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Mike points out very positive qualities in the President's speech last night, but he warns of pitfalls that could come back to haunt him if his financial/economic policies don't work out in the positive way his advisors have told him they will. Obviously Krugman, Reich and a host of Financial Bloggers who saw the whole Housing Bubble blowing and and realize that it was the very same people Obama has as his advisors were the ones who helped blow it up and caused the crises that we citizens are having to go through are very concerned. Mike Lux does a nice job of pointing out what those people who saw the crises are worried about with Obama's policies in that speech.
---------------------- The Most Reasonable Man in Washington Mike Lux: Author, The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be Posted: January 26, 2011 02:52 PM
The first relates to Obama's description of, and attitude about, the economy. My fear is that the president and his economic team have convinced themselves that the economy is all coming up roses. I am not so sanguine, and I don't think the American middle class generally is either. The fact that corporate profits, the stock market, and our GDP are all going up has the president in a happy mood, because he believes it when folks like Geithner and Summers assure him that, as the White House team has been saying for the past two years, "jobs are a lagging indicator."
Look, I fully understand why the White House wants to trumpet any scrap of good news they can find about the economy. They have an urgent political need to try and convince people their economic plan is working. And if the economic team is right, and all these corporate profits and higher stock prices start to trickle down, and lots of new workers finally start to get hired, middle-class voters will be a lot happier with the president by the time November 2012 rolls around. My fear is that the damage to the economic fundamentals has been far more severe than the conventional wisdom macroeconomists at the White House realize, and that unemployment problems won't be going away very fast at all. My fear over the long term is that people are going to remember Obama bragging about increased corporate profits and stock prices even as they see unemployment stay high, wages still not rising, and housing prices continuing to be in the toilet -- the same way voters in 2010 remembered his claim that bailing out bankers would lead to new investment and new jobs. That is a nightmare scenario for a president that the middle class still isn't sure is on their side.
Which brings me to my second worry: All this talk about American competitiveness in general is all well and good, but if middle-class folks don't feel the benefits of it any time soon, Obama has a big problem on his hands. There was a lot of talk in that speech about America doing better, America being more innovative and competitive, American business doing well. But it wasn't often in that speech that you got the sense that the president cared about the fate of the typical American working family; the family that might have a member unemployed or in a bad part-time job, the family worried about the fact that their mortgage is underwater because of home prices collapsing, the family whose income hasn't increased much in years as their gas, utilities, groceries, health care, and kids' tuition have all skyrocketed. If Obama has those folks at the front of his mind every day -- if Obama is fighting his heart out for them every single day -- you wouldn't have known it from his speech. And when people are going to vote, especially in economically stressful times, one of the main things on their mind is always: Which of these candidates is more on my side? Who understands my life and my concerns more? When push comes to shove, who will fight for me and my family more?
Especially if I am at least partly right about my first worry, and those middle-class swing voters are still under a ton of economic stress in November of next year, the who-is-on-their-side issue will weigh heavier than ever. I know such things are a little out of fashion to talk about right now, with corporate CEOs and Washington centrists being the president's main advisers. But unless the economy comes roaring back -- and by that I mean jobs, not just corporate profits and stock prices -- this question of who the president really cares about is going to weigh very heavily in the next election.
MUCH MORE...A GOOD READ AT........ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-lux/the-most-reasonable-man-i_b_814404.html
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