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It's The Economy, Stupid (Nation: Election Results Weren't Just Driven By Iraq War -huh???)
The Nation ^ | 11/21/06 | Christopher Hayes

Posted on 11/21/2006 12:14:53 PM PST by presidio9

Everyone wants Virginia's Senator-elect Jim Webb to talk about Iraq, but the man The Weekly Standard recently called a "blood-and-soil conservative" wants to talk about something else: economic inequality.

The day after he accepted George Allen's concession, Webb barely let his NPR interviewer get a word in edgewise before jumping in to correct the misperception that his bid for office was motivated solely by opposition to the war. "I decided to run because of my concern ... with the economic breakdown that's happened in this country along class lines."

Class lines? Mr. Webb is a man who has railed against the "collectivist taming" of American culture by Marxists and has served in the Reagan administration. So why is he talking like Eugene Debs? "There are huge income inequalities ... that we haven't seen since the 1880s," he said on NPR. "And wages and salaries ... are at an all-time low as a percentage of wealth."

As idiosyncratic as he is, Webb is not an anomaly. He's part of a broader trend that has been obscured by the fast-congealing conventional wisdom that the election results were driven chiefly by the ongoing disaster in Iraq.

If you drill down a little into those results, it's clear that Iraq and Republican scandal can't account for all the Democratic victory. Consider the Democrats' success at the state level. The party picked up six governors, nine legislative chambers and more than 300 state legislative seats, none of which can plausibly be ascribed to discontent over Iraq.

As Webb suggests, the hidden story of the election was the appeal of economic populism in a country whose middle class is increasingly feeling the squeeze. Coast to coast, Democrats running for local and national office campaigned on raising the minimum wage, repealing welfare for Big Oil and opposing trade deals lacking protection for workers and the environment, and their message resonated with an electorate anxious about the economy.

Half of all voters rated the economy not good or poor, and a full 69 percent said their family's economic situation had either gotten worse or stayed the same since the last election. Democrats won both these groups by wide margins.

Ironically, in the weeks leading up to the midterm election, the Republican Party stole a page from the Democrats' playbook and attempted to shift the focus toward the economy and away from the manifestly unpopular Iraq war.

The thinking was that the years of relatively strong GDP growth coupled with relatively low unemployment would redound to the ruling party's benefit, perhaps canceling out the anger over Iraq and corruption.

The GOP's strategy both worked and backfired. Voters did focus on the economy, but they didn't reward Republicans. Exit polls showed that 39 percent of voters rated the economy as "extremely important" (roughly the same percentage as those who said the same about Iraq and corruption), but Democrats won those voters by 20 points. This shouldn't be surprising. Despite relatively strong growth, manageable inflation, high corporate profits and a bullish stock market, real wages continue to stagnate, productivity gains continue to be captured by the wealthiest 1 percent, income inequality has continued to get worse and, as Jacob Hacker argues persuasively in "The Great Risk Shift," America's middle class finds itself living with far more risk and income volatility than it did a generation ago.

None of these trends are new, but over the past six years the problems have grown so noticeable that even the neoliberal economists who crafted the much-celebrated Clinton economic agenda have begun to focus on correcting the perversely inequitable distribution of the fruits of economic success.

After years of reading the likes of David Sirota and Thomas Frank urging Democrats to embrace their inner populists, Dems finally started getting the message: Aside from opposition to the war, the Democrats focused on attacking subsidies to Big Oil, blasting the corruption endemic to a system in which corporate special interests call the shots and advocating for "fair trade" over the so-called "free trade" agreements that benefit capital over labor.

Even the Democratic Leadership Council, the most outspoken opponent of economic populism, has begun to come around. In 1995, Roll Call reported that "DLC officials think that, if Clinton calls for a minimum-wage increase in the State of the Union ... it could wreak the same political damage as his 1993 vow to veto any healthcare bill that did not provide universal coverage." By this election, the DLC was firmly behind an increase in the minimum wage.

In fact, the minimum wage just might have been Tuesday night's most underreported story. Not only has the Democratic Congress pledged to raise the minimum wage within the first 100 hours but in the six states that featured ballot initiatives to raise the minimum wage above the national — Ohio, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Arizona and Colorado — every one passed. In Montana it took 73 percent of the vote, and in Missouri 76 percent.

Consider that the much-publicized stem-cell-research initiative passed in Missouri by only a few percentage points. That means hundreds of thousands pulled the lever for an increased minimum wage and against funding for stem-cell research.

"One of the interesting facts about this campaign is it has been able to bring together people across many political lines," the Rev. Paul Sherry, national organizer for the Let Justice Roll Living Wage Campaign, told me. "I do a lot of speaking around the country, and when I say that a person working at $5.15 an hour full time makes $10,710 a year, you can see people's eyes light up as they begin to think of their own circumstances."

(Not only did the minimum-wage initiatives run a clean sweep but their conservative counterparts fared poorly. Three states — Maine, Nebraska and Oregon — featured ballot referendums modeled on the Grover Norquist-backed Taxpayer Bill of Rights, which severely limits the growth in state government taxing and spending levels. All of them lost.)

At the national level, cable pundits almost immediately focused on a handful of winning Democrats with conservative stances on social issues — Jon Tester's A rating from the NRA, Bob Casey's opposition to choice and, obsessively, former NFL quarterback Heath Shuler, who defeated incumbent Charles Taylor in North Carolina's 11th District while opposing abortion, gay rights and a guest-worker program for immigrants.

But what the pundits didn't mention was the role in Shuler's victory of the district's opposition to "free trade" deals. The area's textile industry has been gutted by NAFTA, so when it came time to vote on CAFTA, Taylor was caught between his district, which wanted him to vote no, and the GOP House leadership, which wanted him to vote yes. So he skipped the vote altogether and CAFTA passed by one vote.

During the campaign, Shuler hammered Taylor for "selling out American families," and he wasn't alone in using trade as a wedge issue. A post-election analysis by Public Citizen found that campaigns cut 25 ads attacking free-trade deals, and that trade played a significant role in more than a dozen House races won by Democrats. In the entire election, Public Citizen noted, "no incumbent fair trader was beaten by a 'free trader.' "

"Democrats have coalesced in favor of trade policy reform over the past decade as President Bill Clinton's NAFTA, WTO and China trade deals not only failed to deliver the promised benefits but caused real damage," said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch division.

To get a sense of just how far the consensus on trade in the Democratic Party has come, consider that Shuler was recruited to run for office by none other than Rahm Emanuel, the man charged with ramming NAFTA through a skeptical Democratic Congress in 1993.

Indeed, back when Emanuel was the NAFTA enforcer, he met some of his stiffest resistance from a young freshman Congressman from Ohio named Sherrod Brown, whose 12-point victory over incumbent Senator Mike DeWine was one of election night's highlights.

In a column a few weeks before the election, David Brooks called Brown's Senate contest "the most important political race in the country," because as a "full-bore economic populist" Brown represented the most "vibrant strain" of the Democratic Party.

Brown is an across-the-board progressive: a supporter of gay rights, abortion rights and civil rights who voted against the Iraq war and the Patriot Act (though, disappointingly, for the Military Commissions Act during the campaign). In 2005 National Journal ranked him as more liberal than 86 percent of House members. But he managed to avoid being sliced apart by wedge issues or tarred and feathered as an out-of-touch liberal by focusing with Terminator-like persistence on a simple economic populist message: "fighting for the middle class," as his campaign manager John Ryan put it to me.

Ryan says that even when DeWine attempted to change the topic or attack Brown, the campaign spent 50 percent of its airtime in TV ads responding to the charge "and 50 percent of Sherrod looking onscreen with a working-class message and a middle-class message."

In some ways, Ohio's a special case, having been particularly hard hit by globalization and with 83 percent of voters saying the economy was extremely or very important. The race came down to the have-nots outnumbering the haves: 37 percent of voters rated the economy excellent or good, and DeWine won their vote by 44 points. But 62 percent rated the economy not good or poor, and Brown won those voters by almost 50 points.

I asked Ryan if, given Ohio's particularities, he thought Brown's message would be applicable in other parts of the country.

"Take Columbus," Ryan said. "Columbus is so much like the rest of the country, demographically, that companies from all over the country conduct focus groups there. There's not a lot of factories, and it might be the one part of the state that might have gained some jobs with NAFTA. We went down to Columbus and we tested [Brown's trade message] to see if it would work. The difference was that in Dayton people would say, I lost two jobs because of NAFTA, and in Columbus people said, I know someone who lost a job. It was one half-step away, but people got it — people understood that the government was not on our side."

In addition, Ryan pointed to Brown's success in southern Ohio, which is by far the most conservative part of the state. In three southern counties, Brown's support exceeded the number of registered Democrats by at least 20,000 votes.

Brown's successful populism and that of other Democrats hasn't gone unnoticed. Commentators have raised the specter of the rise of a "Lou Dobbs"-like wing of the party whose economic arguments are inextricably linked to a racialized nationalism, the kind of populism that's equally comfortable bashing corporations that outsource jobs and "illegal aliens" who take away Americans' jobs here at home, and whose opposition to the Iraq war, like Pat Buchanan's, is rooted in an America-first isolationism.

To be sure, economic populism has a dark side. It's a fine line between railing against corporate-written trade deals because they hurt workers the world over, and scapegoating the brown-skinned other who is stealing our jobs.

Democrats haven't always walked this line carefully: There was more than a whiff of demagoguery in John Kerry's nomination acceptance speech about "closing firehouses in America" while opening them in Baghdad. (Why shouldn't Iraqis have firehouses?)

That subtext ran through many Democrats' ads in this past cycle, as they rushed to declare their opposition to "amnesty," a word as racially loaded today as "quotas" was in the 1980s. Heath Shuler's ads attacking his opponent for "selling out our families" also ridiculed him for voting to set up a scholarship for Russian students (the horror!), while pledging that he would "put American families first." Even Sherrod Brown talked in television ads about the need for "tighter borders."

It's the left's perennial dilemma: Populism is a fundamentally majoritarian mode of politics — the have-nots versus the haves, the many versus the few — but a central part of the left's most noble tradition is protecting the rights and interests of minorities.

Yet if there's going to be a center-left majority in this country, its electoral strength is going to rest on a coalition bound by a shared interest in economic justice. The Democrats face several obstacles to making that coalition stick.

First, the infusion of corporate cash that's about to flow into the now-majority party will provide a disincentive to go after corporate power in ways that voters clearly want. In the past, when caught between the interests of their donors and of their constituents, too often Democrats have advocated for the former: Just look at the vote on the bankruptcy bill.

Second, the Democrats' continued growth rests on a burgeoning Latino population, as well as on young people, who are more socially liberal than the population at large. So whose interests are going to get top priority?

Though difficult, it's not an impossible situation to navigate. With the power to control the agenda, Democrats can leverage the electoral strength of economic populism to protect minority interests by making sure that socially conservative members never get the chance to cast a vote in support of things like a marriage amendment or a "partial birth" abortion ban.

But that strategy will work only if the Democrats can enforce real party discipline and prevent socially conservative Dems from defecting on key issues such as stem-cell funding, choice, abstinence education and immigration.

In the short term, Nancy Pelosi's strategy seems to focus on the economic issues with the broadest range of support. Her agenda for the first 100 hours of her term as Speaker of the House is a package of mainstream, popular, progressive bills that would benefit a variety of the Democrats' constituencies: a raise in the minimum wage, which would greatly benefit blacks, Latinos and single women; a cut in interest rates for student loans, which would benefit young voters; and bulk negotiation of Medicare prescription drugs, which would benefit the elderly.

"The Republicans are here to concentrate the wealth of our country in the top 1 percent, and all the power that comes with that is at the expense of the middle class and those striving to be in the middle class — and that's just plain wrong," Pelosi said in a conference call the day after the election. "That's why we need to get a progressive economic agenda out there. As long as I get my caucus organized around that, that's more important to me than having a checklist."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: justsayno2socialsm; not4government2do; nutjob; pornpeddler; socialismstinks; webbisakook
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To: Vicomte13
But the Social Security tax stops on compensation above $90,000.

One of the things GWB wanted to change, a la his SS reforms of 2005.

The Democraps had a coniption, as did many "hide under the pillow" Republicans.

As for capital gains, they are taxed at 15-percent.

And in order for your wages to be taxed at 35-percent, you have to be in the $300,000 a year PLUS bracket.

Or somewhere around that.

A person making $50,000 or $60,000 a year can expect to pay around 17-percent FEDERAL income tax.

121 posted on 11/21/2006 2:21:41 PM PST by Edit35
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To: oblomov
I live 20 miles South of Cleveland and travel routinely through the state. Yes, there is agriculture, but is very mechanicanized. I guess I should have made it a little more clear. We moved from agrarian economy to an industrialized one at the turn or the century, hence the labor force reduction.

Manufacturing is traveling along the same course, utilizing advanced machine tools producing much more per man hour. That was my point.
122 posted on 11/21/2006 2:22:27 PM PST by mr_hammer (Pro-life, Pro-gun, Pro-military, Pro-borders, Limited Govn't will win in 08!)
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To: tcrlaf
I really cannot wait until the Dem policies drive the economy to the brink of recession...

Fortunately, the GOP still has filibuster power in the US Senate, and VETO power in the Executive Branch.

As much as I despise the Democrap distortionists, I really don't think they will be able to get through any signifigant legislation in the next two years.

Which is why the US Stock Market has done so well since election day.

Not that it didn't do well prior to Nov. 7 when the GOP was in charge.

But economists and others have come to the realization that Democrats good at race baiting, good at Bush-hating, and good at providing terror-loving countries with political cover.

But other than that, Democraps are impotent.

123 posted on 11/21/2006 2:28:13 PM PST by Edit35
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To: HHFi

"I voted Republican, but only because I knew the alternative was even worse, not because the current Congress gave me any reason to reelect them."

I am with ya a 100%, commom sense seems to be lacking big time in our republic lately.


124 posted on 11/21/2006 2:30:39 PM PST by mr_hammer (Pro-life, Pro-gun, Pro-military, Pro-borders, Limited Govn't will win in 08!)
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To: MadIvan

Get your mind around this: we live in a representative democracy. Government provides welfare, including the grandaddy of all welfare programs for the poor and middle class: public education, because the people WANT IT that way. They vote for it. They aren't going to STOP voting for it. We are not going to let Malthus govern the results at the bottom. Those days are past, precisely because this IS a representative democracy, and people vote for a social safety net.
It is never, ever, ever going to go away.

Make peace with that reality.
Social Security is here to stay.
So is public education.
So is Medicare.
So are student loans for college.
So are OSHA standards, and regulation of the capital markets.
All of these places, ways and means that government provides a safety net, or supervises private conduct to prevent monopolistic or dishonest behavior are going to stay put. You will never convince even a majority of Americans to do away with any of these things.

There, now that we have taken due notice of the bounds of REALITY, perhaps we can decide how it is that we are going to prevent the Democrats from sweeping the Midwest and being the permanent majority.

"Stay the course" was a failed stratgey in Iraq, and it's a failed strategy domestically. If you want to go down with the ship, go ahead, but there's no virtue in it.

We have to shore up the security of industrial workers in transition. If we don't, the political unrest will keep the Democrats in office for a long, long time, because they certainly WILL do something, and thereby gain the allegiance of that class of voters.

Try to get your brain around the concept, for your own good: democratcy means that no purist philosophy EVER rules the roost. Pragmatic solutions to pragmatic problems.


125 posted on 11/21/2006 2:37:29 PM PST by Vicomte13 (Aure entuluva.)
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To: presidio9

Unionize!!


126 posted on 11/21/2006 2:41:22 PM PST by griswold3 (I cried when I erased my tagline....)
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To: Vicomte13
Get your mind around this: we live in a representative democracy. Government provides welfare, including the grandaddy of all welfare programs for the poor and middle class: public education, because the people WANT IT that way.

The people voted for Reagan in 1980 and 1984, and the Republican Congress in 1994, because they promised to roll back the frontiers of government. In case you've been sleeping, there have been a good number of columnists and thinkers who believe that it was the failure of Republicans to live up to this promise that caused their recent defeat. Your theory of permanent socialism has no basis in fact. It is a call for defeatism: you basically say that because a government programme or responsibility is in place now, that this is how it is and we may as well get used to it. That is not what most of us got into conservatism before - not to make peace with the status quo, but to change it as it is inadequate. Surely any political system, and any mature electorate can recognise the need to change when it arises. With entitlements leading the nation to bankruptcy, that need is pressing.

Your agenda of surrender is not American, nor British. It is a sickening, disgusting recipe for accomodation with things that conservatives should find repulsive.

Ivan

127 posted on 11/21/2006 2:44:00 PM PST by MadIvan (I aim to misbehave.)
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To: Vicomte13
You will never convince even a majority of Americans to do away with any of these things.

We forced welfare reform down Clinton's throat because voters demanded it and voted his party out of office during his midterm election. And his bubble economy was supposedly rocking at the time. So what you are saying doesn't make a lot of sense. Second term presidents always lose seats in mid term elections, and this one was augumented by a media which overplays negative news about Iraq and trumps up scandals about inappropriate emailings. Nothing more.

128 posted on 11/21/2006 2:46:52 PM PST by presidio9 (Tagline Censored)
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To: MikeA

Only communists and socialist need a permanent poverty class. Conservatives believe it is most important for an upwardly mobile class. A belief in 'hard work' paying off with rewards drives this country.

Tax the rich
Feed the poor
Til there are no rich no more....

Then who do we tax??


129 posted on 11/21/2006 2:49:22 PM PST by griswold3 (I cried when I erased my tagline....)
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To: presidio9

We're not going to tax wealth, so it's a bit of a moot point.

But, if I were King and taxing wealth (but having no sales tax, or income tax, or any-other-tax except user fees for government services) we would tax it thus:

Wealth is measured by:
Assessed value of real estate.
Standard values (blue book, etc.) of registered vehicles (cars, boats, airplanes, etc.)
Policy value of property insurance (i.e.: A $50,000 property insurance policy covers $50,000 of wealth, so $50,000 is taxed).
Amount in bank accounts and securities.
Self-reporting of other assets.

The only part of this which can be evaded is the insurance piece. To the extent that somebody decides not to insure his property so as to not pay the 1% tax on insurance value, well, he takes the risk. Of course, his tax evasion will be discovered if the property is ever STOLEN and he makes a police report.

There is about $660 trillion of wealth in the USA. A 1% wealth tax would generate about $5 trillion in revenue every year (I'm assuming about a 20% evasion rate). Since we only need about $3.5 trillion in taxes to run everything, I guess we wouldn't even need the general wealth tax to equal 1%.

But this is not going to happen, so why fight about it?


130 posted on 11/21/2006 2:49:47 PM PST by Vicomte13 (Aure entuluva.)
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To: Vicomte13
We're not going to tax wealth, so it's a bit of a moot point.

Then why even bring the stupid idea up? Listen, I already asked you nicely to stop wasting my time. As for the rest, you didn't even bother to address my question: How individuals with no liquidity are going to pay it?

131 posted on 11/21/2006 2:54:43 PM PST by presidio9 (Tagline Censored)
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To: presidio9

Welfare reform targeted programs for the undeserving poor.

Social Security and Medicare are middle class programs. The people in terrible job stress in the Midwest are middle class, not poor. They don't WANT to be on welfare, but see their options dwindling.



So, the GOP either uses its control of government to manage the problem and diminish the blows, or these folks do what they just did in Indiana, Pennsylvania, Ohio and industrial Connecticut: they exercise the option of electing people who might change the terms of the deal.

Considering that a major foreign war and millions of babies' lives are on the line here, bickering about social programs is not a smart way to expend energy.


132 posted on 11/21/2006 2:56:13 PM PST by Vicomte13 (Aure entuluva.)
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To: presidio9

Statement is false.


133 posted on 11/21/2006 2:58:05 PM PST by tomjohn77
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To: presidio9

"Listen, I already asked you nicely to stop wasting my time."

Done!


134 posted on 11/21/2006 2:58:11 PM PST by Vicomte13 (Aure entuluva.)
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To: presidio9

Later read.


135 posted on 11/21/2006 3:02:05 PM PST by wjcsux (The Republicans are disappointing, the DemosRATs are dangerous- Dr. Sowell)
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To: presidio9
In Norway the minimum wage is around $16-17 or more. At least I don't know any place that pay less. Unemployment is around 2-3% and inflation is low. There are a lot of guest workers that are paid less from Poland and Eastern Europe. They usually work in construction, farming etc.
136 posted on 11/21/2006 3:04:25 PM PST by tomjohn77
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To: KMAJ2
Some Most people have no clue about economics and fall prey to emotional appeals and arguments.

Even many FReepers. I corrected your statement.

137 posted on 11/21/2006 3:06:48 PM PST by Hardastarboard (Why isn't there an "NRA" for the rest of my rights?)
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To: presidio9

"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."
Winston Churchill


138 posted on 11/21/2006 3:09:56 PM PST by wjcsux (The Republicans are disappointing, the DemosRATs are dangerous- Dr. Sowell)
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To: thinkthenpost
Read my prior post. Higher minimum wage is not the same as less jobs. It only look that way. Whats wrong with efficiency and technology at all levels of society. BTW I am in favor of low taxes etc., but raising minimum wage does not mean less jobs.
139 posted on 11/21/2006 3:10:38 PM PST by tomjohn77
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To: presidio9

There are a few TROLLS on this thread. I am for the flat tax....everyone pays the SAME rate. What could be more FAIR than that!


140 posted on 11/21/2006 3:21:11 PM PST by oiler (Reagan Republicans Unite!!!!! Draft Fred Thompson in 08')
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