Posts Tagged ‘the Obama administration’

Boehner announces deal with Reid on end to payroll tax impasse

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Boehner announces deal with Reid
on end to payroll tax impasse

Boehner announces deal with Reid on end to payroll tax impasse, NBC Politics on MSNBC, December 22, 2011, by Tom Curry, msnbc.com National Affairs Writer, excerpt quoted verbatim: OK, so this is a little back into the murky world of politics. We’ll try not to do that too often, but this deal, as described below, is actually one of the first successes the Obama administration has had over the House Republicans. Savor it while you can. ~ Paul Evans

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Tom Curry: Hearing anger from the people they represent, House Republicans found a way to make a deal and claim they accomplished something, too. NBC’s Kelly O’Donnell reports.

House Speaker John Boehner announced Thursday that he had agreed with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on a two-month extension of a package including a payroll tax cut and an extension of unemployment benefits.

Boehner said in statement he and Reid “reached an agreement that will ensure taxes do not increase for working families on Jan. 1 while ensuring that a complex new reporting burden is not unintentionally imposed on small business job creators.”

He said the Senate “will join the House in immediately appointing conferees, with instructions to reach agreement in the weeks ahead on a full-year payroll tax extension. We will ask the House and Senate to approve this agreement by unanimous consent before Christmas.”

See the full article, here.

See Also: BREAKING: Bah, humbug- Boehner CAVES, Daily Kos, December 22, 2011, by Earl from Ohio.

See Also: Boehner Takes Strong Hand With House GOP After Payroll Tax Meltdown, Talking Points Memo, December 22, 2011, by Brian Beutler.

See Also: Dems win one as GOP caves, The Washington Post (The Plum Line), December 22, 2011, by Greg Sargent.

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Should the Left & All Americans Trust Barack Obama?

Evans Caring Community
November 27, 2011

 

Should the Left & All Americans
Trust Barack Obama?

© 2009 Evans Caring Community, edit and rewrite of November 27, 2011, also published February 1, 2011, and May 8, 2009, by Dr. Jack E. Evans and Paul Evans. Originally published with the title “Why the Left and All Americans Should Trust Barack Obama” — please notice the new title. Photo of Dr. Jack E. Evans is from 1977 and is hereby placed into the public domain:

This article was originally published on May 8, 2009 on Evans Liberal Politics and has been rewritten and updated. I am introducing here my father, Dr. Jack E. Evans, who is a retired 86 year old professor of Russian language and literature with a doctorate from Yale University, and an old New Deal Democrat. A year after this article was first published, at the beginning of 2010, Dad had to go and live at a local nursing home, where he struggles with senile dementia. I have lived with Jack all of my life, almost. My father tried so very hard to impart to me the strongest of spiritual and mental gifts with which he tried to help me overcome my mental illness, and to try to develop my ability to think logically, and as an editor. I could not possibly show him enough gratefulness, and I know that he has been a far better father than I could possibly deserve.

In mid-2009, Dr. Evans felt that this topic was important enough that he wished to contribute to a discussion of it when it was originally published. I truly and strongly hope that I am successful in conveying his feelings about the current political situation. Dr. Evans was a marine officer in the Pacific in World War II. Later, he spent 13 years in charge of and as chief editor for translating sections for ASA, NSA and CIA, before getting his doctorate from Yale and teaching at several colleges. He also has a masters degree in Russian history from Georgetown. I (Paul Evans) mentioned above that I lived and interacted with Dr. Evans almost my whole life; We worked on the translation of 11 books together. Later, I was his caregiver before he had to go to live in a Wooster nursing home, where I visit him almost every day.

photo from 1977 of Yale Professor of Russian language and literature Dr. Jack E. Evans

We both wanted to simply say that, while as progressive Democrats we are sometimes critical of the actions of the (late) Democratic (now Republican) Congress and even the actions of President Obama, we trust Barack Obama’s heart and mind and remain committed to his Presidency and his success. However, our views are not some sort of blind loyalty either to President Obama or to the Democratic Party, but arise mainly through an understanding of the difficulties Obama has in this economy and with the current composition of Congress as well as the general political direction, or “mood” if you will, which our country has taken. Even so, that does NOT mean that we are at all content with the leadership that President Obama has shown in taking the country in a progressive direction.

Both Dr. Evans and I have been upset at the appointment to high office in the Obama administration of economic advisers with corrupt histories and very strong ties to Wall Street. Even the mainstream media has discussed what we feel to be unnecessary pain, hardship and suffering for ordinary Americans, brought on by what seems sometimes to be a corrupt American system of government.

Nonetheless, we remember well Barack Obama’s roots as a community organizer in South Chicago, and we do not feel he has changed much in his heart from who he was in those simpler days. We think he may well remain about as progressive in his personal identity as ever, but is compelled by a pragmatic outlook to follow “the art of the possible.” At least, we hope so.

We also feel that President Obama wants to represent all Americans, and not just those who feel they are progressive or liberal in their outlook. We think and pray that Obama is still a progressive in his heart and mind and still trying to move the nation in that direction. But nonetheless, we are both proud of Barack Obama specifically FOR trying to represent all Americans, and not just liberals and progressives. Really, that was a lot to attempt. Lately, however, we both have been wondering about that. One real disappointment for us is that Obama has had a Presidency so intertwined with corporate America, which was evident from the start when he chose as his economic advisers Summers, Geithner, Bernanke and crew. Now he is moving even more in this conservative direction with the emphasis on American competitiveness and the whole movement towards an austerity budget. (Did you know that the new budget contains a 12 percent increase for the Pentagon?)

Important liberal and progressive economists, such as Paul Krugman, Robert Reich and Daily Kos’s Bob Swern have exhorted the President about a growing crisis in the resources and job situation for our workers, yet Obama seems determined to capitulate to the Republican House without even attempting to defend the working class. At the same time he is all too willing to give rich Americans tax breaks and even seems willing to consider major cuts to entitlements. Dr Evans and I want to exhort the President to remain strong in the understanding that America’s business engine is built on the labor of the average American worker and their ability to make purchases, and it is primarily their welfare he needs to look out for, not that of Wall Street.

Thinking about the upcoming election of 2012, Obama needs to consider how disillusioned his supporters from 2008 are because of Obama’s apparent economic and fiscal conservatism that has only grown stronger with time. There comes a point when Obama may realize that his base is so disillusioned and heartsick about the “change we can believe in” having morphed into support for the rich and the status quo in general, that we may be unwilling to work very hard to reelect the President. I know I myself worked pretty hard in 2008, yet am weighing my options about 2012. Many progressives who I have talked to have confided to me that it is only upon considering the likely Republican nominees that they would even consider working for Obama at this point.

But it’s not just liberals who are upset and struggling over how much to support the President. Many independents and just ordinary Americans I have spoken with are VERY dissatisfied. Some people who have been ruined in their financial status say that the whole situation may even turn violent if the oppression of the American worker by the rich continues much further. I do not know, but I ask myself: why are ordinary Americans talking this way, and why would they unless something pretty profound is wrong with the way America is these days.

Informed progressives feel that America is in danger of becoming a two class oligarchy, and that it is up to all of us to stop this trend. To work to make America financially sound again, the vast majority of the American middle class and American workers must again be brought into a condition of prosperity. This is our main concern going forward, as it is that of some of our featured economics writers here such as Paul Krugman, Robert Reich and Bob Swern.

The nation has fully embraced the full-bore pro-Capitalist spirit. This is all very well, but ordinary Americans are increasingly suffering. So long as that reality is true, the nation will never regain its full elan and vigor and move forward to meet the challenges of the 21st century as it should.

Still, overall, while our own expression is sometimes adamantly progressive in terms of what has been published on Evans Liberal Politics, we want to be sure to say that “we support you, President Obama, and we are still trying to trust you too.” We just wish you would be a lot more concerned with the economic pain of ordinary Americans and a little less preoccupied with the people who bankroll your campaigns and Congress. Ordinary Americans swept you into office and without us, you will not again be successful in 2012.

We do however understand the political reality you labor under, President Obama, and also that you are really trying to move the nation beyond hyperpartisanship and into a more caring and decent relation between those of differing views. While I do in fact feel that this is one of the President’s main goals, we have to ask ourselves: just who made the President bring Bush’s “wrecking crew” into his administration as it’s principal economic advisers at it’s start? Why would a truly liberal or progressive President bring in those people?

I used to be really skeptical of the effort to bring about bipartisanship, President Obama. Then I had a period in which I tried to be accepting of bipartisanship, believing that the President had the interests of all Americans in his heart — not just liberals and progressives.

A lot of people on the left have come to the conclusion that you have “sold out.” Dr. Evans and I still hope and pray for you, President Obama, and yet, all the legislation coming out of Washington is pretty darned Republican in what it appears to be, at least to the left. At what point do you stop working for bipartisanship when the other side refuses to compromise at all?

So, overall, there is a disconnect between what President Obama promised us during the campaign of 2008, and what has happened since then. Perhaps this all is not Barack Obama’s fault, but is more a product of our nation’s and Congress’ economic corruption. One wonders just how much better it would be if Republicans in Congress actually considered working with the President and Democrats in a bipartisan way. Could we not as a nation unify behind this man Barack Obama, who has shown himself to be a true patriot and true American citizen for all of us? My father and I truly hope that we will. Dr. Evans and I believe that true bipartisanship would solve a lot of problems in this country. And it is so sad to see the ideals of 2008 bow down before political reality.

That being said, Barack Obama used to be fully a “man of the people.” Now he has a lot of informed people questioning that. President Obama, you need to show the nation you still care about the average citizen more than Wall Street and big business. Carry the nation forward with that in mind, and we will all support you like we did in 2008. We trust that you are still our Barack Obama, and we implore you to stand up for ordinary Americans.

This article was originally published on Daily Kos. I can think of no better summary and end for it than to quote a commenter on the article there: “It’s not a question of a lack of trust, it’s about each of us playing our role. I do trust Obama, which is why I’m willing to follow the path he set us on. But that path includes applying pressure for what I know is right.” ~ Jack and Paul Evans

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What I Have to Say to God in Heaven, Whether It Matters or Not

Evans Liberal Politics
June 3, 2011

 

What I Have to Say to God in Heaven
Whether It Matters or Not

A Christian Response to Poverty, Injustice and Suffering
And A Challenge for Each of You

Evans Liberal Politics, completely revised June 3, 2011 and May 23, 2011, originally published May 21, 2011, by Paul Evans:

I don’t give a damn. I don’t give a damn about any of this, about anything You put me through — whether God or Satan or the evil, sick society we live in. You made Socrates drink hemlock, and you killed Jesus. Gandhi, JFK, MLK, RFK — all martyred. I guess that is a complaint to God. If I so chose to, I could make almost an indictment or accusation. Free will, of course, yet ALL of those wonderful people gone. All of them and more like them. If you are omnipotent, how could you "let" that happen?


I wonder at the suffering in life — suffering I see each day on the news, suffering I see among people, and my own – and I do not understand why it must be. And yet, I am not starving, and I have a roof over my head. This morning driving into town I saw a tall black man walking towards town with a bag in hand. I damn well should have picked him up. And there are supposed to be ONE BILLION people in the world without access to clean drinking water. Why do you allow this, God?

I am powerless. Everyone on God’s green earth is absolutely powerless. All I can do… All we can do — logically — is to suffer our fates, live truly caring lives as we are able to, beyond all reasonableness, and try to hope. In other words, fight. Fight not simply for ourselves, but for each other. That is what we should all do, in whatever way we understand life. It is the proper logical response to life. To the near-meaninglessness that God Himself, for some reason inexplicable to me, enforces upon us. Perhaps — in fact I am saying, pretty definitely — it is not so much enforced on us as it is the result of our collective and individual failures to lead logical and caring lives.

A Word About Logic and Caring: The better you get with logic and the more caring of a life you try to live, you will see that it is impossible to be fully logical without living a fully caring life to the extent of sacrifice. Those people who claim, al la Ayn Rand and others, that selfishness is logical, have not thought out the matter fully, nor actually tried to live caring lives. And isn’t it amazing how all these Ayn Rand followers are these real big Christians, or say they are?

Leading a truly caring life is actually all we can do to make a logical response to the world in which we find ourselves. LOGOS, the logical order of the universe considered philosophically, has only one value, and that value is caring. (Or so thought the ancient, pre-Socratic Greeks and later the early Christian church, which remade Logos into a philosophical representation of the second person of the Holy Trinity, or Jesus.) You cannot be very logical and not be very caring.

These Republicans — and most all of my liberal friends too — talk about personal responsibility in life. That’s Bullsh*t. They’ve never been down and don’t know what they’re talking about. Like the song says, “when you’re down that’s where you’ll stay.” Oh, I know, you read the success stories, and the press and TV play them up, but that’s NOT real life for almost all of the poor and downtrodden.

What I would like to see, personally, is a lot of the money that now goes into prisons and law enforcement instead go into drug treatment facilities, and adult education. Did you know that fully 27 percent of African Americans have been in jail at least once for marijuana crimes (whatever a marijuana crime is…). If one switched from punishment to treatment as our priority, there would be plenty of money here to give those who need it a subsidized job. That would be the caring way to proceed. Many criminals see no way out for their lives and families, and so they revert back to criminal acts. Treating them, educating them and providing subsidized jobs with a living wage is the best alternative to prison, so far as I can see. It is certainly the caring, Godly way to help them and thus help society.

I was speaking above of “real life” for the poor and how few who have not been here can truly understand how degrading it is. Real life is wondering if you can get someone to give you some money for gas to go into town to the charity organization so you can get food to eat. And of course, you do realize that begging is illegal, right? Yes, the police have made me aware of this three or four times in the last year, while I was trying to get a little gas money at the gas station, through begging it off of people. Yes, many people will rat you out and turn you in to the police if you are resorting to this. Real life is hoping and praying that your car holds together for a few more thousand miles. Real life is helping your housemates with gas to drive 40 miles and back, so the woman can visit her children, even though helping her that way means that there will be zero money left for the rest of the month. O.K., here’s some real life that no one without an addiction can understand: real life is picking up a nice, juicy cigarette butt off of the sidewalk, because that is just how addicted to them you are and you have no money to buy any kind of smokes. Degrading, isn’t it? Real life is also begging for help from your friends until both the help and the friendships stop. If only ALL your friends would help, it would not be a hardship for any of them, would it? And yet — I know from firsthand experience — you really are going to lose all your friends if you keep asking for help. And real life is trying to keep the lights on and heating just a few rooms in your home by means of electric heaters through the winter so that your water pipes don’t freeze up and burst… and then trying to pay the huge electric bill.

At first your friends help, but it is not too long before there are “reasons” why not. They talk about things like that “personal responsibility” and “sustainability” and not being my bank. Yet so many of them, before they dropped me as their friends, were and are people of means, to whom $10 or so every second or third day means very little. Or at least they are a lot better off than I am. Yes, caring has these limits, you see — except for one person: Jesus, and I follow Him. Now, in my experience, almost all of these “Christians” who go to church each Sunday have shown themselves to be hypocrites. I believe there was a strong metaphor in an explanation Jesus gave… Something about a camel and the eye of a needle, am I right?

But of course many understand — and it doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter that I understand, at all. In many ways, for the common man, life sucks. And the only reason that this “got out there,” that I was allowed to think this through and to rewrite it and put this out on the internet for you is that — I think — despite the rambling, somewhat incoherent rant that this constitutes, God just wanted you people to "think about it" and realize about the way each of us is called to not judge each other and to lead a fully caring life. I do know this: personally, you can’t be at peace otherwise.

Oh, and the title of this article? It does matter…. but perhaps not in the long run, or in terms of us changing anything, or in terms of God allowing or causing the world to somehow be different than it is. Yet in our own lives, in terms of the peace we need in our own hearts, and for our friends and families and loved ones — and for the stranger we meet alongside the road — of course leading a caring life is what we are called upon by all the is decent and good in our hearts and in the world to do. For me, and for some small number of people in the world, to live in any other way is unthinkable. I challenge each of you to think logically about what is right and decent and “what Jesus wants” when confronted with poverty, suffering and injustice, and then to make changes in your life.

I have suffered a lot in my life, especially lately, what with mental illness, poverty, and various thus-far rather mild diseases, seeing all my loved ones die off and losing my friends because I stood up for what I believed the correct and Christian thing to do is (in terms of refusing to stop opening my home to sheltering two homeless people). They are homeless no more – now this is their home too. I do not have gas to drive into town, and am out of food. I beg from my friends, and have lost almost all of them as friends because of all of this. At this point, I now refuse to struggle any longer at all in terms of my own spiritual gifts and what that itself means I must go through. At this point, like the Tom Petty song below, “you can stand me up at the gates of hell, but I won’t back down.” All I can do is live my life in terms of what seems just and right to me. I am powerless and it is in God’s hands, and I cannot do other than I am now. God’s response is up to Him.

That is about all I have to say in words, not that it really matters, but here is a musical response to the experience of life that my viewers may appreciate, I hope:

What the response of Jesus might be. (For Anita)

My own response to mankind’s fate and the difficulties we all have in our lives is, in part.

Please join me in a short prayer for our President, Barack Obama: God, actively help and guide this man who shapes so much of our destiny. Spare him and grant him wisdom and health to work for all the people. Amen.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

The Black Crowes
She Talks to Angels

Third Day
King of Glory

Collective Soul
Heavy

Tom Petty
I Won’t Back Down

The Cost of Politics in Our Lives: Politics as Sewage & the Sublime

Evans Liberal Politics
May 13, 2011

 

The Cost of Politics in Our Lives:
Politics as Sewage & the Sublime

Evans Liberal Politics, May 13th, 2011, Commentary by Paul Evans, with excerpts from Addiction and Politics (Updated 2X), Evans Liberal Politics, March 31, 2011, by Paul Evans:

I have been strongly actively involved in political activism and political writing and blogging since 2005. I know that’s not very long, compared to a lot of people who might be considered more expert at this than I am. But I have learned a lot, and over the years, I have found the world of politics to be depressing and disappointing.

Actually, what really got me going in the area of activism, in the summer of 2005, was the music of U2, most particularly the song “Pride in the Name of Love,” which makes a comparison between the love and sacrifice of Jesus and that of Martin Luther King, Jr. Really, from the point where I started doing Evans Liberal Politics, the day after election day, 2008, that song was a major influence and motivation for me. I cried the first several times I heard it.

U2 Pride in the Name of Love

Now I have fewer hopes of truly living a life like that or making any kind of real influence in the world. Nonetheless, with an honestly humble attitude, I try to bring my readers as much of what is important and true about the world of news and politics as I have time for each day. I have no kind of idea that I might do more than help a few or several people on the road of life, yet this is enough for me.

The high point, of course, was the election of 2008 and the campaigning I did before this. Yet later, I became badly disappointed by Barack Obama, finding him to be essentially just another Democratic Politician, and not the agent for hope and change that I had so fervently hoped and worked for. Later, I realized that, at the national level, in the United States today, no man can be other than a political animal with a conventionally political mindset and hope to have any real success. This was very disillusioning for me, and for a short time turned me towards more radical, leftist positions.

Still, I have to ask, is it so radical and leftist for me to want America to take care of its people, for the individual and corporate tax structure to be truly progressive, for health care to be universal, and, for example, for crack mothers and crack babies to have a roof over their head and enough to eat, outside of a homeless shelter and an adoption agency? No, to me, those sorts of goals are the mainstream of my thought, as I know they are for many progressive activists.

I believe that many of us thought we had found the agent that would bring us “to the promised land” of Dr. Martin Luther King in Barack Obama, and that, by now, most of us have been pretty badly disappointed. Others, I realize, who supported the President in 2008, are not as fully progressive as I am and have not found Obama’s actions disappointing, at least not disappointing as to their truly progressive direction, or the lack thereof. On the other hand, can the man be entirely blamed or even much blamed when Congress exists as currently constituted? Yet it was all very disappointing and disillusioning….

Let me give you an excerpt from my March 31st article on addiction and politics which may offer some words of comfort here, or at least make the whole situation more livable, perhaps, for the progressive activist:

"Politics is depressing. In that regard, my old friend Betsy sent me a wonderful article which I need to share with you, called ‘Across the Universe: The Power of Disillusionment and the Politics of Despair,’ OpEdNews, March 15, 2011, by Chris Floyd. A young man is disillusioned, somewhat depressed, and even contemplating drinking or suicide because his Mom’s hero Barack Obama is complicit in so much that is wrong. Instead of simply making a comment of some encouragement, Chris Floyd makes this commentary in its own article, of which I wish to quote part:"

You have to remember that politics is a toxin. It will make you sick, taint your mind, poison your soul, blight your life if you let it. One has to deal with politics as a form of waste management, just as you need to have some kind of sewage system in your home or community to prevent disease.

Politics — the machinations of the stunted, damaged souls and third-rate minds who hanker for power — is just a small part of life. It entirely lacks the tragic element; nothing tragic or depthful about politics and power, it’s just brute force, greed, ignorance and spite. So there is no deep meaning to be found in it. No tragedy; no real joy either. Even the greatest moments, the epiphanies — and they do happen in politics on rare occasions, one must admit — will lead very quickly back into the sewage. And that’s OK, that’s the way it is; sewage, waste management — it’s part of life. But it’s not where meaning, joy, tragedy, the salt and savor of existence can be found. So why let the evil done by third-rate goobers drive you to despair of life itself? By hook, crook, lies and murder they’ve already amassed all kinds of power; why give them power over your very soul?

Sigh…. I believe I am gonna have more social interest articles on Evans Liberal Politics and concentrate a little less on the political angles. Probably will get me more viewers, and at least entertain, if not aid in some way, more people anyway.

May God grant you the serenity to accept the things you cannot change, courage to change the things you can, and the wisdom to know the difference.

Still, no matter what, “I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have: three meals a day for their bodies, – education and culture for their minds – and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits.” — Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. — And that’s why I am a liberal. And that’s why I will still work for progressive activism. ~ (From my page of Liberal Speeches & Quotes). ~ Paul Evans

Osama bin Laden is Dead, US has body [Confirmed]

Evans Liberal Politics
May 2, 2011

 

Osama bin Laden is Dead
US has body [Confirmed]

with Video of the President’s Announcement of bin Laden’s Death

Bin Laden Dead, U.S. Official Says, The New York Times, The Lede, May 1, 2011, 11:29 p.m., by Robert Mackey, photo of Osama bin Laden courtesy of the C.I.A. and Wikipedia, article excerpt quoted verbatim:

C.I.A. photograph of the Al Queda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden

WASHINGTON —President Obama announced late Sunday that Osama bin Laden, the leader of Al Qaeda responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks, was killed in a firefight during an operation he ordered Sunday inside Pakistan, ending a 10-year manhunt for the world’s most wanted terrorist. American officials were in possession of his body, he said.

…SNIP…

President Obama said that on Sunday, a small team of U.S. operatives launched a “targeted assault’’ on a compound in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad where months of intelligence work had established that Mr. Bin Laden was living. Mr. Bin Laden was killed after a firefight, and the troops took custody of his body.

Read the full article here.

By the way, May 1st was the 8th anniversary of Bush’s infamous “mission accomplished” speech.

See US kills Osama bin Laden decade after 9/11 attacks, AP on Yahoo News, May 2, 2011, by Kimberly Dozer and David Espo: the article describes our team which accomplished this as the elite SEAL Team Six, a counter-terrorism unit. They were in and out of the compound in less than 40 minutes. Osama bin Laden’s body has been buried at sea, in accordance with Islamic customs.

Watch a video, Details Leading To Osama Bin Laden’s Death, with information about the intel and operation leading to bin Laden’s death, and a very disturbing photograph of the DEAD Osama bin Laden (this photo is graphic and disturbing).

President Obama’s Speech
on the Killing of Osama bin Laden

Robert Reich: President Obama’s Real Proposal (And Why It’s Risky)

Evans Liberal Politics
April 15, 2011

 

Robert Reich: President Obama’s Real Proposal
(And Why It’s Risky)

President Obama’s Real Proposal (And Why It’s Risky), Robert Reich.org, April 14, 2011, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Paul Ryan says his budget plan will cut $4.4 trillion over ten years. The President says his new plan will cut $4 trillion over twelve years.

Let’s get real. Ten or twelve-year budgets are baloney. It’s hard enough to forecast budgets a year or two into the future. Between now and 2022 or 2024 the economy will probably have gone through a recovery (I’ll explain later why I fear it will be anemic at best) and another downturn. America will also have been through a bunch of elections – at least five congressional and three presidential.

“Patriotic” For Rich
To Pay “Fair Share”

The practical question is how to get out of the ongoing gravitational pull of this awful recession without cow-towing to extremists on the right who think the U.S. government is their mortal enemy. For President Obama, it’s also about how to get reelected.

(Yes, we also have to send a clear signal to global lenders that America is serious about reducing its long-term budget deficit. But in truth, global lenders don’t need much reassurance. Bond market yields in the U.S. are now lower than they were when the government was running a budget surplus ten years ago.)

Seen in this light, Obama’s plan isn’t really a budget proposal. It’s a process proposal.

Stage 1, starting now and ending in June, requires that Republican and Democratic leaders devise a budget for 2012. Apparently they’ve already agreed to try.

That budget would also include a “framework” for deficit reduction over the longer haul. But that framework will be mainly for show. It will give House Republicans enough cover to vote to raise the ceiling on the amount the U.S. government can borrow. (The vote has to occur before the Treasury runs out of accounting maneuvers, in early July.)

And because the framework’s details will be filled in after Election Day, it will give Obama wiggle room before the election to campaign on his priorities. If he wins big – and if Democrats retake the House – its details will look completely different from what they’d look like in the alternative.

Stage 2 occurs in 2014 – fully two years after Election Day. Then, according to Obama’s proposal, if the ratio of the nation’s deficit to the GDP hasn’t fallen to 2.5 percent (it’s now over 10 percent), automatic across-the-board cuts will go into effect to get it there.

Importantly, these cuts wouldn’t apply to Social Security and Medicare, or to Medicaid and other programs designed for the poor. And they wouldn’t be limited to spending. They’d also apply to tax expenditures – that is, to tax deductions and tax credits.

The betting in the White House is that by 2014 the recovery will be in full force, and the economy will have grown so much that the ratio of deficit to the GDP will be in the range of 3 to 5 percent anyway. That means any across-the-board cuts wouldn’t have to be very deep.

The White House is also betting that a strong recovery will take the sting out of any recommendations to slow the growth of Medicare spending emanating from the Medicare board set up under the new health care law (officially known as the Independent Payment Advisory Board.) Under Obama’s new plan, such proposals will be necessary if Medicare spending grows .5 percent faster than growth of the economy (under the law, it’s 1 percent faster).

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All told, it’s a clever strategy. It might well avoid a dangerous game of chicken over raising the debt ceiling. It still allows the President to charge Paul Ryan and other Republicans who join him as ending Medicare as we know it – which they are, in fact, proposing to do. (This may help Democrats win back seniors, whose support for Democratic house candidates dropped form 49% in 2006 to 38% in 2010.) And it gives the President lots of room to maneuver between now and Election Day, and between Election Day and 2014.

But there’s one big weakness. The whole thing depends on the recovery picking up steam. If the economy doesn’t, the process could backfire – leading to indiscriminate budget cuts later on, as well as big cuts in Medicare. Indeed, if the recovery fails to fire up, Obama’s own chance of reelection is dimmed considerably, as are the odds of a Democratic House after 2012.

Yet what are the chances of a booming recovery? The economy is now growing at an annualized rate of only 1.5 percent. That’s pitiful. It’s not nearly enough to bring down the rate of unemployment, or remove the danger of a double dip. Real wages continue to drop. Housing prices continue to drop. Food and gas prices are rising. Consumer confidence is still in the basement.

By focusing the public’s attention on the budget deficit, the President is still playing on the Republican’s field. By advancing his own “twelve year plan” for reducing it – without talking about the economy’s underlying problem – he appears to validate their big lie that reducing the deficit is the key to future prosperity.

The underlying problem isn’t the budget deficit. It’s that so much income and wealth are going to the top that most Americans don’t have the purchasing power to sustain a strong recovery.

Until steps are taken to alter this fundamental imbalance – for example, exempting the first $20K of income from payroll taxes while lifting the cap on income subject to payroll taxes, raising income and capital gains taxes on millionaires and using the revenues to expand the Earned Income Tax Credit up to incomes of $50,000, strengthening labor unions, and so on – a strong recovery may not be possible.

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Robert Reich was the nation’s 22nd Secretary of Labor under Bill Clinton and is Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations. In 2008, Time Magazine named him one of the Ten Most Successful Cabinet Members of the century. He has written eleven books, including “The Work of Nations,” which has been translated into 22 languages. His recent book is “Supercapitalism.” For Professor Reich’s book page for Supercaptialism at Amazon, go here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future has been released September 21, and is available for ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Watch the video Aftershock: The next economy and America’s future (about his new book). Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

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Obama’s Debt Plan Sets Stage for Long Battle Over Spending

Evans Liberal Politics
April 14, 2011

 

Obama’s Debt Plan Sets Stage
for Long Battle Over Spending

Obama’s Debt Plan Sets Stage for Long Battle Over Spending, © The New York Times, April 13, 2011, by Mark Landler and Michael D. Shear, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON — President Obama made the case Wednesday for slowing the rapid growth of the national debt while retaining core Democratic values, proposing a mix of long-term spending cuts, tax increases and changes to social welfare programs as his opening position in a fierce partisan budget battle over the nation’s fiscal challenges.

Obama Unveils Budget Proposal

After spending months on the sidelines as Republicans laid out their plans, Mr. Obama jumped in to present an alternative and a philosophical rebuttal to the conservative approach that will reach the House floor on Friday. Republican leaders were working Wednesday to round up votes for that measure and one to finance the government for the rest of the fiscal year.

Mr. Obama said his proposal would cut federal budget deficits by a cumulative $4 trillion over 12 years, compared with a deficit reduction of $4.4 trillion over 10 years in the Republican plan. But the president said he would use starkly different means, rejecting the fundamental changes to Medicare and Medicaid proposed by Republicans and relying in part on tax increases on affluent Americans.

The president framed his proposal as a balanced alternative to the Republican plan, setting the stage for a debate that will consume Washington in coming weeks, as the administration faces off with Congress over raising the national debt ceiling, and into next year, as the president runs for re-election.

Mr. Obama named Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to lead the negotiations with Congress, which the administration hopes will produce the outlines of a deal by the end of June, though a detailed agreement might have to await the outcome of the 2012 election. Mr. Biden played a similar role in talks that averted a government shutdown at the 11th hour, over issues far less thorny than those on the table now.

In a 44-minute speech to an audience at George Washington University that included Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, the author of the Republican plan, Mr. Obama was often combative and partisan, saying the Republican approach would hurt the elderly by driving up the cost of medical care, deprive millions of health insurance and starve the nation of investments in its future.

“These are the kind of cuts that tells us we can’t afford the America that I believe in,” he said. “I believe it paints a vision of our future that’s deeply pessimistic.”

“There’s nothing serious about a plan that claims to reduce the deficit by spending a trillion dollars on tax cuts for millionaires and billionaires,” the president continued, as Mr. Ryan sat stone faced. “There’s nothing courageous about asking for sacrifice from those who can least afford it and don’t have any clout on Capitol Hill.”  ….

Read the full article, here.

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Doing the Right Thing and Leadership versus Pragmatism and Bipartisanship

Evans Liberal Politics
April 10, 2011

 

Doing the Right Thing and Leadership
versus Pragmatism and Bipartisanship

An Open Letter to President Obama

Evans Liberal Politics, April 10, 2011, Commentary by Paul Evans; as featured on OpEdNews:

Mr. President, most liberals and progressives that I know are pretty disappointed in your leadership and your “politically correct” bipartisanship. I believe that I, as well as many political observers, understand your mindset and that you have compared and found similar the elections of 2010 and 1994, and drawn the “obvious” conclusions from that comparison. Ah, but we have to be pragmatic, Mr. President, right? We mustn’t ignore the political realities. And above all, we must appear to be bipartisan, right now, and move towards the center. Even if morality gets thrown under the bus. Right, Mr. President? Democratic politics as usual. NOT change. Not actually moral politics.

As one who expected a moral progressivism from you, and real leadership, I am, like the author of Ignore This, Mr. President. You Already Ignore Me., Daily Kos, April 9, 2011, by teacherken, bitter and disappointed. Like a black slave 160 years ago, almost, Mr. President, the poor and the politically knowledgeable liberals and progressives in this country are crying out, “How long, Oh, Lord??” When will we get a President (and a Congress???) who will do the morally correct things which need to be done, regardless of money, and influence, and “political reality.” When will liberals and progressives and the American people find their second Lincoln? When, indeed.

Mr. President, you’re not leading. You are going with the flow, attuned to the current “political reality,” and you are abandoning what is right, what is liberal or progressive, abandoning justice for the people, and simply not fighting for them: you are just making compromises, pragmatically. It just isn’t right, and I expected much more.

I believe you will see in your reelection campaign a lack of enthusiasm, a dearth of volunteers, and you will blame it on the political climate. No, Mr. President. If you acted for what is right — and I KNOW you know what that is, and actually believe in that — your numbers would be fine. And then we would follow you to hell. As it is, people are actually talking about a man like Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich challenging you. Ask yourself why that is, and you may see that you have taken the wrong approach, and have been coming up with the wrong answers and strategies.

Do the right things, regardless, and the nation would rally behind you. Or go down in history as an “average” President. Your choice.

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