How has he catered to them? Particularly with regard to the actual legislation....where has he caved in any way?
Obama Caves to Republicans on Stimulus Plan
GUEST: Doug Henwood, author of the book, “After the New Economy,” and editor of “Left Business Observer,” host of a Pacifica weekly program called Behind the News
Rough Transcript:
-- excerpts
Kolhatkar: So, how much do you know of the plan, and just looking at it—broadly speaking, before we get into the details—do you think that it has the makings or the potential for something that will actually address this recession we’re in?
Henwood: It started out better than it’s becoming in the last few days; it started out looking like a very large spending program—mostly concentrated on infrastructure, with also some assistance to state and local governments and extended unemployment benefits… and for the longer term some spending on subsidies and research and development for clean energy. These were all very good things, but we’ve heard in the last couple of days—in order to appease Republicans—that a very large portion, perhaps as much as forty percent of the proposed plan, will go to tax cuts, which are a much less effective way of stimulating the economy.
NOTE:: Explaining the difference between republican demanded tax cuts directed towards business..
Kolhatkar: Explain the difference between the two.
Henwood: Well, the business one is the one that’s especially ineffective. They’re actually talking about even giving credits to companies that have made losses in recent years. Now, that doesn’t make any sense to me, that kind of rewarding failure…
Kolhatkar: I mean, that would just basically help them perhaps not go bankrupt, but it wouldn’t necessarily create new jobs.
Henwood: No, it certainly wouldn’t; and it just could be a dying operation anyway, so it’s throwing good money after bad. But what really stimulates the economy most effectively is infrastructure spending, and that kind of thing. And the more we learn about the plan, the less of it there seems to be.
And what the politics behind this are very mysterious to me. It’s obviously designed to appease Republican opposition—but the Democrats have fifty-nine votes in the Senate, a large House majority, Obama won with a fairly large popular vote margin—they have some political capital to spend. George Bush barely squeaked into office a couple of times and acted like he owned the world. And with much more of a mandate and a great deal of enthusiasm behind him, Obama is eagerly compromising with the Republicans—it doesn’t make any political sense to me. Okay, if you can’t get it through Congress and you have the Republicans start to filibuster, then maybe you start thinking about compromise; but if you start out compromised, what kind of political thinking is that?
Kolhatkar: And, so, basically, the Republicans—even as an unpopular minority—are still carrying so much clout. But, then, what about the argument that Wall Street supported Obama hugely, wholeheartedly, when he was running for President, is this perhaps also not a nod to Corporate America?
Henwood: Well, to some degree, but Wall Street is very happy with the idea of big stimulus spending…
Kolhatkar: Right, because that means contracts for them…
Henwood: Well, not just that—I think they’re really very concerned about the state of the economy. I read, for example, the Goldman Sachs daily economic commentaries and they’re very enthusiastic about a very large stimulus program. You have the IMF talking about very large public spending programs—this is orthodox economic thinking right now.
Republicans, I think, really represent a kind of provincial, small-business mentality that really doesn’t deserve the time of day. We’ve got big business—certainly big capital, big Wall Street capital—would go along with whatever Obama and Congress came up with, so I just don’t see the point in appeasing Republicans.
I think this is part… let me see… I think there are two things involved. One, the Republicans have a coherent theory—it’s nonsense, but they have a coherent theory about tax cuts—it’s your money, you should keep it, the government shouldn’t take it, the government doesn’t know what to do with your money.
The Democrats really have nothing to compete with that. They don’t have an ideology, they don’t have a real philosophy—they’re just pure pragmatists. And, on top of that, we have Obama’s dedication to this post-partisanship—he’s going to end conflict in Washington. But politics is about conflict; there are different interests, different philosophies involved. You can’t have politics without conflict. So this seems to me bankrupt at every level, both the purely political level and also the philosophical/ideological level—and, also, the economic level at this period…much less economically effective turn this program has taken the last couple of days.
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http://uprisingradio.org/home/?p=5383
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