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red states rule
07-26-2010, 02:20 PM
The WSJ looks at how the hope and change things is doing and what the results are





Democrats have been running Congress for nearly four years, and President Obama has been at the White House for 18 months, so it's not too soon to ask: How's that working out? One devastating scorecard came out Friday from the White House, in the form of its own semi-annual budget review.

The message: Tax revenues are smaller, spending is greater, and the deficits are thus larger than the White House has been saying. No wonder it dumped the news on the eve of a sweltering mid-July weekend.

Mr. Obama inherited a recession, so let's give him a pass on the budget numbers for 2009. Clearly the deficit would have been large no matter who was President, even if the David Obey-Nancy Pelosi $862 billion stimulus made it larger than it otherwise would have been. What's striking about the latest budget estimates, however, is that the White House is predicting the numbers won't improve much through 2011, the third year of the President's term.

As a share of the economy, the White House now says the deficit in fiscal 2010, which ends on September 30, will be even larger than in 2009: 10%. That's after a full year of economic growth, given that the recovery began last summer. More remarkable still, the deficit will barely fall in fiscal 2011, declining only to 9.2% of GDP in the second year of a recovery that ought to be gaining steam.

To put this in historical context, consider the nearby table that compares deficits as a share of GDP under Presidents Reagan and Obama. The 1981-82 recession was comparable in severity to the one Mr. Obama inherited and reached similar heights of unemployment. The deficits that resulted from that recession were the source of huge political consternation, with Democrats, the press corps and even some senior Reagan aides insisting that only a huge tax increase could save the country from ruin.

Yet as the table shows, the Reagan deficits never reached more than 6% of GDP, and that happened only in 1983, the first year of economic recovery. As the 1980s expansion continued, the deficits fell, especially as the pace of spending slowed in the latter part of Reagan's second term. Few remember now, but when Ross Perot won 19% of the Presidential vote in 1992 running more or less on the single issue of the deficit, the budget hole was only 4.7% of GDP.

The Obama deficits are double that, and more than one-third higher than even the Gipper's worst year. What explains this? Part of it is that Democrats are simply spending much more, sending outlays as a share of GDP above 25% for the first time since World War II. The White House now says outlays will be higher in 2011, at 25.1% of GDP, than at the height of the stimulus in 2009 and 2010.

This is an ironic tribute to the degree to which Democrats on Capitol Hill have been increasing spending willy-nilly below the media radar. The 111th Congress is the most spendthrift in a century outside of World Wars I and II.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703995104575389430430274968.html?m od=wsj_share_facebook

bullypulpit
07-27-2010, 04:13 PM
http://www.lafn.org/gvdc/Natl_Debt_Chart.jpg

bullypulpit
07-27-2010, 04:20 PM
Oh, and here's another one...

http://www.cbpp.org/archivesite/1-25-05bud-f1.jpg

Red...Supply-side economics...voodoo economics as Poppy Bush called it...is nothing more than the promise of a free-lunch. A promise which, given their lack of political and economic sophistication, the average American voter finds irresistible. Never mind that the economics behind supply-side theory has long since been discredited, the voter's memory is notoriously short, so the GOP continues to serve up the same old crap-sandwich. And they'll continue to do so as long as American voters keep forgetting that there ain't no such thing as a free lunch.

TANSTAFL, y'all.

Gaffer
07-27-2010, 04:32 PM
So bully will you ever stop blaming Bush and try to concentrate on today. Bush is no longer in office, your boy the dark lord is. Our present economy is the direct result of his actions. And your actions for putting him there.

red states rule
07-27-2010, 05:57 PM
So bully will you ever stop blaming Bush and try to concentrate on today. Bush is no longer in office, your boy the dark lord is. Our present economy is the direct result of his actions. And your actions for putting him there.

Hey Bully here is the perfect bumber sticker for your car


http://logo.cafepress.com/nocache/0/5076440.jpg

Now why not be a man and admit your guy have broken all records for spending, and deficits?

bullypulpit
07-27-2010, 08:12 PM
So bully will you ever stop blaming Bush and try to concentrate on today. Bush is no longer in office, your boy the dark lord is. Our present economy is the direct result of his actions. And your actions for putting him there.

I'll blame Bush less when y'all wake up and start blaming him more. And the facts do not bear out you assertion. Bush era tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans constitute the largest portion of the current national debt. CBO figures bear this out. Sucks for you and your fellow travelers that the facts have a librul bias.

Buh bye now.

avatar4321
07-27-2010, 08:57 PM
So Bully, you say you are going to blame Bush until the day you die? How is that going to fix anything?

Blame is irrelevant. You can't blame one person for everything. If we are going to fix the problems in our nation we need to start by fixing the problems in our life.

red states rule
07-28-2010, 04:53 AM
So Bully, you say you are going to blame Bush until the day you die? How is that going to fix anything?

Blame is irrelevant. You can't blame one person for everything. If we are going to fix the problems in our nation we need to start by fixing the problems in our life.

Bully reminds me of a liberal I work with. I asked him when he would stop blaming Bush for the economy

With a straight face he replied "When it gets better"

red states rule
07-28-2010, 05:54 AM
I wonder if BP will now attack his fellow liberals who are now losing confidence in Obama and his policies?





Obama's base quits blaming Bush
President's poll numbers slip as 'same problems' continue

The summer of the discontented voter steams onward and, unfortunately for President Obama, polls show voters are no longer blaming the bad times on the George W. Bush administration.

Add Hispanics to the growing list of Obama supporters disgruntled by aspects of the presidents performance, in what has become for the White House and Democrats a seemingly daily beat of gloomy polls.

Mr. Obama gets only lukewarm ratings on issues important to Hispanics in a Univision/AP poll released Tuesday, and, according to a separate Reuters-Ipsos survey, Americans overwhelmingly believe the president has failed to focus enough on job creation.

"A lot of these folks wouldn't like him no matter what, but I think the country has pretty much the same problems it did before Obama took office — at least that's how voters feel — and more and more that's becoming Obama's fault rather than Bush's fault," said Tom Jensen, director of Public Policy Polling.

Support for Mr. Obama has eroded among whites, independents, men and now Hispanics, who were part of the coalition that powered him to the White House in 2008.

While the AP-Univision poll found that 57 percent of Hispanics still approve of Mr. Obama, it revealed deep skepticism among the key Democratic voting bloc. Only 43 percent of Hispanics said Mr. Obama is meeting their needs, according to the poll, while 32 percent were unsure and 21 percent said he has done a poor job.

The Reuters-Ipsos poll, also released Tuesday, found that an overwhelming majority of Americans — 67 percent — do not think Mr. Obama has focused enough on creating jobs, compared with the administration's emphasis on overhauling health care and rewriting the nation's financial rules. The survey said only 34 percent approved of the president's handling of the economy and jobs while 46 percent rejected it as unsatisfactory.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/jul/27/obamas-base-quits-blaming-bush/