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Michael Barone
Michael Barone
24 May 2012
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A Reality Check on Obama's Wish List

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What will an Obama administration and a Congress with increased Democratic majorities do? That's a relevant question, given the Democrats' leads in the polls. And it's a little hard to answer, given the financial crisis that has been raging and the recession that seems to be ahead.

One thing they will certainly do is raise taxes on high earners. The Bush tax cuts are scheduled to expire in 2010, and congressional Democrats will gleefully allow the top rates to rise. Left-leaning Democrats, like Barack Obama himself, want to "spread the wealth around," as the candidate told Joe the Plumber in October. Blue Dog Democrats want to reduce the budget deficit and will welcome the additional revenue that the Congressional Budget Office's static-analysis models will promise. Raising taxes when the economy is weakening is not the medicine prescribed by Keynesian economics, and it is probably not what Obama's economic advisers would prescribe if they were starting from scratch today. It is what Herbert Hoover and Congress did in the early 1930s, and it helped to produce the Great Depression. But it is baked into the pie.

So is a slide toward trade protectionism. The breakdown of the Doha Round and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's refusal to bring the Colombia Free Trade Agreement to a vote mean that both multilateral and bilateral trade liberalism channels are clogged. Obama may or may not try to renegotiate NAFTA, as both Canada and Mexico have center-right governments satisfied with current arrangements. But the trend will be toward less free trade.

The prospects are cloudier for two other issues on which Obama has made big promises. Much of the next Congress's time and psychic energy will be taken up with refashioning financial regulation — a subject of considerable difficulty. And the looming recession will make it politically risky for Democrats to push big spending programs.

This means that Congress in the next two years may not pass Obama's national health insurance plan. The weakening economy and the enraged reaction earlier this year to $4-a-gallon gasoline also make it less likely that Congress will pass carbon reduction legislation — certainly not a carbon tax and probably not a cap-and-trade system.

Regional impact.

In any case, health insurance and carbon reduction will be heavily lobbied, despite all the denunciations of lobbyists issued by Obama (and John McCain). Any one-size-fits-all healthcare bill affects various regions differently, because we have many healthcare delivery and finance systems across the country. The same goes for carbon reduction legislation, as the economies of some regions depend more heavily on coal than do others; it may be hard to convince voters there that we have to impose burdens on them today to achieve promised benefits in 2050. These disparities cut across party lines and helped defeat the Clinton healthcare proposals in 1994. They will probably come into play again if far-ranging bills are pressed forward.

Two issues pushed by Democrats in this Congress have no budgetary costs. One is the "fairness doctrine," which is intended to shut down talk radio, the one communications medium in which conservative voices are dominant. The other is the so-called card check bill, which requires employers to bargain with unions when

their organizers secure signatures on cards from a majority of employees; secret-ballot unionization elections, required now, would be a thing of the past. The aim is to vastly increase union membership, pumping money into a Democratic pressure group.

What might happen in the unlikely event McCain is elected and faces a Democratic Congress? Presumably he would try to hold tax rates down, but to do so he might have to embrace the kind of bipartisan tax reform enacted in 1986, with low rates and fewer preferences. Democrats might be willing to bargain if they could get rid of the alternative minimum tax, which threatens their core constituencies. McCain's plan to end the tax preference for employer-provided health insurance could be the basis of compromise with a similar plan advanced by Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden that has bipartisan support. McCain might also seek a bipartisan carbon reduction bill.

Much depends, whoever wins, on whether Democrats elect enough senators to overcome filibusters. Even more may ride on the course of the economy and the depth of the recession, which could scotch either candidate's proposals.

To read more political analysis by Michael Barone, visit www.usnews.com/baroneblog. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;... What a surprise to learn Hoover drove us into the great depression when I just read that the worst of the economy had been reached, and the rebound was begun before FDR took office... It was just a very deep hole the country had to pull itself out of, and without world trade, and the dust bowl for example, such improvement could not be quick... But; If the rich are interested in saving their economy it is not going to be on the backs of workers because the workers are all played out... It is all like that story of the man who parked his big flea bag outside a bar, and had a drink... Another guy went in, and said: who owned the big dog outside... And the first guy said: I do; and why... The second man said: my dog just killed him.... And number one said: just how did that happen, and number two said: Well; I think he got lodged in his throat... There is plenty more free wealth in America.... But what the rich tried to swallow got lodged in their throats... You remember this... The U.S. can control its economy if it has to draft every stock broker and working girl on Wall Street... Make them responsible, so they will act responsible or march them back and forth till they figure it out... All that is missing is the will power, and anything will be possible..The alternative is to have our economy control us... What fun is that???. Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Oct 25, 2008 6:07 PM
All I can say, Barone, is that your guy just got an endorsement from Al Qaeda and Bin Laden. That speaks volumes, doesn't it? McCain's clearly the best man on their team. Who else could keep up the fine tradition of flushing it all down the toilet in Iraq so the vacationing crowd we should have been after can continue getting rich on the opium trade? But they have a much bigger prize in mind, thanks to our idiotic notions of protecting oil in Iraq: Pakistan.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Sun Oct 26, 2008 9:07 AM
Oh darn. Please don't take money away from the wealthy, they need it so they can be good little consumers! Instead, let's just make the poor people poorer. Yes, we will re-train all the unemployed to be proper and efficient indentured servants! And who cares if the returning veterans from the wars don't have adequate care at the VA. They will just go to the streets and maintain making up 1 in 4 of the homeless population nationwide. You know, the poor people! I thought everybody knew that Robin Hood was a bad guy!
Comment: #3
Posted by: Dayna Celise
Tue Oct 28, 2008 11:03 AM
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