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Entries in presidential campaign (2)

Wednesday
Aug172011

Republicans Bash Obama's Bus Tour 

As President Obama completes his bus tour through the Midwest Wednesday, Republicans charged that Obama diverted his focus on the economic crisis and dragged in politics. 

“This bus tour is nothing but another campaign jaunt for this president,” Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus told reporters today. 

“I think he should spend a little bit more time in the White House doing his job as opposed to running around on Canadian busses and planning his next vacation in Martha’s vineyard,” Priebus added. 

Priebus mentioned that the bus tour is being paid for by taxpayers, which he felt was “outrageous” due to the level of political commentary from the President.

Priebus continued to criticize Obama for allowing the economy to fail by not producing a job creation plan. 

“We have no plan from the president. We have no engagement from the president. But what we do have are forensic winning speeches that he likes to give with no plans at all for our country to get it back to work. Obama’s economy has failed,” Priebus said. 

Illinois GOP Chairman Pat Brady concurred with Priebus and explained how lagging economic growth has affected Illinois in particular. 

“Citizens in the state of Illinois, since Obama has taken office, pay more taxes, they pay more for groceries, they pay twice as much per gallon for a gallon of gas, and we have one of the highest sales taxes in the country,” Brady explained to reporters. 

“We have the worst deficit and debt in the country,” Brady continued. “President Obama: your buddies in Illinois have done a miserable job handling the economy in this state.” 

President Obama’s three day bus tour spans Iowa, Minnesota and Illinois.

Wednesday
Jan232008

Presidential Economic Advisors speak at the New America Foundation


Ellen Ratner reported from the New America Foundation where advisors to the various presidential campaigns spoke on the state of the economy. Advisors to John Edwards, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain spoke about their candidates and economic stimulus. 

Leo Hindery, the managing director of InterMedia Partners L.P., is the senior economic advisor to John Edwards. Hindery said that the United States can't educate or invest our way our of the current economic crisis. He cautioned that trade must be looked at as a fairness issue. Hindery said that a long-term plan for economic growth shouldn't be called a stimulus. He addressed several of the  problems he sees with the current discussion on the economy. He said that the Federal Reserve is not the entity that should be developing legislation and pointed out that this is not a sub-prime mortgage problem. He said that we have a "pervasive consumer debt problem" and noted the $7 trillion in consumer debt and without war accounting accounting the federal debt has been raised by $4 trillion. 

Austan Goolsbee is a senior economic advisor for Barack Obama. Goolsbee gave an overall economic assessment. He said that we have inadequate health insurance and that college has become less affordable and that the bottom 75 percent of earners have not seen income growth. He also mentioned the personal savings rate as problematic. Goolsbee said that Barack Obama has an iPod version of the government: easy to use. He spoke about the $200-$400 billion in mortgage losses and cautioned that bailing out financial institutions should be a last resort. On the Federal Reserve Goolsbee observed that the Fed is in a tight spot and that if we cut interest rates the value of the dollar goes down and a weak dollar is not good for the U.S. economy overall. The economic advisor to Obama also looked to history sighting that typically recessions have lasted 11 months since World War II. His suggestion for an immediate solution is to distribute rebates from payroll and put it into social security payments. He said that a solution "must be right now" without applications to fill out and speed the money out the door.  


Kevin Hassett is a senior advisor to John McCain and the Director of Economic Policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute. His statements on the state of the economy began with the observation that the U.S. government is $50 to $60 trillion dollars short of obligations like social security. He said that the minute the markets start to think that the U.S. doesn't have it's house in order the situation could get worse. Hassett said that John McCain wants to restore the comprehensiveness of corporations. His other suggestions were to have compromise legislation immediately and make business measures in that legislation retroactive. He cautioned that to put forth a stimulus package and later raise taxes would "not be a good idea."  He said that in the long history of stimulus packages they don't work expect for the last one when the government mailed money to people and it was associated with permanent tax cuts. He said that McCain believes in getting government out of the way and letting infrastructure happen without lots of regulation. 

Gary Gensler is a senior advisor to Hillary Clinton and a former Under Secretary of the Treasury for Domestic Finance and the former Assistant Secretary of Treasury for Financial Markets. He spoke about health care costs as well saying that they are up while the American middle class has lost up to $2 million in foreclosure filings. He said that the Clinton campaign is focused on housing, energy and jobs. In terms of the economic stimulus he said that it is critical that the government act fast and put out a $110 billion package. Clinton outlines such a plan as $40 billion in tax rebates, $30 billion in energy costs, $10 billion in unemployment insurance, $30 billion in housing via state authorities. He said that if you raise taxes of those making $250,000 a year or higher than you still have a great economy. He spoke about the difference between a stimulus package that gets spent and a money that gets put toward paying down debt. $40 billion in immediate energy costs is something the states could do right now, he said. He also mentioned that housing money would take a bit longer to have an effect.