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Drop the Middle Class Talk
· Friday, February 3, 2012
In 1992, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton built his campaign for the White House on doing more for the "forgotten middle class." Calling it the "new covenant" (Democrats since Roosevelt have tried to work the words "new" or "deal" into their campaign slogans), Clinton promised to focus on the people he called "the backbone of the country, the ones who do the work and pay the taxes and send their children off to war."
Sound familiar? Here is Mitt Romney, the morning after the Florida primary: "I'm in this race because I care about Americans. I'm not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich; they're doing just fine. I'm concerned about the very heart of ... America, the 90 percent, 95 percent of Americans who right now are struggling."
The usual firestorm erupted -- with liberals and conservatives alike pouncing on evidence of Romney's "tin ear." NPR anticipated (eagerly?) that Romney's words would show up in Democratic attack ads. And an exasperated Jonah Goldberg wondered in National Review Online whether Romney actually knows how to play this game: " . . . The concern is, after nearly a decade of running for president, if he can't get this stuff down now he never will."
It wasn't just the reference to not being "concerned" about the "very poor" that was misguided on Romney's part. It was the whole thrust of picking groups to favor or disfavor, help or ignore. When Bill Clinton promised to focus on the middle class (with, for example, a middle class tax cut that never materialized), he was well within a Democratic tradition of claiming to speak for this or that constituency. His departure from Democratic tradition was sly -- whereas previous Democrats had overdone their claims on behalf of the poor -- Clinton shoved the poor aside and focused on bringing goodies to the vast middle class, the people who vote.
This contretemps is an unforced error. Romney has elsewhere declined to engage in this kind of pandering. In his victory speech in Florida, for example, he said, "The path I lay out is not one paved with ever increasing government checks and cradle-to-grave assurances that government will always be the solution. If this election is a bidding war for who can promise more benefits, then I'm not your president. You have that president today." In the second Florida debate, he chastised Gingrich for promising a new federal program at every campaign stop, reminding voters that that's how we got into this mess.
That's the spirit that will energize the Republican Party and independent voters.
Romney has sometimes hit the right notes, but he needs to more consistently convey a sense of urgency at the fiscal crisis the nation faces. It's fine to reference his private sector experience, but he should then quickly pivot to the national debt, the extraordinary growth of government and the unsustainability of the fiscal path we're on.
This week, the Congressional Budget Office released its Budget and Economic Outlook. It projects a fourth straight year of trillion dollar deficits -- the chief accomplishment of the Obama years. But then, because the CBO must make predictions based on current law, the projections take a turn into fantasyland. The very smart analysts at CBO, advanced degrees in economics notwithstanding, are thus forced to spin fairy tales. This year's goes like this: deficits will plummet as a share of GDP after 2013, dropping to under $200 billion between 2013 and 2022.
This cheerful outlook is bilge. It assumes that the Bush tax cuts (all of them, not just those for the rich) will be permitted to expire, that the cuts in Medicare reimbursement to doctors will not be reversed by Congress (which has never happened before), that the alternative minimum tax will not be indexed to inflation, and that the automatic spending cuts mandated in last fall's budget agreement will indeed happen.
Everyone knows this isn't so. In fact, the CBO, perhaps embarrassed by the numbers in the official forecast, issued an alternative prediction, based not on current law but on what is likely to happen, and that projection is beyond grim.
Just like the social democracies of Europe, the U.S. has made more promises to its citizens (mostly middle class citizens, by the way) than it can possibly pay for. This is the glaring emergency that demands leadership. This, not the middle class, is what Romney ought to be talking about.
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Tex Horn
It seems that the establishment Republican candidate (Romney) has chosen, like the socialist president, to raise the class issue. Bad idea. It seems that the second leading establishment Republican candidate (Gingrich) has chosen, like the socialist president, to create more government committees and departments. Another bad idea. So, it seems, like many on these forums have argued, that nothing will significantly change with the nomination and election of an establishment Republican candidate.
Posted February 3, 2012 at 10:26:55 AM
wjmccrindle
Liberals are liars, they can't speak without fabricating stories and fantasy. The media, doesn't even pretend anymore, but blatantly lies to the sheeple what they want them to believe, and truth never enters the stories. I don't care about the poor, they have better I-phones and TVs than I do. They get to vote several times for more handouts that the Democrats give them in exchange for all their votes. The fat slovely poor are what the Democrats want to controll, with their welfare and handouts and free stuff, to the detriment of the rest of us working stiffs who are robbed of our production to give to the Poor, who should be ashamed but are indoctrinated in the marxist ideology that they deserve their largess at the expense of those who actually earn a living. What the American people need is a government that allows success through hard work, not rewarding failure and lazyness. The Poor should be starving suffering from their lazyness, not given handouts to sit playing their X-boxes and Playstaions. Charity is not the business of government. The Marxist statist traitors have only made the poor dependant on government, at the expense of freedom for the rest of us. Where is John Galt? Those with their hands out shouldn't be allowed to vote, and that would pretty much take care of the treasonous marxist statist Democrats.
Posted February 3, 2012 at 10:58:35 AM
lmills
The middle class is not a class at all - It is an idea born in the free society of the United States. I have been in a situation where my husband and I brought home 30 thousand a year and in a situation where we brought home 120 thousand. In both cases we believed ourselves to be middle class. It wasn't until we were in a situation where we need serious assistance that we realized we were no longer middle class, but had dipped into poverty. We made changes in our lives and now bring home around 60 thousand. Middle Class is about not being in debted to anything or anyone. It is about freedom. That is what this country offered from the beginning. It means being able to make your own living. To work, sweat, clear, plant and make your own way without asking for permission to do so. The Founders understood the importance of "property" in the minds and lives of Free People - to not be indebted or in servitude to another. With debt and government intrusion we are losing the middle class. It's not economics - it's freedom. Romney does understand this - I wonder if Republicans really do.
Posted February 3, 2012 at 11:33:54 AM
mmccrindle
Without massive cuts across the board this country will fail.
If obama gets back in it will happen that much sooner, that's all.
I just wonder if Obama has some kind of sick plan to take over. He's certainly not seeing very much resistance to his stomping all over the constitution lately, has he?
His plan to destroy this country is quite evident to me, why not try to guess his post-meltdown strategy.
Me? I'm glad I know people who have lots of ammo.
Posted February 4, 2012 at 5:09:09 PM