Pushing Health Reform When Job Losses Are Rising
· Monday, November 16, 2009
Barack Obama told the House Democratic Caucus before the roll call vote on health care on Nov. 7 that they would be better off politically if they passed the bill than if they let it fail. Bill Clinton speaking to the Senate Democrats' lunch on Nov. 10 cited his party's big losses in 1994 after Congress failed to pass his health care legislation as evidence that Democrats would suffer more from failure to pass a bill than from disaffection with a bill that was signed into law.
These were closed meetings, but we can safely assume that the two Democratic presidents also assured their fellow partisans that health care legislation would do all sorts of good things for the American people. We know Obama did say that Democrats should "answer the call of history," even though America has gotten along pretty well without government-run health insurance for some 220 years.
But political calculations are always on politicians' minds. The two presidents were urging passage of legislation that has become increasingly unpopular as its provisions become more widely known. They were speaking at a time when Gallup tells us that only 47 percent of Americans think providing health insurance is a government responsibility, down from 69 percent just two years ago.
So despite their assurances, it's unclear whether Democrats will be better off passing a bill or seeing one fail. In political discourse, it's often assumed that there is some clear path to a favorable outcome. But sometimes both paths lead down.
The question is how you got to that point or, more specifically, how Barack Obama and congressional Democratic leaders decided to make expensive health care legislation a No. 1 priority at a time when the nation was facing enervating unemployment, now at 10.2 percent and rising far higher than White House projections.
Obama seemed to acknowledge as much when he announced, just before embarking on his trip to Asia, that he will convene a White House "jobs summit" in December. Obama credited his administration, justifiably in my view, for stabilizing financial markets and preventing an even steeper economic downturn, and he might have credited, but didn't, his predecessor's administration for that, as well.
But it's hard to see what else his administration has done to address job losses that were already large when he took office and that are far larger now. The $787 billion stimulus package passed in February has undoubtedly prompted the creation of some jobs somewhere and has clearly saved the jobs of many members of the public employee unions that contributed so generously to Obama's campaigns.
As the reporting of my Washington Examiner colleagues has shown, the claims that the stimulus package has "created or saved" specific numbers of jobs posted on recovery.gov are as greatly exaggerated as the early obituaries of Mark Twain.
It's easy, in contrast, to spot the job-killing planks of the Obama platform. The prospect of higher taxes on high earners after the Bush tax cuts expire in 2010 is one. The surtax on high earners in the health care bill the House passed is another. The cap-and-trade bill passed by the House, which would increase the cost of energy to avert disasters predicted for 50 years hence, is another. With all this in prospect, why would people choose to make job-creating investments?
The numbers tell a discouraging story. The three-month moving average of jobs lost fell from 829,000 in January 2009 to 230,000 in June. That's the good news. But in the very months that the stimulus package was supposed to be taking effect, and at a time when the economy appears to have started growing again, movement has been in the other direction, with the three-month average of jobs lost rising to 589,000 in October.
That's bad news indeed, for the nation and for Democratic politicians. So here is a suggestion for the jobs summit. The president should put on again the bipartisan hat he wore during much of the campaign and embrace the proposal by some Republicans for a payroll tax holiday. Cutting our most regressive tax should appeal to Democrats. And it would immediately reduce the cost of job creation. Voting for health care legislation may or may not help incumbents. Voting for a payroll tax cut would.
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veritaseequitas
"The president should put on again the bipartisan hat he wore during much of the campaign and embrace the proposal by some Republicans for a payroll tax holiday. Cutting our most regressive tax should appeal to Democrats."
Do you mean his Liar Hat? This president never had any intention of bi-partisanship and is making it more obvious by the day that his agenda consists of nothing more than the total enslavement of the American taxpayer to Big Government. Liberals live and die by higher taxes. They shudder at the thought that Americans should keep anything of what they work for...except of course those at the very top.
Posted November 16, 2009 at 7:56:23 AM
MichaelSSEC
Veritaseequitas has the right of it, while Mr Barone inexplicably operates under the delusion that President Obama wants to do what's best for America.
If Mr. Barone has some evidence that this is so, America would love to see it because so far all we've seen is one gigantic recipe for EPIC FAIL.
Yet Mr. Barone curiously touches on the one pertinent question in all this nonsense: given the state of the economy why on Earth would ANY sane leader attempt to implement massively expensive entitlement programs if, as many apparently assume, his job is to get America back to prosperity again? The answer is, of course, no sane leader would do anything of the kind. These staggeringly expensive programs are economy-snuffing nightmares. They are the OPPOSITE of what America needs (at any time, but most especially) during a recession.
Yet, these things have become the centerpieces of Obama's platform. What do Americans rank DEAD LAST on a list of priorities? Global warming. So naturally Obama yearns to shove Cap & Tax con jobs down our throats. When nearly 90% of Americans have health insurance of some kind, and are concerned only with the increasing costs of that health care, Obama pushes a plan that does not address costs (except it GREATLY increases them) but spends TRILLIONS of dollars providing insurance to roughly the same number of people who have it now. Americans rank the economy as their #1 priority, so naturally President Obama's big concern is killing the Bush tax cuts so he can strip even more money out of the economy.
If I were some sinister character with a master plan to dismantle a strong, wealthy, influential country, my schemes would involve:
1) turning a serious recession into a MUCH worse problem by raising taxes and spending TONS more money, most of it on credit.
2) take over several private industries and then run them in the worst possible way to insure that they stay in the tank for generations to come.
3) run around angering our allies, betraying them whenever possible, and breaking our agreements.
4) run around sucking up to evil tyrants and supporting their deadly regimes.
5) prevent us from using our domestic energy resources at the very time when foreign sources are getting absurdly expensive and the countries that produce them are increasingly unstable.
6) do everything I can to help rogue nations acquire nuclear weapons, even going so far as to declare they have a "right" to nukes.
7) ram through a crazy shell-game scheme based on a popular hoax called "global warming," so that every unit of energy in our country suddenly costs 12 times what it should.
8) do everything in my power to undermine our military, subvert the war on terror and support the people who have vowed to kill us. Give the enemy over a billion dollars in "foreign aid" so they can buy more weapons with which to kill us, using our own money -- and laugh at the irony of it all.
But guys like Mr Barone still labor under the delusion that President Obama wants to do what's right for America. All the evidence to date leads to the exact opposite conclusion. President Obama is the most radical, anti-America President ever to sit in the Oval Office. Heaven help us all.
Posted November 16, 2009 at 1:35:16 PM