Friday, September 9, 2011

The GOP Debate and Obama’s Speech Review

As promised, here’s my review of the GOP debate and Obama’s speech.  I also was tweeting during both events and those logs are at the end of this post in case anyone’s curious. 

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This was a lively debate.  It was fun viewing.  The candidates showed a unity against Barack Obama that the GOP sorely needs while simultaneously setting themselves apart from each other.  They were collectively more aggressive towards each other than I expected, but that’s a good thing.  I was surprised at how much praise Obama got.  Not only did he get credit for suspending EPA regulations as I predicted in my preview, but also for keeping Guantanamo Bay open.  One particularly interesting point was Newt Gingrich defending Rick Perry’s book as a book of ideas rather than a presidential plan.  Mitt Romney and everyone else had some zingers, too.  The Ronald Reagan tribute was also very well-done, and as usual, Brian Williams showed why he’s the best newscaster in America.  His hand-off to Rachel Maddow and Chris Matthews was my cue to call it a night.

I now see four tiers of candidates in the GOP race.  The GOP debate reaffirmed my belief that the race is effectively down to two candidates, namely Romney and Perry.  They were clearly the strongest.  Obviously, the Romney camp will say Romney won and the Perry camp will say Perry won, but the two represent the divide within the GOP camp between a staunch conservative in Perry versus a right-of-center Romney.  Personally, if I had to pick a single winner, it would be Romney because I believe he effectively kept Perry’s charge at bay during the debate.  Part of that relates to this being Perry’s noticeable case of first-debate jitters and the fact that he’s not a particularly strong debater to begin with, whereas Romney is far more seasoned and stronger in debates.  Perry came out strong, but I think Romney got the better of him at this debate.  As Perry gets more in his groove, this may change, yet for now, Romney is still the man, and, “To be the man, you have to beat the man,” as Ric Flair says.

Perry’s rise has relegated Michelle Bachmann to the second tier of the race.  She had a solid performance, but Perry has clearly stolen her thunder.  I originally was going to give Bachmann her own level, but I was so impressed with Jon Huntsman’s surprisingly strong performance that I’m putting him on her level.  Think of it as though Bachmann is at level 2+ and Huntsman is at level 2- because Bachmann still has way higher poll numbers than Huntsman.  Huntsman was forceful and decisive with some very good ideas.  He also very effectively handled the questions from Williams regarding his comments about the GOP, managing to dodge that bullet without naming names and without looking like a total coward (contrast that to how Tim Pawlenty flubbed with his Obama-Romney-Care point at a debate, which was a good point, but he looked like a total pushover).  Concerns about Huntsman’s toughness should be put to rest after this debate.  Bachmann and Huntsman are still in the mix, but they’re longshots.  They should both hang in there, but they should also keep in mind their potential as vice-president picks.  

Ron Paul is on a level all his own.  Paul is probably not even in the same building as the rest of the race.  As I retweeted, he’s a pure Libertarian who doesn’t even try to pretend to be a Republican.  Paul is pretty much the godfather of the Tea Party movement.  His performance likely endeared him to the Tea Party, but I don’t think it did him any favors with the rest of the GOP.  He tended to ramble and I think he came across as a bit too far right.  Paul is too libertarian even for me.  Realistically, he has very little chance of winning the primary, much less the general election, and I don’t see him being seriously considered as a vice-presidential pick.

Gingrich, Rick Santorum, and Herman Cain are in the bottom level (along with the others who didn’t appear like Buddy Roemer), and the debate left me thinking they should bow out of the race sooner rather than later and hope to be considered for the vice-president spot because they have no realistic chance of winning the primary.  Gingrich was the strongest of the three, I’d say.  I suspect if Gingrich, Santorum, and Cain dropped out, most of their supporters would gravitate towards Perry, Bachmann, and maybe even Paul, though I also could see some Gingrich supporters shifting towards either Romney or Huntsman.

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And now we’re onto Obama’s speech.  The American Jobs Act he proposed is a $450B effort to stimulate the economy that I think will be another epic failure.  It was your typical Obama speech in that it was heavy on poetic rhetoric, but light on details and new ideas.  The American people are tired of rhetoric and they want results.  He brought a few decent new ideas, but most of what Obama laid out in this speech was stuff that has already been tried and failed to stimulate the economy.  In essence, he was, for the most part, doubling down on some of his previous policies under the notion that they were ineffective not because they were poorly conceived, but because they weren’t big enough and/or haven’t had enough time to succeed. 

Before I get into all that, I was particularly disheartened when he said that America can be #1 again.  That, along with an abundance of other evidence, shows he thinks America is no longer #1, which is false.  We still are whether he believes it or not.  I’ve love to tell him, “I find your lack of faith disturbing.”  I hope people picked up on that and I hope he gets nailed for it.  I don’t expect it to hit him like malaise did to Jimmy Carter, however.

As I discussed in my preview, infrastructure spending, in theory, should work as an economic stimulus, but it doesn’t.  This is an example of a failed policy in which Obama is doubling down.  Obama’s plan calls for $80B in infrastructure spending ($30B for school modernization and $50B for roads and bridges).  He tried this with his first stimulus bill.  It didn’t work then, it didn’t work in the 1930’s when FDR tried it, and it won’t work this time, either.  It’s a necessary investment for America’s future, but it won’t boost the economy meaningfully now.

The extension and expansion of the Social Security tax cut for workers is a nice boost to our paychecks.  Keeping more of my money is fine by me.  Last year, the rate was 6.2% for the worker, versus 4.2% this year and 3.1% proposed for next year.  Employers would see no change unless they have payrolls smaller than $5M/year, in which case their tax would drop from 6.2% to 3.1%.  This reduction for small employers is a good new addition.  These cuts would be in effect for only 2012 unless they’re renewed. 

I see three problems with this measure, however.  First, it is set to expire unless renewed.  Businesses don’t usually hire with a one-year timeframe, so they have to assume that these cuts will expire and factor that into their hiring cost calculations.  This is a prime example of the regulatory and tax uncertainties that businesses face.  Will they or will they not be renewed?  It works to partially hold business decisions hostage to Washington.  3.1% may not sound like a lot, but labor is the dominant cost in many industries.  The second problem is it will exacerbate the drawdown in Social Security.  I’m guessing it will cost us at least three years’ worth of Social Security solvency based on the premise that the 2% cut for workers that Obama did this year cost us a year.  The third problem is the original tax cut didn’t work to stimulate the economy because people naturally tend to save temporary gains versus spend them.  If Obama locked this in for a few years, people may be more inclined to spend and thereby stimulate the economy.  It’s a step up from George W. Bush’s $600 check to everyone in America, but not by much.

Also, on the old ideas front, Obama has also proposed aid to state and local governments to keep teachers on the job and extensions of unemployment benefits.  These are portrayed as measures to guard against further job losses by keeping the unemployed spending money and keeping the teachers from becoming unemployed.  He plans to pay for all of this by allowing the Bush tax rates to expire for the rich and raising taxes on the oil industry.  To be honest, I can’t understand how this bill can do all this and not add to the debt, as Obama promises.  The math doesn’t add up and relies on savings showing up in the future and the assumption that the super-committee can do things the way Obama wants them to.  I also don’t see where the pro-Obama economists are getting the idea that this bill could add 1-2% to GDP.

It wasn’t all old ideas, though.  There were a couple new ideas that have promise because they indicate that the government is finally waking up to the reality that structural unemployment is a major problem here (refresher: this is when there’s a major mismatch between the skills employers are looking for and the skills of the unemployed).  What I liked in particular was Obama starting to focus on the long-term unemployed, who make up over 40% of the total unemployed population.  Obama proposed tax credits for hiring workers unemployed for over six months and some government job training programs.  I don’t think either of these will be terribly effective in the short term, however, because companies still lack the confidence to hire, retraining can take months or even years, and the further extension of unemployment benefits will reduce the incentive for the unemployed to seek work/retraining.  Obama also mentioned trying to make it easier for people to refinance, which is a great idea, but from what I can tell, it’s out-of-scope here because it’s probably not going to need to be passed by Congress.

It strikes me as a highly politicized bill.  I think this bill is designed to do four things and I think these things are plain as day when we remember that, as always with Obama, anything he does is about how it helps him get reelected.  First, I view this bill as a handout to several elements of Obama’s base, namely the labor unions (through infrastructure spending) and the teacher unions (though the local and state aid).  Second, the bill is designed to pick off some of the undecided voters (the Social Security tax cut extension for workers and the unemployment benefit extensions for the unemployed).  Third, the bill and the speech were designed to ratchet down expectations.  Fourth, the bill aims to punish Obama’s enemies in two ways.  It raises some taxes on Obama’s economic enemies, like the rich and the oil industry, and in offering a couple things to try to entice some GOP support, he’s trying to paint the GOP into a political corner.  Will it work?  I don’t know.

Even if the speech was about a highly-politicized bill that’s filled with mostly old ideas (and a couple new ones) that probably won’t work very well, at least Obama is actually trying to lead versus sitting on the sidelines like he did during the debt ceiling debacle.  I’m under the impression he’s going to actually try to craft this into a bill for Congress.

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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Brian Williams appears to have handed it off to Rachel Maddow and Chris Matthews. That's my cue to go to bed. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Brian Williams is right saying there'll be many more discussions. There could be as many as 12 more #GOP primary debates. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
I did not expect the death penalty to come up tonight. The moderators are all over the place. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Romney calling for the end of dividend, capital gains, and interest taxes and continuing the attack on Big Ben. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
47% of Americans may not pay federal income tax, but they probably pay sales tax and stuff like that. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Newt's going after Big Ben (Bernanke, not Roethlisberger or the clock) and off-topic, but some interesting points. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Bachmann mentioning #Obama suspending new EPA regulations. Exactly as I predicted in my blog. :-) #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Huntsman getting grilled on his views of the #GOP , but making good points about trying to broaden the party and win. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Santorum pounding on #Obama but no mention of leading from behind. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Pretty much. #ReaganDebate RT: “@sharkbiotech: Ron Paul is a libertian not a republican he doesn't even pretend otherwise”
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Bachmann hammering #Obama on foreign policy here. She may even mention the War Powers Act. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Perry gave #Obama some praise for keeping Gitmo open. I didn't expect even that much praise for him. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Huntsman calling for a pledge to sign no pledges. I love it. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
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@Dan_Dicker We've got many months to do that. It's still early in primary season. :-)
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
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@Dan_Dicker Anybody on the stage at the #ReaganDebate would do better than #Obama as president.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Huntsman framing immigration as a human issue and clearly articulating here. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Newt calls for English as our national language. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Perry and Mitt talking tough on illegal immigration. Newt is a bit more flexible here, surprisingly. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Some rare slight praise for #Obama from Newt. That's probably the best he'll hear tonight. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
And Huntsman is back in the mix, too. I bet we won't hear from him again for a good long while. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Paul certainly can't complain about being ignored tonight. He's getting plenty of speaking time. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Paul is right about the TSA going way too far in airport security. Unconstitutional. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Right as I say that, Newt pipes up. Go figure. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Did the moderators forget Huntsman and Newt are at the #ReaganDebate tonight? They've been mute for a while now.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
I'm not a doctor, but I think the HPV vaccine is probably good medical practice. Perry countered well here. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
I'd love to see a president show some restraint on executive orders like Paul advocates at the #ReaganDebate tonight.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
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@adamfeuerstein The #ReaganDebate is pretty lively and better than I thought this early in primary season.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Cain mentions the Chilean model for Social Security. It works and should be considered. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Perry correctly calling Social Security a Ponzi scheme and did well at focusing the topic on young people. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Yay for a Reagan tribute at the #ReaganDebate and a well-done one at that. And now back to the debate.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Paul took that 'gas for a dime' point in an interesting direction. Right to inflation. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Bachmann is getting rightly nailed on her $2 gas promise, but talking about gas prices surging under Obama is so misleading. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Santorum strong on welfare, food stamps, and poverty. Perry following up well on it, too. Good JFK quote, too. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
I don't know what Cain is talking about with #Obamacare shrinking HSAs at the #ReaganDebate because the HSA business is booming.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Bachmann strong on repealing #Obamacare at the #ReaganDebate versus an executive order. And Newt with a call for #GOP unity against #Obama .
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Huntsman is effectively straddling Romney and Perry on healthcare. I'm impressed with him so far. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Romney doing a decent job dodging Obama-Romney-Care, but Perry appears to have taken control here on healthcare. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
#ReaganDebate Paul had a nice libertarian string there. Newt coming out with a good defense of Perry's book being ideas, not a manifesto.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Huntsman jabbing both Romney and Perry on job creation results as governor. I'll dig in to see who's really done the best. #ReaganDebate
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
#ReaganDebate Sorry, Santorum, but you won't get Democrat votes by cutting the corporate taxes to zero. Nice start for Cain with 999, too.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Everyone's looking dapper tonight at the #ReaganDebate and some spirited discourse between Perry and Romney to start us out.


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ericjackson Eric Jackson
by TimABRussell
Feel bad for Mark Zandi: he's been consistently wrong about economy for 2 years and he hasn't finagled a job working for Obama either
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tdgraff Tom Graff
by TimABRussell
And even @NYTimeskrugman couldn't justify @whitehouse claim that this adds 1-2% to GDP
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tdgraff Tom Graff
by TimABRussell
I'm sorry, but umm... No... “@ezraklein: White house believes this plan would add one to two percentage points to GDP growth next year.”
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
@Barackobama's speech was, as usual, heavy on inspirational rhetoric and light on new ideas. He's still a great speaker, though.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
@Barackobama forgets that the whole point of the Constitution was to limit what the government can do.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
@Barackobama forgot that America never stopped being number one.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
@Barackobama with a good idea regarding refinancing assistance, but several trade agreements have been sitting on his desk for years.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
@Barackobama is promising the world here. Interesting that he explicitly said this isn't class warfare.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Does @Barackobama finally recognize the need for entitlement reform? He's talking as though he does.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
I like the payroll tax cuts, tax breaks, and focus on the long-term unemployed. @Barackobama
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
Pretty light on details and heavy on rhetoric so far. Par for a @Barackobama speech.
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
I wonder what they say to @Barackobama as he works his way through the crowd. Am I the only one who wonders that?
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TimABRussell Tim Russell
@Barackobama will be speaking shortly, but some kind of "Homeland Security Issue" is being discussed. Scant details thus far.
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BioRunUp BioRunUp
by TimABRussell
Hey man, Obama got the Nobel Peace prize.! If anybody can fix this mess its him! </sarcasm>

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The GOP Debate and Obama’s Speech Preview

I don’t usually start paying serious attention to party presidential primaries this early.  The general election is still over a year away.  However, I’m a little intrigued by this week’s debate.  After all, this GOP debate is apparently such a big deal that not only did Barack Obama want to steal its thunder by “accidentally” scheduling a speech during it (I don’t think that was a coincidence since this is Rick Perry’s first debate), but also John Boehner dug in and told Obama to reschedule, which he did.  It was pretty funny how the White House went out of their way in the press to make it clear that the speech would be done in time for kickoff of the NFL season opener.  Well done. 

This is apparently the 5th of potentially 17 debates for the GOP presidential, according to 2012presidentialelectionnews.com (found here).  Clearly, moving or cancelling this debate wouldn’t have been that big of a deal seeing as how there are so many others, and this is just for primary season.  This doesn’t include the debates for the general election between Obama (presumably – see my previous post for why he is likely, but not guaranteed to be there) and the GOP winner.

What I expect to see in this debate (and all those other GOP primary debates) is a strong uniformity in economic matters and energy policy.  Job creation will be the focus, along with other economic and fiscal matters.  We’ll hear a lot along the lines of this accurate and articulate line of thought from Mitt Romney’s recent op-ed in the USA Today (found here).  “Each proposal is rooted in the conservative premise that government itself cannot create jobs. At best, government can provide a framework in which economic growth can occur. All too often, however, government gets in the way.”  I wouldn’t be surprised to see a fairly uniform consensus regarding the repeal (or at least dramatic weakening) of both Obamacare and financial regulation, along with lots of talk about other regulatory reforms, such as streamlining the processes and making sure they consider economic impacts. 

We may even see some rare praise for Obama because of his announcement last week to suspend new smog regulations from the EPA, which he rightly should be praised for because this is not only the right thing to do on its own grounds (tighter smog standards aren’t needed because they were already tightened during the Bush administration, we already have darn clean air except in the big cities, which have still improved greatly over time, and the technology simply doesn’t exist to get there), but because it’s a good first step to show that Obama’s serious about the economy and regulatory reform. 

We’ll also hear about tax reform and tax cuts.  Dividend, capital gain, and interest tax cuts or eliminations will be discussed.  I suspect we’ll hear some mixed reviews of Obama’s Social Security tax cut, too.  Of course, we’ll also hear some about spending cuts.  I wouldn’t be surprised if they spent some time on foreign policy, too.  We’re coming up on the 10-year anniversary of the September 11 attacks, so be ready to hear some about military matters.  I’m also ready to hear some free trade, immigration, and energy policy discussion.

I think we’ll see some differences among the candidates regarding social issues, but these will probably be along the lines of how strongly the candidates oppose things like abortion, gay marriage/unions, gun control, separation of church and state, illegal immigration, maybe even welfare, social security, and Medicare or Medicaid.  Expect to see some contrast between the staunch social conservatives like Bachmann, Perry, Gingrich, Cain, and Santorum versus the social moderates like Romney and Huntsman. 

All eyes will be on Perry this time around because it’s his first debate.  Will he play it safe or will he swing for the fences?  The upside for him is he could further energize the social conservatives in the GOP, and maybe even the libertarians.  The downside is he could make himself sound too crazy and further alienate moderates and independents.  I don’t think he’s going to play it safe, and I think Perry will want to get more momentum going.  I’d say Perry’s entry into the race is probably going to hurt Bachmann the most.  If Perry can drain enough of her voters, he’ll really become the guy to beat.  I don’t foresee many people deserting Romney for Perry or Bachmann because Romney is aiming more for the moderates and independents within the GOP.

It’s a given that Obama will be a punching bag for the GOP contenders.  What’s not as certain is how aggressively the GOP candidates will go after each other.  I think we’ll see a general division between the staunch conservatives (Perry, Bachmann, Gingrich, Cain, and Santorum) and the so-called ‘RINOs’ (Republicans in Name Only) like Romney and Huntsman.  Paul is kind of the odd-man-out in this breakdown because though his libertarianism sometimes trumps his social conservatism, he isn’t what I would consider a moderate on social issues.  We’ll probably even see some swipes within those two broad groups.  Largely, the GOP race is a two-candidate race between Romney and Perry at this time, with Bachmann in a close third.  I don’t see the also-rans like Gingrich, Santorum, Paul, Cain, and Huntsman having that much of an impact at the debate.  Also, I don’t anticipate any further entries into the GOP field, seeing as how Rick Perry has finally entered the hunt, but I could be proven wrong. 

Speaking of Obama, his poll numbers are going down the tubes as he’s gearing up another speech Thursday night, also focused on job creation, coming off of rallies he attended over Labor Day weekend to try to cozy back up to the unions.  Maybe he finally got the memo that the economy is an issue.  I’ve been critical of him in the past, but I hope he delivers tonight.  In particular, I hope he finally gets serious about regulatory and tax reform. 

We’ll probably hear about an infrastructure bank or some other expansion of infrastructure spending.  It sounds great in theory, but it doesn’t work.  It’s not that I question the need for infrastructure spending.  I fully agree with it and know the need better than most given my engineering background.  Indeed, the American Society of Civil Engineers graded the US with C’s and D’s over several categories and estimates we’ll need a couple trillion dollars over the next few years to improve that into the B range.  The problem is that infrastructure spending historically doesn’t work as an economic stimulus in the short term.  It didn’t work when FDR tried it in the 1930’s and it didn’t work earlier in Obama’s presidency with the stimulus bill.  However, it does lay the foundation for stronger growth in the long term, the importance of which cannot be understated.

We may even hear about attempts to extend or enlarge the Social Security tax credit or perhaps some worker retraining programs.  Surely, we’ll hear about how Washington is dysfunctional.   I’m looking for Obama to try to pitch the message that he’s trying the best he can, but he really was dealt a bad hand and he needs more time.  Of course, he’ll try to shirk responsibility for the current malaise and play the blame game, particularly towards the Bush administration, the current GOP membership, the rich people, and corporate America.  I hope he’ll keep the demonizing rhetoric in check, but I’m not holding my breath.

I’ll follow this up with my impressions and notes of the debate and the speech.  They’ll both probably be shorter than my preview.  And don’t worry.  I won’t be posting a preview and review of every single primary debate.  Like I said, I don’t usually get serious with the primaries until a little later in the season.

For anyone who’s interested in my real-time thoughts, I’m going to try tweeting during these two events.  This’ll be a grand experiment for me.  @TimABRussell is my Twitter handle.

Links:


Will Obama Seek Reelection?

I saw an article recently calling for Obama to step down as president.  One term of his is more than enough for me, but I don’t think Joe Biden would be a much better president than Obama and I doubt I’m the only one.  Remember, if Obama leaves, Biden’s the guy.  So, let’s back off a little here.  Logically, one would usually assume that Obama will certainly seek reelection, but will he? 

I know that seems like a silly question.  He won decisively in 2008 and has a proven track record as a strong campaigner (his actual leadership skills and useful experience, or lack thereof, are a topic for another day).  He’s fairly young by US president standards.  Obama is a fund-raising machine, expected to raise over a billion (yes, with a ‘B’) dollars for 2012.  He’s America’s first (half) black president.  Obama is also generally viewed as the leader of the Democratic party and, aside from the Clintons, nobody else in the party has such stature.  And one of the Clintons was already president for two terms, thereby ineligible for 2012 per the 22nd Amendment.  So, why in my right mind would I ask whether he’s going to seek reelection?

I see two reasons, and even though I do think Obama will run, I think it’s a worthwhile line of thought.  I’ve already discussed the possibility of (and compelling case for) Obama being impeached for violating the War Powers Act with his military excursion into Libya, so I won’t belabor that point.  He also faces potential legal trouble due to the Department of Justice’s Operation Fast and Furious, though that is still somewhat off the screen for the mainstream media.  Legal issues are the first reason, but there’s a second reason.

Look, let’s be honest, Obama’s poll numbers stink and they’re only getting worse.  The economy isn’t recovering as robustly as it could.  Unemployment, debt/GDP, and commodity prices are still uncomfortably high, housing is still a mess, and middle class incomes have stagnated.  We just got downgraded, too.  Voters place heavy blame on Obama and his policies for that. 

Rightly so, in my view, but it still shouldn’t be all the blame because there’s only so much a president can do.  Also, to be fair, some of this is squarely on Obama’s shoulders and some was inherited.  Either way, Obama can only blame George W. Bush for so long.  All this is yet another story for another time, but the longer the economy languishes in a very slow recovery (worse, a double-dip or even worse, a second collapse), the more trouble it is for Obama’s poll numbers.  Furthermore, Obama will go down in history as the guy in charge when we got downgraded for the first (and hopefully only) time.  I’m not predicting anything economically here, just relating the economy to Obama’s poll numbers.

Personally, I think one of the biggest mistakes was how he did the stimulus and financial regulation, then washed his hands of the economy to focus on Obamacare.  I view all three policies as epic failures, but that’s not the point.  The point is how casually he moved on from economic and financial regulatory matters to healthcare.  It shows his startling lack of comprehension on economic and financial matters in that he moved on before actually solving the problems.

If Obama’s poll numbers continue to decline, he may not seek reelection.  The Democratic party cares about retaining the White House, whether Obama’s their person or not.  Such an occurrence, a president not seeking reelection while eligible to do so, is not unprecedented. 

Though hardly a perfect comparison, we need to go back to LBJ in 1968.  LBJ was eligible to seek reelection in 1968.  He was president for about a year following JFK’s assassination, then won reelection in 1964.  Had LBJ served more than two years of JFK’s term instead of the one he did serve (in other words, had JFK been assassinated a year or so earlier), LBJ would not have been eligible for the 1968 election per the 22nd Amendment of the Constitution, which was passed about a decade prior to try to prevent another four-term president like FDR (I have another post in the backlog discussing this amendment).

There were two reasons that LBJ didn’t seek reelection in 1968.  One, the Democratic party was a splintered mess.  There were four factions vying for power, lead by LBJ, Eugene McCarthy, Robert Kennedy, and George Wallace, respectively.  LBJ won the primary with a weak 49% of the vote, but McCarthy still had a strong showing with 42%.  That’s virtually unheard of and a major sign of a party divided.  Seeing no way he could unite the party and win reelection, LBJ bowed out.  The second reason was LBJ’s concerns about his own health.  LBJ died on January 22, 1973, which was a mere two days after the conclusion of what could have been his second full term as president.  These two reasons aren’t in play right now.  Obama’s poll numbers are bad and declining, but the Democratic party appears unified and Obama seems healthy.

So, if Obama doesn’t seek reelection, who would be the Democrats’ presidential candidate?  One would think the most logical choice would be Joe Biden, the current vice president, but I think current Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would be the stronger choice.  In my opinion, Biden would lose a presidential election to all but the weakest GOP competitors whereas Clinton would be able to hold her own against even the strongest GOP competitors.  Several established Democrats, such as Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, share Biden’s problem while others, like John Kerry and Al Gore, have previously proven their inability to win close elections, both coming within one state of defeating George W. Bush.  Ohio sank Kerry and if Gore would have won his home state of Tennessee, Florida would not have mattered (that’s my way of saying that I don’t buy the interpretation that the Supreme Court stole the election for George W. Bush because I can’t think of a time when the winner of a presidential election lost his home state). 

Scandals have decimated the rising stars of the Democratic party.  John Edwards and Anthony Weiner come to mind.  However, they may surprise us.  After all, Barack Obama came from out of nowhere to take the nomination and election in 2008.  Maybe they have somebody else who’s flying under the radar, waiting in the wings.  We’ll just have to wait and see.