woolfe9999
Diamond Member
- Mar 28, 2005
- 7,153
- 0
- 0
That has basically been my point all along, but you said it in a more even-keeled manner.
This But Bush...! nonsense is seriously beyond ridiculous and tired.
Yes if the statement is framed as "but Bush," when referring to the recession, it is incorrect. I have been saying since 2008 that Bush was not principally resonsible for the recession, if at all. However, when Obama points out that he inherited a recession that *he* did not cause, that *is* correct. And that has been the way Obama has framed it. If certain people on a message board frame it differently, that is a different issue.
When we're talking about the deficit, that is another matter. There is no question that we had 2 tax cuts under Bush, 2 unfunded wars, and an unfunded Medicare entitlement. Those things are the responsibility of Bush, the republicans in Congress, and a lesser number of congressional democrats who supported each policy. Furthermore, there is no question that each of those things has continued to have a fiscal impact in the Obama administration. It isn't as if they were one off expenditures which temporarily raised the deficit then went away when Obama took over.
The crucial point is the relationship between the recession and the deficit expansion under Obama. Much of that is automatic, non-discretionary spending that kicks in under a recession - increased payouts for unemployment, medicaid, cobra, etc. The rest of it is Obama policies directed at combatting the recession - stimulus, TARP, etc. Those who are critical of Obama on deficit expansion need to point to increased spending that is unrelated to combatting the recession. You're going to be very hard pressed to do so, you'll find some things that are basically chickenfeed in budgetary terms.
Incidentally, I agree with you that Obama can take no credit for the Iraq withdrawal. I recall the agreement that came down in December '08 after the election. This was a pre-commitment made by the Bush administration. I think if people are going to correctly divest Obama of credit for something that was started before he came into office, they also need to correctly view the entire context, and all the facts, in judging his record on the economy and deficit.
One final point - the American electorate tends to have short memories. This means they probably *will* credit Obama for the withdrawal, but they'll probably also blame him for the recession and deficit. If I was a republican, I'd take that tradeoff in a heartbeat.
- wolf
