yes for an answer. We’ve avoided Europe’s repeated recessions and settled for a stock market bubble and tepid growth with high long-term unemployment instead. So I guess that’s something…

This is infuriating, but only because I’ve been screaming about this for years now, as have been many people more important than I (like certain Nobel prize winning economists in the New York Times.) The fatuous trope that the government has to “tighten its belt, just like your family” has repeatedly come out of the mouths of every political leader of both parties, including the president. The vague insinuation that deficits are the cause of our bad economy cannot have been an accident and yet it has been totally wrong from the get.

Look, I certainly understand that all the smart liberals have recently discovered that the executive branch is powerless and that the presidency is largely a ceremonial position, much like Wills and Kate. But I still think that it might have a tiny bit of influence in setting the terms of the debate, at least to the extent of nudging Democrats in congress to focus on certain issues or see the solutions to problems in a certain way. And there is just no denying that the president has been framing the deficit as a major problem (if not the major problem) that must be dealt with immediately. Indeed, his administration has taken great pride in their accomplishments in this regard.

Recall that the president even framed the Senate passage of his signature Health Care bill like this at the conclusion of his Christmas 2009 press conference:

“With today’s vote, we are now incredibly close to making health insurance reform a reality in this country. Our challenge, then, is to finish the job. We can’t doom another generation of Americans to soaring costs and eroding coverage and exploding deficits. Instead we need to do what we were sent here to do and improve the lives of the people we serve. For the sake of our citizens, our economy and our future, let’s make 2010 the year we finally reform health care in the United States of America.”

And that was only the beginning of the increasingly shrill deficit mongering by Democrats and Republicans alike with a few dirty hippies screaming impotently on the sidelines. It led to the endless budget showdowns we’ve endured ever since with the Democrats offering up massive cuts even as the Republicans demand more and more.

It’s a step in the right direction for the president to try to reframe this debate. It’s long overdue. But much damage has been done and it’s largely because of a very big mistake on the administration’s part to validate conservative cant on economics and focus on deficits at the wrong time. As David says below, there’s nothing to lose by confrontation at this point. Indeed, there never was, as we’ve seen demonstrated in living color. So perhaps the president could at least make amends for this error by using his considerable skills to reframe this debate for his potential successors, his Party and the people of this country.  We can’t take any more of this.

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The Obama Presidency is adrift. It’s his own fault. And it can be fixed. by @DavidOAtkins

The Obama Presidency is adrift. It’s his own fault. And it can be fixed.

by David Atkins

The President has has made a recent pivot to talk about jobs and economic growth rather than cuts. This is welcome, and the rhetoric has been good.

Yet some of it leaves one to scratch one’s head. Consider this:

In an interview with The New York Times, Obama said the overwhelming focus on cutting spending and trimming the deficit has been a “damaging framework in Washington,” and that there needs to be ample attention given to ensuring upward mobility for all Americans.

“If we don’t do anything, then growth will be slower than it should be. Unemployment will not go down as fast as it should. Income inequality will continue to rise,” he said. “That’s not a future that we should accept.”

Cutting spending and trimming the deficit has been a “damaging framework”? If that is so, why did he spend so much time legitimizing it?

The President’s defenders often state that he does the best he can with intransigent Republican opposition. Those same people often state that rhetoric doesn’t matter–that only votes matter, and that votes are a product of local, economic and institutional factors, not Presidential persuasion. But if that’s the case, why bother with a rhetorical pivot to jobs?

If rhetoric and framing do matter, why would the President state that cutting spending and reducing deficits is a bad framework when he himself has done so much to promote that framework through a Grand Bargain?

This is precisely the sort of thing that is making his Presidency seem adrift. It is adrift. That, of course, is largely the fault of Republican extremism preventing the country from accomplishing anything and attempting to nullify his presidency. But that alone doesn’t explain the lack of focus.

The President could take a stand, forcing passage of what small improvements might be possible while cursing the GOP for not doing more. Nothing is getting done anyway.

If nothing is going to get done, why not use the intervening time to damage the House Republicans who stand in the way of progress? Why not demand message bill after message bill, sponsor them through the Senate and watch the GOP filibuster every one? Why not then call for reform of the filibuster? Spend every day listing the things the House Republicans will not do? Go to the media and ask why the Republicans refuse to give the President a bill to increase the minimum wage? Why do they refuse to send him an infrastructure bill to create jobs? Why do they refuse to send him a gun control bill?

If I were President, I would go on camera and say:

“You know, I want what the American people want. Like you, I want to increase the minimum wage. I want to boost jobs, increase incomes for middle class Americans, and fix our decaying infrastructure. I want to do something to stop the epidemic of gun deaths in this country. I want to invest in green jobs, move away from the old fuels that fund our enemies, slow down and stop climate change and make America the leader in the technologies of the 21st century. I want to invest in our children’s education and stop students from taking on a lifetime of debt just to go to college.

Like you, I want to do all these things. But I’m not a king. I can’t force Congress to put these bills on my desk. They have to bring them to me, and Republicans in Congress refuse to do so. I’m asking them directly: give me these bills. The American people want them. I got elected by a significant margin in order to get these things done that I talked about on the campaign trail.

I’m as aware as the American People that nothing is getting done in Washington. It’s all bickering and no action. But that doesn’t mean everyone is equally to blame. I’m trying to get these things done to bring relief to my fellow Americans. Most of my Democratic colleagues in the Senate are trying to do the same. But the House of Representatives is refusing to do its job. In fact, they’re planning on taking America hostage–again!–refusing to pay the bills we’ve racked up unless we slash even more jobs and hurt our economy even worse than they hurt it already.

Enough is enough. I’m waiting for the House to act, and for Republicans in the Senate to stop filibustering every bill we put forward to help the American people. The Republican Senate Minority has already blocked twice as many bills during my Presidency than in any other Presidency. I’ve tried compromising, I’ve tried threatening, I’ve tried pleading. Nothing works. There’s nothing to trade. The Republicans are so invested in trying to make my Presidency fail that they’re will to let American go down with it.

They don’t want to raise the minimum wage. They want to cut taxes for the rich. They don’t want to invest in green jobs and infrastructure: they want to cut jobs and privatize our roads and bridges. They don’t want to reduce the number of guns on our streets and in our schools; they want to increase them. They’d rather regulate women’s bodies than regulate corporations that evade taxes and pollute our air and water. There’s no compromise to be had there. Trust me, I’ve tried–though the press often pretends I haven’t, I’ve tried as hard as anyone can. They just don’t want the same things the American people do.

My message to the American People is this: you elected me to do a job and make your lives better. I’m doing all I can, but I can’t do it alone. I need Congress–and Republicans in Congress especially–to do their jobs rather than cater to the interests of a few big corporations and the wealthiest Americans. Everything I can do alone, I’m doing. But I can’t do the big things without some help. If you want change as much as I do, if you want to realize your and my hope for a better future, call up and email your members of Congress and tell them to do their jobs and send these bills to my desk.”

Would that be a divisive speech? Of course it would. But it’s not as if the government is functional now, or as if partisan sniping could get more acrimonious than it is now.

Such a speech might not accomplish too much. But it wouldn’t be the speech of a Presidency adrift. It would be the speech of a Presidency on point. It would highlight precisely why the President was taking executive action to go around Congress when possible. It would highlight who was causing problems. It would be difficult for a fractured Republican caucus to effectively respond. And it might even mobilize Democratic and progressive activists to do the seemingly impossible and retake the House in 2014.

The current approach will accomplish no more legislatively, while failing badly politically. If the Presidency is adrift, it’s time for the American people to learn why straight from the horse’s mouth.

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