Nobody Likes the Obama Economy
In New Hampshire, voters in both parties are worried
President Obama strode into the White House press room last Friday to deliver an economic pep talk. “So unemployment, deficits, gas prices are all down. Jobs, wages, and the rate of the insured are up,” he said. “The United States of America, right now, has the strongest, most durable economy in the world. I know that’s still inconvenient for Republican stump speeches as their doom and despair tour plays in New Hampshire. I guess you cannot please everybody.”
Or anybody. Mr. Obama is right about New Hampshire but wrong that the doom and despair are limited to Republicans. A striking finding in Tuesday’s voter exit poll is how anxious nearly everybody in the Granite State is about the U.S. economy—even more than six years into the expansion that Mr. Obama so vigorously salutes.
As the nearby table shows, pollsters asked voters in both parties how worried they are about “the direction of the nation’s economy in the next few years.” An astonishing 93% of Republicans said they were either very or somewhat worried. It makes you wonder what the 1% who said they aren’t worried are drinking. (Substitute smoking if you live in Vermont.)
But lest you think this anxiety is partisan, the mood among Democrats is little better. A total of 79% of Democratic voters said they were either very or somewhat worried, with 29% very worried. Bernie Sanders beat Hillary Clinton by 3 to 1 among the very worried. Add up the totals in both parties and some 86% of the state’s voters are at least somewhat worried.
To put it another way, the most persuasive repudiation of Mr. Obama’s economic record is coming from Democrats. Mr. Sanders and Mrs. Clinton are both campaigning againstthe economic status quo, deploring the lack of income growth, rising income inequality and unaffordable health care, among other problems.
Mr. Obama once let slip in 2008 that he wanted to become the progressive version ofRonald Reagan by changing the terms of America’s political debate. Yet when George H.W. Bush campaigned to succeed the Gipper in 1988, he ran to extend the undeniable prosperity of the Reagan years. No one in either party is running to extend Mr. Obama’s prosperity because the voters know it doesn’t exist.
No one seems to be too thrilled with what President Obama has done for the economy since his term began last year. Conservatives blame him for everything from wasteful stimulus spending to killing the dollar. Liberals say he's catering to Wall Street and has failed to attack unemployment with enough vigor. Mike Dorning at Bloomberg doesn't think this is fair. But no one ever said the intersection of economics and politics was fair.
Here's some of what Dorning writes:
But Democrats aren't celebrating this fact either. That can also be easily explained: Obama has yet to accomplish their economic priorities. They want a crackdown on the financial industry; they want unemployment lowered to alleviate suffering. Although Obama has done much that should satisfy those with big stock portfolios, he's accomplished far less to help average Americans.
So you've got this kind of odd situation where the most of the economic progress that the Obama administration has made would satisfy the wrong side of the aisle, so it's providing him with very little political capital to work with. I'm pretty sure this wasn't on purpose. It was unavoidable.
The reality is the stock market and GDP growth lead economic recovery, while unemployment lags. In order to have any recovery at all, the President had to stabilize the financial industry. In other words, he had to make Wall Street healthy before the broader economy could recover. After all, it was banking that made the economy sick to begin with.
The most legitimate criticism to be made here is that Obama could have placed financial regulation higher up in his list of priorities, say above health care. But I don't know that there are many liberals willing to concede that point: health care reform is pretty important to them.
That leaves the most alienated Americans the ever-important moderates. They aren't nearly as passionate about health care reform to begin with, but are probably angry that Wall Street appears to be back to business as usual, while one out of five of their friends is underemployed. And unfortunately for Congressional Democrats -- who have followed the same course as Obama, by the way -- moderates will matter most in midterm elections this November.
Why Nobody Likes Obama's Economic Policies
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Here's some of what Dorning writes:
"We've had a phenomenal run in asset classes across the board," said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist for Miller Tabak & Co. in New York. "If he was a Republican, we would hear a never-ending drumbeat of news stories about markets voting in favor of the president."First, let's think about the stock market, as Dorning does. He's absolutely right: it's done wonderfully during Obama's reign. It's up around 42% since January 20th through yesterday. And Greenhaus is right too: if a Republican accomplished this feat, conservatives would be hanging "Mission Accomplished!" banners from their rooftops. Of course, Republicans' disapproval should surprise precisely no one: that's just politics.
The economy has also strengthened beyond expectations at the time Obama took office. The gross domestic product grew at a 5.9 percent annual pace in the fourth quarter, compared with a median forecast of 2.0 percent in a Bloomberg survey of economists a week before Obama's Jan. 20, 2009, inauguration. The median forecast for GDP growth this year is 3.0 percent, according to Bloomberg's February survey of economists, versus 2.1 percent for 2010 in the survey taken 13 months earlier.
So you've got this kind of odd situation where the most of the economic progress that the Obama administration has made would satisfy the wrong side of the aisle, so it's providing him with very little political capital to work with. I'm pretty sure this wasn't on purpose. It was unavoidable.
The reality is the stock market and GDP growth lead economic recovery, while unemployment lags. In order to have any recovery at all, the President had to stabilize the financial industry. In other words, he had to make Wall Street healthy before the broader economy could recover. After all, it was banking that made the economy sick to begin with.
The most legitimate criticism to be made here is that Obama could have placed financial regulation higher up in his list of priorities, say above health care. But I don't know that there are many liberals willing to concede that point: health care reform is pretty important to them.
That leaves the most alienated Americans the ever-important moderates. They aren't nearly as passionate about health care reform to begin with, but are probably angry that Wall Street appears to be back to business as usual, while one out of five of their friends is underemployed. And unfortunately for Congressional Democrats -- who have followed the same course as Obama, by the way -- moderates will matter most in midterm elections this November.
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