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When Do We Get That Job ‘Surge’? (Admitting failure and changing course may be the only way)
Pajamas Media ^ | 7/13/2009 | Jennifer Rubin

Posted on 07/13/2009 12:17:03 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Presidents generally enjoy a honeymoon both because the public wants their presidents to succeed and because in the early stages of a presidency the mistakes, lies, and screw-ups have not yet materialized. But soon they do. And in the case of this presidency, the non-stimulus plan is proving to be the equivalent of the first serious fight between the newlyweds.

The stimulus plan was bad policy, poorly conceived and oversold. It isn’t working, yet the president insists his policy was perfect. The result now is a surprising agreement between the Left and Right.

On the Left, Bob Herbert chimes in:

Vice President Joe Biden told us this week that the Obama administration “misread how bad the economy was” in the immediate aftermath of the inauguration. Puh-leeze. Mr. Biden and President Obama won the election because the economy was cratering so badly there were fears we might be entering another depression. No one understood that better than the two of them. Mr. Obama tried to clean up the vice president’s remarks by saying his team hadn’t misread what was happening, but rather “we had incomplete information.”

On the Right, House Minority Leader John Boehner calls foul:

I found it … interesting over the last couple of days to hear Vice President Biden and the president mention the fact that they didn’t realize how difficult an economic circumstance we were in. … Now this is the greatest fabrication I have seen since I’ve been in Congress. I’ve sat in meetings in the White House with the vice president and the president. There’s not one person that sat in those rooms that didn’t understand how serious our economic crisis was.

Hmm. We have consensus. And the president has a problem, both on policy and on credibility.

On the policy side of the equation, we have an economy still reeling. Unemployment, consumer and investor confidence, the Dow, and credit delinquency rates reflect that we are far from the end of the recession. As Herbert points out, “The roof is caving in on struggling American families that have already seen the value of their homes and retirement accounts put to the torch.” There will be less consumption and the doldrums will continue so long as unemployment increases. As David Wessel of the Wall Street Journal explains:

In December 2008, forecasters surveyed by the Wall Street Journal predicted the jobless rate would hit what then seemed a very high 8.1% at the end of 2009. Surveyed again this past week, forecasters now anticipate year-end unemployment of 10%. That suggests 775,000 more Americans will join the ranks of the jobless in the next six months. Because most Americans depend on their paychecks for their shopping, a weak job market and lousy wage growth have cast an ominous shadow over consumer spending and the overall economy.

Liberals are clearly getting nervous. Their Keynesian religious-like faith rests on the notion that government spending “creates” economic activity and wealth. So the answer must be: more stimulus!

But the demands for a second stimulus from Herbert, Paul Krugman, and other liberals are falling on deaf ears both in Congress and in the country at large. Even Obama says he’s not interested. Truth be told, we have already spent the money, albeit on something that didn’t work. And now there is no money or political support to do more. We could of course rip up the old plan and start again. But that would be an admission of failure too great for the administration and Democratic Congress to contemplate. It is therefore not surprising that this is precisely what Republicans are suggesting. Minority Whip Eric Cantor was happy to tell voters in an appearance on Fox News:

Let’s remember the context that we took this so-called stimulus bill up in. It was passed almost in the dark of night, 1,100 pages. No one in the House read that bill because the urgency was such that the president said we had to act now and if we acted now, we would stave off job loss and we’d get America back to work. That hasn’t happened. So why is it that we were going about spending nearly $800 billion if we didn’t expect the monies to go out until one, two, three, four years later? That’s not how we should be operating here. We’ve got to stop this bill from going into full effect, and we’ve got to start being smart again and that’s what the House Republican plan would have done.

So we head toward double-digit unemployment and the stimulus becomes a fiscal eye sore, the overstuffed, ineffective symbol of liberal governance. (As Cantor put it on his Saturday weekly radio and internet address, “President Obama has already asked you to borrow trillions, and so far nearly 3 million jobs have been lost this year alone. Simply put this is now President Obama’s economy and the American people are beginning to question whether his policies are working.”)

But worse than the policy problem is the credibility problem. As both Herbert and Boehner point out, the administration has resorted to lying. It is not that the president and his advisors failed to comprehend the magnitude of the economic crisis. It is that they got the solution wrong, and now they refuse to admit the mistake. It may not be long before the Washington press corps start hounding Obama, as they did George W. Bush, to admit “error.”

Yet Obama this weekend declared that the stimulus “has worked as intended” because it has extended unemployment insurance and delivered a one-shot tax rebate. Jaw-dropping statements like that suggest the president thinks the public, media, and his Republican critics won’t recall the promise of “immediate jobs” which accompanied the president’s stimulus sales effort. The whole point of spending a trillion dollars (with interest included) was to keep unemployment below 8%. We could have spent a great deal less simply to extend unemployment benefits.

There is an eerie familiarity about this. A policy well-intended was poorly executed. The results are obvious. The White House insists everything is fine. The public sees a different picture. The result: the president becomes the subject of ridicule and the target of barbs that he simply “doesn’t get it.” Iraq pre-surge? Katrina?

Well yes, one does sense that the White House is on the verge of going to war with reality. And unlike Iraq or a single hurricane, which did not personally impact the lives of every American, the economy does. They can see for themselves what is working and what is not. Average voters, even if still employed, certainly know a family member or friend who is unemployed. They are not fooled and they begin to wonder if the president thinks they are the fools.

Now, the economy may improve on its own. The Democrats in Congress may get lucky and see a recovery in the nick of time before the 2010 election. But they may not be so fortunate. (Wessel notes that “unemployment, up five percentage points so far, could remain in double digits into 2011.”) And then those who devised the stimulus plan and now defend it may take a beating at the polls.

Along the way, the public may come to see the president in a different light. Rather than the antidote to business-as-usual politics and ideologically-driven policies, he may come to embody both. And more importantly, if his policies don’t turn around the economy, the president, who was supposed to bring competency and efficiency to the White House, may come to resemble another one-term bumbler, Jimmy Carter, who resorted to blaming the American people for the stagflation brought on by his economic policies.

The president, like his predecessor, might therefore want to think seriously about a “surge” — an acknowledgment of policy error and a whole new approach to dealing with the nation’s major challenge. It may be the only option to rescue both the economy and his presidency. After all, it was Obama who said in February: “I expect to be judged by results and … I’m not going to make any excuses. If stuff hasn’t worked and people don’t feel like I’ve led the country in the right direction, then — you’ll have a new president.” Precisely so.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 111th; bho44; bhoeconomy; democrats; economy; hopechangey; jobs; miserablefailure; obamanation; unemployment
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1 posted on 07/13/2009 12:17:03 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

1—Obumble will never admit failure. 2—the course will not be changed (witness the calls for ANOTHER “stimulus”.)


2 posted on 07/13/2009 12:18:00 PM PDT by OCCASparky (Steely-Eyed Killer of the Deep)
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To: SeekAndFind

Simply.

There will be no recovery until Obozo is out of office.


3 posted on 07/13/2009 12:18:04 PM PDT by Texas Fossil (The last time I looked, this is still Texas where I live.)
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To: SeekAndFind

New sign/slogan/t-shirt that nails it:

The Surge Worked

The Stimulus Failed


4 posted on 07/13/2009 12:19:33 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I'd like to tell you, but then I'd have to kill you.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Spending almost a trillion dollars on pork and entitlements won’t stimulate the economy??? Who knew???


5 posted on 07/13/2009 12:20:40 PM PDT by colorado tanker ("Lastly, I'd like to apologize for America's disproportionate response to Pearl Harbor . . . ")
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To: OCCASparky
Obama Lies , the Economy Dies
6 posted on 07/13/2009 12:22:35 PM PDT by KTM rider
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To: SeekAndFind

7 posted on 07/13/2009 12:22:37 PM PDT by NMEwithin
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To: Secret Agent Man

Next little bippy:

NO SECOND TERM (with Obama’s little design in the “O” of NO)

SURGE II 1-20-2012

and

Operation Liberate Congress 2010

Surge II


8 posted on 07/13/2009 12:23:30 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I'd like to tell you, but then I'd have to kill you.)
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To: Texas Fossil

I keep telling my wife that as we have sold our home, we ARE RENTING for the next 2 years...we will save for the next two years, then buy in 2011-2012 when the market is OFF 50% from today’s prices...

Trust me, there is no job growth other than bureaucrats which are costly and useless (save military, teachers, cops and firemen).

Cap and trade, tax hikes on the “rich”, business tax hikes, fee increases, Socialized medicine...drilling bans, nuclear energy bans, water rationing...no talk of deporting the millions of illegals...

There is a train wreck coming, you can see the Obama Locamotive heading towards America. I am waiting until 2010 to see the tide could be turning.


9 posted on 07/13/2009 12:23:38 PM PDT by wac3rd (80 Carter/Obama 08)
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To: SeekAndFind

“It may not be long before the Washington press corps start hounding Obama, as they did George W. Bush, to admit “error.” “

In a blue moon. No. That’s far to generous to the Old Media. How about, “won’t ever happen”?


10 posted on 07/13/2009 12:24:57 PM PDT by ModelBreaker
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To: SeekAndFind

Obama is incapable of admitting error, nor is the MSM going to press him to do so. For Libs to abandon Keynesianism would be ideologically like a devout Muslim pulling a homicide bombing in Mecca. They will just sort of implode as less and less of the public are willing to believe them.


11 posted on 07/13/2009 12:24:58 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: SeekAndFind
The stimulus plan was bad policy, poorly conceived and oversold.

The intent of the stimulus was to provide a massive infusion of capital in 2010 in order to insure Democrats maintain a solid majority in Congress.

12 posted on 07/13/2009 12:25:53 PM PDT by fso301
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To: colorado tanker
the money did not go to "pork" or "entitlements" , it went to hedge fund managers and bond payoffs overseas, it was a bailout for the Federal Reserve banking industry its all gone, we lillputions won't see a penny

I know even the local unions are pissed

13 posted on 07/13/2009 12:27:00 PM PDT by KTM rider
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To: SeekAndFind

It certainly has been a honeymoon, we are gettin f#@ked good over and over.


14 posted on 07/13/2009 12:28:03 PM PDT by HerrBlucher
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To: SeekAndFind
I expect to be judged by results and … I’m not going to make any excuses. If stuff hasn’t worked and people don’t feel like I’ve led the country in the right direction, then — you’ll have a new president.”

From your lips to God's ears, Zeroboy

15 posted on 07/13/2009 12:29:38 PM PDT by Nonstatist
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To: wac3rd

Sounds like a reasonable strategy.

There are place where property is already at 25-30% of replacement costs. The downside is that jobs are scarce there.

I live in a small town where things are like that. Low property costs translate into relatively low property taxes. Cost of living is also low.

I tele commute to work and like it.


16 posted on 07/13/2009 12:30:48 PM PDT by Texas Fossil (The last time I looked, this is still Texas where I live.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Uh, when the nation and government encourages, promotes, and stops fighting new business instead of creating temporary government jobs with phony stimulus billions.

No business growth, no new jobs. Government growth = government jobs that bring no new net wealth for the nation and expire when we run out of money and chased the wealthmakers away.

Think a genius like zerO would have figured that out? What do they teach at Harvard anyway.


17 posted on 07/13/2009 12:38:15 PM PDT by epluribus_2
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To: SeekAndFind
It may not be long before the Washington press corps start hounding Obama, as they did George W. Bush, to admit “error.”

That will
NEVER
happen.

18 posted on 07/13/2009 12:40:04 PM PDT by Recovering_Democrat (I'm SO glad I no longer belong to the party of Dependence on Government!)
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To: SeekAndFind

who resorted to blaming the American people for the stagflation brought on by his economic policies.

It ultimately will be the American people who will decide whether or not to participate in Obamanomics. Many I know have rejected the deal.


19 posted on 07/13/2009 12:41:37 PM PDT by griswold3
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To: epluribus_2

Add to that, we have to start “MAKING SOMETHING”! Can’t buy everything from asia and expect jobs here to last.


20 posted on 07/13/2009 12:41:46 PM PDT by epluribus_2
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