A Challenge Obama Should Accept
He’d have advantage in town halls with McCain
To his credit, John McCain has
invited Barack Obama to join him in a national “town hall” tour over
the coming months, without the unneeded intrusion of celebrity
journalists, network extravaganzas and all of their irrelevant
impertinence.
The Republican senator insists that he wants a
serious debate over the competing ideas and visions of the two parties,
rather than the usual petty focus on process issues and gotcha
questions. After so many election cycles dominated by race-baiting,
panty-raiding and Swift-Boating, voters might feel reassured by
serious discussions of real issues. On no issue is such frank
discussion more urgent than the economy, as the numbers plunge downward
along with national and world confidence.
Despite McCain’s
widely quoted confession that he doesn’t know much about economics, the
conceit of his party has long been that only conservatives understand
how the world works—and that only cutting taxes on the wealthy and
removing regulations from business can encourage growth, especially in
recessionary periods.
Many American voters used to accept
those simplistic nostrums as received truth, but perhaps it is time to
re-examine them in the light of past history and present failures. When
it is Obama’s turn to speak in the coming debates, he may wish to point
out that the record of past economic performance by Republican
politicians compares quite poorly with that of their Democratic rivals.
Republican Responsibility for Economic Slump
Take Phil Gramm, the former Texas
senator whose proud authorship of the Reagan tax cuts in 1981 was
immediately followed by severe recession and then by the largest
peacetime tax increase in American history.
Among
Gramm’s final speeches in the Senate was an impassioned rant warning
that the Clinton economic program would lead to unemployment, inflation
and higher deficits. He could not have been more wrong, of course—an
embarrassing historical footnote that is only significant because he
now serves as chief economic counselor to the McCain campaign.
Working
alongside Gramm in the McCain policy shop is Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an
economist who claims with a straight face that President Reagan “cut
taxes within the context of budget discipline and controls on
spending.” That happy memory is utterly false. Moreover, the economy
was still in deep trouble when Bill Clinton entered the White House
after more than a decade of Republican rule.
Rather than
merely score easy debating points off McCain and his ill-chosen
advisers, however, Obama could speak more broadly about the stagnation
and waste that have resulted from Republican economic policy. He could
explain how unfair policies hinder growth. And he shouldn’t hesitate to
pillory conservative policy-makers for incompetence and
irresponsibility.
But what Obama ought to emphasize,
consistent with his positive and uplifting appeal, is the excellent
economic record of his Democratic forebears during the past century or
so. As stewards of the economy, they have consistently bested the
Republicans on every important measure, from stock market performance
to gross domestic product to job creation to disposable income.
Democrats
have always been better at reducing poverty and increasing wages, which
may not surprise anyone. But they have also proved superior at keeping
inflation low, reducing budget deficits and restraining federal
spending. After the scandalous budgeting of the Republican Congress and
the Bush administration, perhaps nobody will find those statistics
surprising, either. The Obama advisers reflect the longstanding
Democratic consensus, with their commitment to universal health care,
Social Security and fiscal stimulus balanced by budgetary
responsibility and tax equity.
They understand that fairness
is the fastest path to renewed and sustainable growth. As for McCain,
who dissented from G.O.P. orthodoxy by voting against the Bush tax cuts
in 2001, he recants that heresy almost every day. He once understood
that we cannot entrust our financial system to the unregulated avarice
of predators like his old pal Charles Keating, symbol of the
savings-and-loan debacle. Yet now he parrots the free-market
fundamentalism that led to the S&L crisis back then, and to the
subprime mortgage disaster today. He proposes the same panaceas he used
to deride.
So yes, let’s have a freewheeling debate about how
to revitalize the economy and the nation. Let’s hear McCain defend the
discredited conventional wisdom of the right, and Obama extol the
achievements of the liberal past and the promise of the progressive
future. It is hard to imagine a clearer choice.
2008 Creators Syndicate Inc. What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com or comment on this story online at www.expressmilwaukee.com.



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