Leader: The world cannot afford a defeat for Barack Obama
A Romney victory would greatly increase the chances of war with Iran, embolden the most reactionary elements in Israel and further accelerate climate change.
By New Statesman Published 31 October 2012
If Barack Obama has fallen short of the expectations of many of his supporters, it is partly because they were so high to begin with. During his election campaign in 2008, Mr Obama spoke lyrically of “hope” and “change” and promised a new era of post-partisan politics. His unique status as his country’s first black president encouraged the sense that the limits of the possible had been redefined. Liberals embraced him as the man who would close Guantanamo Bay, bring peace to the Middle East and slow “the rise of the oceans”.
But Mr Obama did not reckon on the recalcitrance of a Republican opposition that has sought to undermine his presidency at every turn, or the intransigence of leaders such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Binyamin Netanyahu. Four years on from his election, Guantanamo Bay remains open, the Middle East peace process has collapsed and the oceans have continued to rise. Yet, if the initial adulation for him was excessive, then so, too, is much of the subsequent disdain.
Mr Obama entered office in more difficult circumstances than any US president since Franklin D Roosevelt. The economy was in the deepest recession in 70 years and losing jobs at a rate of 750,000 a month; the automobile industry appeared destined for bankruptcy; the US was embroiled in a ruinous and unjust war in Iraq. It was, as we said at the time of his election, “the in-box from hell”. In view of this inheritance, he has performed creditably.
Early in his presidency, he acted to prevent another Great Depression by introducing a fiscal stimulus of $787bn, a mixture of tax cuts, infrastructure projects and increased unemployment benefits. Republican claims that the stimulus was “a failure” are entirely unsupported by evidence. A study by Mark Zandi, a former economic adviser to John McCain, and Alan Blinder, a former vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve, concluded that the policy had created or saved 2.7 million jobs and added 3.4 per cent to US GDP. The US economy has now grown for 13 consecutive quarters, a record that compares favourably with that of the austerity-fixated UK. A more appropriate criticism of the stimulus is that it was too small – yet it is doubtful that a bigger package would have passed Congress, and the final bill, 50 per cent larger in real terms than the entire New Deal, stands as a considerable achievement.
Similarly successful, as Nicky Woolf reports on page 18, was the government-led bailout of Chrysler and General Motors, an intervention dogmatically opposed by the Republicans. “Let Detroit go bankrupt,” declared Mr Obama’s opponent Mitt Romney in November 2008. Should he fail to win Ohio, a state that no Republican has ever won the presidency without carrying, that could be his epitaph.
It is in the sphere of foreign policy that Mr Obama has disappointed. While fulfilling his pledge to withdraw all US troops from Iraq, he has vastly expanded the use of predator drones in Pakistan, a form of warfare that is neither just nor efficacious. In the Middle East, he has been consistently outmanoeuvred by Mr Netanyahu, who, in violation of international law, has continued the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Yet any temptation to suggest that the world can afford a defeat for Mr Obama is dispelled by the prospect of a Romney presidency. A victory for the Republican candidate, who, as Mehdi Hasan writes on page 38, has surrounded himself with Bush-era neoconservatives, would greatly increase the chances of war with Iran, embolden the most reactionary elements in Israel and further accelerate climate change.
On the domestic level, Mr Romney’s pledge to reduce government spending by a fifth would likely plunge the US into a double-dip recession, while his plans to cut taxes for the rich and slash spending on Medicaid, food stamps, housing subsidies and job training would result in a marked redistribution of wealth from the poorest to the richest. Mr Obama’s health-care reform act – his single greatest domestic achievement – would be repealed and Roe v Wade, the Supreme Court judgment that established the legal right to abortion, would be overturned. Let no one claim that there is nothing to choose between the candidates.
Mr Obama stands in a noble liberal tradition that supports an active state as a precondition for individual flourishing. His opponent, by contrast, stands for a shrivelled public realm in which the market rules all and the poor are treated with contempt. In order that the former vision may triumph, Mr Obama must be returned as president on 6 November and Mr Romney decisively rejected.
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77 comments
should be 5+2-0 = +7 TRILLION not billion. But you knew that.
Now, 5 days before the election, it's all last minute spin and MSM hype. Obama will, and for one reason. Fear of Romney, and for good reason. He'll win both the popular and electoral vote. If someone contests the results, I wonder what the Obama and Romney Campaign Derivative Indexes will say about that (yes, some people will bet on literally anything)?
Will Obama's "positive change" ever happen? No. Why? Because it's going to be another term of gridlock. This means the Usual Two Party Response (it's not us. Blame The Other Side for everything). Will the States go off The Fiscal Cliff in January with massive budget cuts? Yes. SInce both sides only understand money and power, losing both could be just the wakeup call they need.
So much wrong in so little space! Where to start????
Obama did NOT face the worst economic situation since Roosevelt. By virtually all economic measures, Reagan faced a worse economy after Carter. Higher unemployment, sky-high inflation, gas lines, etc.
Republican "recalcitrance" had nothing to do with his failure. Recall please he had 2 years of filibuster proof majorities in Congress. Instead of spending time on productive endeavors, he pissed it away jamming a prohibitively expensive and growth killing healthcare bill down the throats of American citizens (even now more unpopular than at passage) and "financial reform" (Dodd-Frank) which is keeping some $2 trillion on the sidelines.
No one with a brain and a calculator thinks the stimulus was a success. Sorry, it just wasn't. It was basically a payoff to political cronies. Virtually no infrastructure projects were completed much less "shovel ready". The vast majority of "saved" jobs were public employees to pay off the unions. Growth has been below "break even" in all thirteen quarters and is lower now than last year and lower last year than the year before. Things are NOT getting better. Liberal polices just don't work. Look at California, Illinois, New York. Compare to Texas, Indiana, and now even NJ, Ohio, and Wisconsin now that they are run by Republicans. It's crystal clear.
Your contention that the auto bailout was successful merely illustrates your economic illiteracy. "Let Detroit Go Bankrupt" was the NYT headline, not Romney's. Your remarks indicate that you never read his op-ed which advocated a managed bankruptcy wherein private equity would have stepped in after the process with gov't loan guarantees. Romney's way would have allowed both GM and Chrysler to jettison non-competitive wage rates, work rules and pension liabilities and Chrysler to remain an American company instead of being owned by Fiat. Instead, Obama illegally bypassed the secured creditors insuring that no private equity would come forward after the bankruptcy to invest in the companies and they remain saddled with legacy costs which make them about $2000/vehicle more expensive than competitors similar models. Additionally, only UNION companies were saved. Delphi would not agree that Obama handled this well.
Finally your contention that allowing people to keep more of the money they earn vs giving it to the government to mis-spend which would lead to another recession or redistribution to the wealthy is just stupid leftist drivel. The historical evidence is clear, just the opposite would happen. While the repeal of Obamacare is likely, it would be a huge economic boon to the country and would be replaced by something rational. Finally, if you think Roe v Wade has ANY chance of being repealed in today's environment, I have to ask how your unicorn farm is doing.
I have to agree with Brad Head, you lost me at "A".
That was not because I read your opinion piece with a closed mind, I don't do that, I strive to give everyone's opinions serious consideration and in this case after reading through to the end and thinking critically about your premise I have to go back to "A" and tell you that nothing beyond that matters.
Mr. Obama really appears to be a potentially great person to have as a neighbor and also appears to be a very conscientious parent and I confess I would really like to sit down with him and get to know him better. Unfortunately though my impression is that he is a narcissist and he probably will never either realize he is or make any efforts to overcome that flaw and it is a major flaw that has led him time and again to disastrous outcomes. He believes he's a great negotiator and the truth is he's a lousy negotiator. He thinks he's very effective and has a laser focus on the most important issues facing the world and is THE one single person who can solve them.
Unfortunately, he is like many employees that I've had over the years and had to let go after giving them all of the support and freedom to succeed that one could possibly give them.
Mr. Obama is unconsciously incompetent.
When a person is afflicted with narcissism and is unconsciously incompetent the very sad truth is they are also totally useless at those things they are trying to achieve and the only hope for success for them is to redirect their efforts to a career as a writer of very esoteric and obtuse theories to entertain the people who believe they have the solutions to every problem for the world and that those of us who actually do things useful to others and who do solve important problems in incremental steps simply because of the disasters that come with the Obama-style of solutions are poor souls who need their help.
Newsflash! We know a loser when we see one and although we give them chances to redeem themselves and demonstrate their wisdom, they fail and we have to let them go. It's time to let Mr. Obama go. We have to let him know that he has failed, he is on written notice that unless he quickly turns things around that we will terminate him shortly and that his last day working for us will be January 20, 2012 and we will take his keys to the office and ask him to clear out his desk and dresser by Noon so that we can start orienting the new employee.
Whenever anyone espouses the individual, any One person, is a savior for us all, run.
And whenever anyone says My vote should be made for the betterment of the World, as opposed to what's in the best interest of America, it's their admission that the vote for the world Isn't in the best interest of America.
Thanks for all the back-up guys... better late than never...
The world needs an obama win like I need a wolverine tearing at my groin. "Progressives" are learning disabled, at the very least; and evil as often as not. Noted "progressives": Stalin, Lenin, Castro, Mao, Hitler, Guavera, Amin, Mugabe, Chavez, Pol Pot, Obama. Yep, we need more of their ilk for sure.
Four more years of unabashed self-absorption? You gotta be kidding! Oh! And you do recall the fate of poor Narcissus? Heaven forbid that the One might take us all with him... as have most of history's great narcissistic leaders.
Four more years of unabashed self-absorption? You gotta be kidding! Oh! And you do recall the fate of poor Narcissus? Heaven forbid that the One might take us all with him... as have most of history's great narcissistic leaders.
Interestingly, a couple of articles in Der Spiegel and The Guardian of late run directly counter to the premise of this particular article. In specific, they note that on the global stage, Obama is considered a weak horse by our enemies, and an ally that cannot be depended upon by our friends.
It remains to be seen how Romney would perform in the foreign policy arena, but we have 4 years of Obama in charge to look back upon, 4 years which have seen allies snubbed and enemies emboldened. Hypotheses about increased chances of war with Iran are just that; hypotheses. However, I would note that the longer Iran is allowed to pursue its nuclear weapons programme, the greater a chance of war. . .regardless of who is President.