By Austin Hill
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Have you heard the latest from the Obama re-election
team?
Mitt Romney doesn’t have enough of his money taken from
him in taxes. Paul Ryan wants to give rich people a tax “break.” Mitt Romney cut
jobs when he was an executive at a private equity firm. Paul Ryan wants to cut
school lunches for needy children.
You’ve probably seen and heard it all before. Romney and
Ryan are scary, “extreme,” and out of touch, according to Team Obama. The
President, Vice President, and all their operatives and surrogates are
committed to getting the word out.
But while the President and his friends are adept at
making rhetorical attacks on Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, it’s an infrequent
occurrence when they offer any reasons why the President should be re-elected.
So what, really, is the case for an Obama re-election victory? We know why the
President dislikes the Romney-Ryan ticket (and Republicans, generally). But why
do we need another four years of Barack Obama as our President? “Because Mitt
Romney is terrible,” seems to be the implied answer.
Try searching for remarks from the President about what
he intends to do in a second term, and you won’t find much. This is because he
hasn’t said much on the topic. Most of the President’s comments these days are
disparaging remarks about Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan and not about his agenda -
although he did note in an Associated Press interview on August 25th that if he
is elected to a second term, he believes there are Republicans in the House and
Senate who will compromise and work with him to “get things done” for the
country.
I did, however, receive a recent email update from the
Obama campaign, a portion of which read like this: “President Obama believes
the only way to create an economy built to last is to build it from the middle
out and not from the top down. His economic plan is to restore middle-class
security by paying down our debt in a balanced way that ensures everyone pays
their fair share. Yet the President also wants to still invest in things we
need to create jobs and grow our economy over the long term, things like education,
energy, innovation, and infrastructure.”
This little blurb should raise some big questions. First,
we should all ask “who is seeking a ‘top-down’ approach to the economy?” The
answer, of course, is the President himself.
Within less than two years of taking office, President
Obama successfully put in to place a system of tremendous governmental control
over the otherwise private economy. By the middle of 2010, the President had
become a de-facto C.E.O. over huge chunks of the economy, with the power to
hire and fire executives, establish compensation limits for executive
management, and to determine what products and services are produced. Insurance
companies, car manufacturers, lending institutions and energy producers –
President Obama has successfully forced his will upon them all.
So has all this governmental control created an economy
that is “built to last?” We should also ask the Obama campaign emailers “how
does the extra $6 trillion in U.S. government debt (roughly the amount of
federal debt increase since the President’s first day in office) help pay down
the debt?” And what about the $813 billion stimulus bill of 2009 – that was
supposed to be an “investment” in innovation, infrastructure and education –
where did that money go? Wasn’t that supposed to be “invested” in important
things? And what happened to “shovel ready jobs” – were there any “created?”
A quick check of Democrats.org, the national party’s
website, also reveals a list of other specific policy ideas that the President
allegedly supports, yet he isn’t talking about them these days. One such policy
has to do with energy independence, as the Democrats claim that “President
Obama knows we can’t just drill our way to lower gas prices,” and that
President Obama is focused on “developing all of America’s natural
resources...”
Of course, the President himself said late last year and
earlier this year that he is committed to an “all of the above” approach to
energy policy, implying that he’s okay with petroleum-based energy, along with
the alternative energy development that he’s promoted.
This sounded great- but the President isn’t saying this
anymore. This is probably because an “all of the above” approach to energy, we
now know, means “anything except Big Oil” within the Obama worldview – hence
the President’s veto on the Keystone XL Pipeline project that could have
reduced America’s reliance on oil from other continents and could have created
jobs from the Canadian border all the way down to Texas. The President and his
friends would prefer to ignore this here within the last ten weeks of the
election cycle, so they simply don’t talk about it – better to remind everyone
about the scary and terrible Romney and Ryan.
Historically, Americans haven’ been content to merely
vote against a particular idea or candidate – they generally prefer to vote for
someone or something, even if they are choosing the lesser between two “evils.”
Will President Obama defy the odds this year – or will Americans be more
scrutinizing?
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