James Kwak | The Obama Renaissance

by: James Kwak   |  The Baseline Scenario | Report

President Obama is enjoying something of a political resurgence, at least among the commentariat. Ezra Klein points out that his approval ratings remain higher than those of his Congressional opposition, as opposed to Clinton in 1994 and Bush in 2006. In The New York Times, Michael Shear says the lame-duck session of Congress could be a “big win” for Obama, and Matt Bai hails the tax cut compromise as “responsible governance” and says it could lead to a successful presidency.

Obama is certainly in a decent position politically, and I would bet on him to be reelected comfortably in 2012. First off, his opponents in Congress are deeply irresponsible (admittedly: “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”) and face a huge political problem within their own party: a significant portion of the conservative base really does want lower deficits, yet the only thing the Republican caucus knows how to do is cut taxes. Klein points out that the Republicans will eliminate House rules that spending increases or tax cuts have to be offset elsewhere, and will instead say that “tax cuts don’t have to be paid for, and spending increases can’t be offset by tax increases.” Second, the Tea Party and Sarah Palin mean that Obama is likely to face an opponent who has been pulled dangerously close to the lunatic fringe during the primary (or, even better yet, Palin herself). And third, there’s triangulation.


Bai basically parrots the Obama administration’s line: they did the tax cut deal because it was good policy, it would stimulate the economy, and they got a good deal. In other words, it’s not a cynical political tactic, it’s good governance. And as I’ve said before, I think the Obama team may actually believe that, because their idea of good policy was centrist to begin with.

Did you notice that their key talking point on the tax cut issue was about not raising middle-class taxes in the middle of a recession? Well, this conveniently overlooks one key fact: they wanted to preserve the Bush tax cuts regardless of economic conditions. Even I forgot (until Klein reminded me in a post on something completely different) that the administration wanted to make the middle-class tax cuts permanent. Remember, these “middle-class” tax cuts go up to $250,000–around the 98th income percentile. And for true ordinary American households, they are negligible, because those households don’t pay much income tax; as of 2009, according to the Tax Policy Center, middle-quintile households have an average income tax rate of 2.3 percent. (They pay much more in payroll taxes.) So even Obama’s preferred policy — killing the tax cuts on the super-rich (over $250,000) and keeping them for the upper-middle class and the moderately rich — is a regressive policy: it lowers the tax burden on people making more than average, thereby forcing the government to cut services that benefit everyone.* And it increases the pressure to cut Social Security and Medicare, which do benefit ordinary people.

So no, I don’t think Obama is abandoning his principles for political advantage; I think these are his principles. And while I’m upset at him, I’m upset at him for being wrong on the policy level, not for abandoning anything or selling out. I think a lot of the bitterness on the left comes from people who thought he was more progressive than he is, and now feel betrayed. As I said in January, I always thought Obama was a moderate who looked like a progressive (certainly the most moderate of the three main 2008 primary candidates), and, as Nate Silver said, “what Obama has wound up with is an unpopular, liberal sheen on a relatively centrist agenda.” What’s happening now, if his good run continues, is he is shedding the liberal sheen and getting a centrist sheen on a centrist agenda. And politically, that’s all good for him. Combine that with his obvious political skills, and the future looks bright for him.

* I know that the administration also supported extending other tax cuts and credits that are more progressive, but those were mainly intended to be temporary, such as the tax cuts in the 2009 stimulus bill. 

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Bet on a (JEB) Bush

Bet on a (JEB) Bush RENASCENCE, instead for 2012 (his Obamanible self's simply Bush place-holding as the erstwhile greater evil)! And in A DECADE those BUSH tax cuts haven't generated Teh JOBS, yet; so why the "enjoyment"? Oh yeah, BHO! Hussein!, 'tis His SEASON!



Obama certainly campaigned

Obama certainly campaigned as a progressive centerist, while the right portrayed him as Karl Marx reincarnated. His commitment to his campaign rhetoric has been , while not nonexistent,extremely weak.



Here we go, Social Security

Here we go, Social Security and Medicare on the chopping block as Politico is reporting:

http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=EB5E9565-C4A8-7E36-747EADB1F4AAB099



Too early for Jeb more

Too early for Jeb

more likely 2016 if at all. Too many people remember W and the economy is in too much of the crapper for a lot of people to take on the presidency.

Obama should not count on re-election as a sure thing if in 2012 we still have 10% unemployment and Romney is the republican candidate-a white centrist republican with a lot of bank to spend on a campaign. A lot of unemployed and underemployed 20 somethings who were counting on change and voted for Obama and didn't get the change nor the jobs may sit out 2012.



"What’s happening now, if

"What’s happening now, if his good run continues, is he is shedding the liberal sheen and getting a centrist sheen on a centrist agenda"

The "unpopular, liberal sheen " was certainly in part of the nature of persistent claims that Obama was setting up Death Panels to kill off everyone's Grandma. The independent's contribution to the Republican resurgence may have represented many of those that believed this type of disinformation, in addition to those who were were registering frustration with Obama's stand-offish approach to job creation. Obama's improved fortunes may largely indicate increased realization that"his opponents in Congress are deeply irresponsible".



By cutting revenues to

By cutting revenues to Social Security, Obama IS setting up death panels -- they're going to starve everyone's Grandma.



Bright? BRIGHT? he was swept

Bright? BRIGHT?

he was swept into office by a very progressive base, these are young people who are closer to canada's ultra-liberal NDP than they are to the center-right democratic party.

They normally don't vote, because they know the situation right now is the republicans pulling right, and the democrats sleeping at the wheel.

Obama convinced them he would start pulling left and seeking to balance their long march to fascism, he has now clearly signaled he will not actually fulfill this promise.

I predict a very sharp nosedive and a huge crater in 2012 if the republicans run ANYONE but palin.



Unbelievable and pathetic

Unbelievable and pathetic spin from someone who doesn't understand the problems of this country or who Obama serves. These kinds of articles are so shallow and weak, and they show up on Truthout with too much regularity. Obama is a tool of the corporate elites just like Bush was, and both political parties are owned by the corporate elites, especially in the banking, military and earth-rape industries. The writer has lost all moral sense. Obama is not defensible. I don't care about his political future. I care about the fact that he refused to prosecute war criminals, commits war crimes via his drones and his Afghan war, and just cut a deal that will ruin social securit and hands tax cuts to billionaires..