McConnell wants credit for economic turnaround

thoughtone

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source: msnbc


Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) probably has a variety of strengths as a politician. A familiarity with the basics of economic policy isn’t one of them.

Over the weekend, for example, the Kentucky Republican insisted a “regulatory onslaught” was “the principal reason” the economic recovery isn’t stronger. It prompted Danny Vinik to explain, in persuasive detail, “McConnell is betraying his ignorance on economic issues.”

Three days later, McConnell shifted gears. As of this morning, the GOP leader is not only impressed with the improved economic conditions, he also wants credit for them (via Sam Stein).
“After so many years of sluggish growth, we’re finally starting to see some economic data that can provide a glimmer of hope; the uptick appears to coincide with the biggest political change of the Obama Administration’s long tenure in Washington: the expectation of a new Republican Congress. So this is precisely the right time to advance a positive, pro-growth agenda.”
This would be amusing if it weren’t so sad.

We just saw an election cycle in which Mitch McConnell argued every day that President Obama is destroying the economy. In fact, his indictment was specific: the combination of “Obamacare,” higher taxes, Dodd-Frank, and federal regulations were a “wet blanket,” holding the country back.

All the while, even as McConnell whined, economic conditions just kept getting better and U.S. job growth reached a 15-year high last year. Which apparently led to an amazing rhetorical detour: never mind all that stuff McConnell said in 2014; in 2015 he wants credit for the recovery’s unexpected strength.

It’s worth emphasizing that McConnell took his time to come up with this rhetorical trick. Two days before Christmas, Americans learned that GDP growth in the third quarter of 2014 reached an 11-year high. And what did the Republican Senate leader have to say about it at the time? Literally nothing.


In fact, when the economic data was released, Republicans – from McConnell to Speaker Boehner to the RNC – apparently couldn’t think of anything to say at all. Two weeks later, however, Team McConnell wants acclaim for the growth he was previously inclined to ignore.

In case this isn’t obvious, that GDP report that was so impressive referred to economic growth in July, August, and September of last year – before anyone could say with confidence what would happen in November’s elections. McConnell is now effectively arguing that businesses and other employers were so excited – over the summer – by the mere possibility of a Republican Senate that economic growth soared. It wasn’t the result of Republican policies, so much as the broad anticipation of McConnell & Co. passing bills for President Obama to veto.

What’s worse: the notion of McConnell actually believing this nonsense or McConnell expecting Americans to buy it?
 
Obama kicks off three-state trip
to tout economic successes



122yqA.AuSt.91.jpeg

President Barack Obama boards Air Force One, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2015, at Andrews Air Force Base,
Md., en route to Ford Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne, Mich., to highlight the workers in the
resurgent American automotive and manufacturing sector.​



WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama embarked on a three-day, three-state swing Wednesday to highlight economic policies ahead of his annual State of the Union address later this month.

Obama will speak about the auto industry in Detroit Wednesday, housing in Phoenix Thursday and education in Nashville Friday.

“We have seen the American economy build up some more momentum, particularly in the second half of last year, and that's due to a wide range of forces,” White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest told reporters. “Some of that is due to very difficult policy decisions that this president made early in 2009 in the earliest days of his presidency. He had to make some pretty politically unpopular decisions to rescue the American economy. And the result has been not just that we staved off a second Great Depression but we’ve actually laid the groundwork for a stronger recovery that's actually the envy of the entire world.”

In Detroit, Obama will talk about the recovery of the auto industry and the manufacturing sector in general at a Ford assembly plant that local newspapers reported earlier this week is temporarily closed because of lagging demand for the small and hybrid cars it produces.

The trip comes weeks after the government sold its final stake in auto lender Ally Financial Inc. as part of the $85 billion auto bailout.

Earnest said Obama will tout the politically unpopular decision to rescue the American auto industry that he said “saved that industry, laid the groundwork for them to come back stronger than ever, but also revitalize the manufacturing industry inside the United States.”

In an interview with The Detroit News ahead of the trip, Obama said some of his team had suggested allowing Chrysler to collapse.

The question was not, 'Do we intervene?'” he said. “The question was, 'Do we intervene in a way that actually spurs the sort of restructuring that gives American automakers the chance to get back in the game,'”

In Phoenix, he is expected to unveil a new executive action on home ownership during a visit to Central High School.

Several lawmakers and veterans groups called on Obama visit the scandal-plagued Phoenix VA hospital during his visit, but Earnest said the president does not have plans to do so.

“The Phoenix VA was ground zero in the secret wait list scandal that eventually revealed massive fraud and the deaths of dozens — if not hundreds — of veterans due to delayed health care at VA facilities across the country,” said Pete Hegseth, CEO of Concerned Veterans for America. “If President Obama wanted to get the ground truth — and send a signal of strong leadership — he would take the time to visit the Phoenix VA hospital.”

Obama returns to the White House on Thursday, but heads out Friday to Knoxville, Tenn. to release a proposal to improve access to college and a manufacturing institute. Vice President Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, will join him in a visit at Pellissippi State Community College.

Obama will deliver the State of the Union Jan. 20 in front of a new Congress controlled by Republicans.



Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/01/...p.html?sp=/99/104/244/106/&rh=1#storylink=cpy


 
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