LOGO: Truthdig: Drilling Beneath the Headlines. A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman. Winner 2013 Webby Awards for Best Political Website
May 22, 2013

 Choose a size
Text Size

Trending:     chris hedges     economy     elizabeth warren     politics     robert scheer
Most Read

Rise Up or Die

Lock Up Washington

Revenge of the Bear: Russia Strikes Back in Syria

How America Became a Third World Country: 2013-2023

California Man Sues Officers He Says Nearly Beat Him to Death

Most Comments
Most Emailed

Reports
 * NEW! * The Path of Hubris and War
 * NEW! * Glaciers Are Melting Slowly but Surely

Ear to the Ground

A/V Booth

Arts & Culture
Act of Congress
Daily Rituals
The Girls of Atomic City

Digs

Truthdig Bazaar
Head Cases

Head Cases

By Michael Paul Mason
$16.50

more items

 
Reports

Obama’s American Exceptionalism

Email this item Email    Print this item Print    Share this item... Share

Posted on May 10, 2012

By E.J. Dionne, Jr.

Can a Republican primary in Indiana have even the remotest connection to a presidential election in France? Richard Mourdock, the tea party giant-killer who defeated Sen. Richard Lugar on Tuesday, clearly thinks so.

“Just yesterday, France elected a socialist,” Mourdock declared in his victory speech. “There are those I’m sure in the administration and in the left side of the Democratic Party that were cheering for that. But we’re not going to stand for that in Indiana because the supporters of Barack Obama are not going to win!”

Don’t scoff. There is a point behind what Mourdock said. It’s just not the point he had in mind. 

Mourdock’s success is decisive proof, if any more was needed, that the Republican Party has lurched far to the right of where it once was. Lugar was regularly described in the course of his re-election campaign as a “moderate.” But he is not a moderate, and never has been. He is a conservative who happens to be civil. Lugar earned a lifetime rating of 77 percent from the American Conservative Union. If being more than three-quarters to the right puts you in the “middle” of the political spectrum, it’s a very skewed measure.

Being a good tea party Republican, Mourdock is all about slashing government spending without regard to the impact of the cuts on the economy or on those who need government help. He cast his campaign as a battle against “the nightmare of ever-growing government” that would turn the United States into a “Western European-style nation.”

Advertisement

This gets us to the irony: Right now, it’s conservatives who want to follow the Western European path of austerity that voters in France and Greece rejected last weekend. The Obama administration, by contrast, has chosen a distinctly American path that kept austerity at bay. As a result, the American economy has climbed out of the Great Recession more quickly than most of Europe. Had Obama accepted the right wing’s assertions that cutting government is the one and only route to prosperity, we would have gone the way of Britain, which is slipping toward recession again.

In fact, the “socialist” Obama has presided over an economy in which private employment has risen by 4.2 million jobs during the recovery even as governments at all levels have cut public payrolls by some 600,000 since the beginning of 2009. If shrinking government is the political right’s goal, this puts Obama to the right of both Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. The United States should have been even more aggressive in pump priming the economy—and Obama would have been if conservatives and some moderates had not been so resistant.

What European voters are demanding, in other words, is a more moderate, American-style course. Eamon Gilmore, Ireland’s deputy prime minister and the leader of its Labour Party, nicely summarized the center-left’s middle-of-the-road approach. “You can’t have economic growth unless you also have stability,” he said, “but neither can you have stability without growth.”

France’s Francois Hollande may carry a Socialist label, but he, too, favors a balanced policy that would use public spending primarily to induce more private sector growth. Matt Browne, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, is right to describe Hollande’s economic views as “pragmatic” and his proposals as embodying “a realistic European agenda.”

On the other hand, the Mourdock Republicans—and they now very much include Mitt Romney, the party’s presumptive nominee, in their ranks—would have the United States embrace an even more radical program of government cutbacks at the very moment when Europe’s voters are telling us that this simply doesn’t work.

In the more reasonable Washington to which Lugar arrived in 1977, Republicans accepted the need to boost the economy during a time of recession. They didn’t allow routine debt-ceiling votes to become threats to the nation’s full faith and credit. They didn’t think cutting government was a politician’s lone task. And, only because the GOP trash-talks Europe so much these days, let’s note that the older Republican Party didn’t believe that right-wing European emigre economic thinkers such as F. A. Hayek and Ludwig von Mises had all the answers.

Obama’s thoroughly moderate economic policies are an excellent example of a practical American exceptionalism. Europeans are moving toward the center-left not because they are doctrinaire but precisely because they are sick of the rigid approaches the advocates of austerity have imposed upon them. Why would we now want to imitate Europe’s failures?


E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com.
   
© 2012, Washington Post Writers Group


New and Improved Comments

If you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy.

By John Poole, May 14, 2012 at 4:43 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Obama may believe that bailing out the rich during a financial crisis is always a
president’s first priority because only after the plutocracy gets back its losses will
they pay any attention to the needs of the proles. Obama may still be thinking
that the plutocracy’s self interest is always enlightened. That delusion may warp
his psyche even more if he wins a second term.

Report this

By Maani, May 11, 2012 at 4:57 pm Link to this comment

grokker/Big B:

You keep saying “he,” meaning Obama: “he” did this, “he” didn’t do that.  How quickly we forget!

Obama was facing - and continues to face - the single most intransigent opposition party possibly in the history of the country - a party whose senior members openly stated that their primary goal was to defeat Obama in 2012 - NOT to help the country, NOT to do what they are paid for, NOT to do “the people’s work.”

In this regard, it is little short of a MIRACLE that Obama accomplished as much as he did, including staving off a MUCH worse economic meltdown, turning around the U.S. auto industry, creating jobs (though admittedly less than might even have been possible under the circumstances), extending unemployment benefits…I could go on.

Obama has certainly been a disappointment based on what we HOPED he might do.  But unless you were living under a fairly large rock in 2008, it was quite obvious that he would not be able to accomplish even more re the economy, since the GOP knew, from the get-go, that doing everything they could do DESTROY the economy (or at least prevent it from getting better) was the single best way to prevent Obama’s re-election, since they knew that all too many people would blame Obama.

Please don’t tell me that you drank the GOP Kool-Aid too!

Peace.

Report this

By Big B, May 10, 2012 at 10:41 am Link to this comment

Once again, we are supposed to congratulate Barry for doing the bare minimum.

And no austerity in USA? What the fuck has Dionne been smoking? Aid to the states has been cut, school funding has been cut, welfare has been cut. He has cut tax levels going into the social security fund that will cause “austerity” to future recipients. People are making less money, and have a lot less benefits than the previous generation enjoyed.

Perhaps Dionne just doesn’t know the meaning of the word “austerity”

Report this

By GW=MCHammered, May 10, 2012 at 9:11 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

CBS News reports that the US workforce is the same size it was in 1982. Yet our GDP is now 5 times what it was then. Somebody’s swiping that productivity gain and it’s not workers.

And if the wealthy create jobs, where are all the Help Wanted signs? Our job market should be awash with opportunities and it is not. Yet the wealthy haven’t had it better or easier in decades!

Instead, layoffs, hospital and school closures, government borrowing, home foreclosures and inflating prices (not wages) result.

If our government was for The People, there would be National Guardsmen on K-Street, Wall Street and in corporate boardrooms. We’re amidst an economic coup d’état.

http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/2011/1021/Six-ways-the-rich-really-do-get-richer/Housing-bargains-but-only-for-the-wealthy-and-uber-wealthy

Report this

By grokker, May 10, 2012 at 7:33 am Link to this comment

“As a result, the American economy has climbed out of the Great Recession more quickly than most of Europe. “

Wow. Just wow!!!! What planet are you from, Dionne? The “Great Recession” was never that. It is a depression and not so great at that. The stock market numbers look decent but are the result of market manipulation and high frequency trading. A recent study shows that since 2006, 50% of college grads are working part time in slightly better than minimum wage jobs and having to hold multiple jobs to pay off their 700+ dollars a month in student loans - living with their parents.
Where is the recovery, Dionne? It’s all a house of cards with the Commander in Chief and his cronies lying their way towards another four years of illusion.

Report this
Newsletter

sign up to get updates


 
 
 
 
Join the Liberal Blog Advertising Network
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
© 2013 Truthdig, LLC. All rights reserved.