Obama Digs a Deeper Hole
By DICK MORRIS
Published on
TheHill.com on July 13, 2010
Any president facing a recession has a basic
conundrum to resolve: If he doesn't try to make people believe that a
recovery is in progress, nobody will. But if he tries to make them
believe that all is getting better, he risks being seen as out of touch
at best or insensitive at worst.
It was just such a predicament that landed George H.W. Bush in trouble
in 1991 when he preached that the economy was emerging from the
recession, only to be seen as rich and elitist for his efforts. Things
got so bad that this verbally challenged president once blurted out his
staff's strategy memo by saying, "Message: I care." That was about as
well-received as Nixon's statement that "I am not a crook."Now
Obama is trying to sell the unsellable -- that the economy is getting
better. In Nevada, he said: "But the question is, No. 1: Are we on the
right track? And the answer is, yes." Presumably those who are gullible
enough to think they can beat the casino odds in Vegas are ripe for this
form of self-delusion, but it leaves the rest of us cold. The fact is
that, when asked directly in polls whether the U.S. is on the right or
the wrong track, by more than two to one, Americans feel the nation is
on the wrong track.
Fifteen million are unemployed and, adding in underemployed, part-time
workers and those who have given up looking, the total is 26 million. So
Obama's statements of confidence are a bit like Herbert Hoover's ritual
incantation that "Prosperity is just around the corner."
Polls show that 70 percent of Americans do not believe that the stimulus
program has worked and a similar percentage feel the best thing we could
do to create jobs is to cut taxes.
But Obama's conundrum is that if he is not the font of optimism, who
will be? Economists are increasingly coming to see that the so-called
recovery was, in fact, a false dawn and that we are entering a
double-dip recession (if, indeed, we ever left the initial downturn). In
our book 2010: Take Back America -- A Battle Plan, we predict a false
dawn followed by a double dip -- and now it is upon us.
It is now time for the Republicans to counterattack against Obama by
calling him out of touch with the realities of the economy and to take
advantage of the commonly held idea that the president doesn't know what
is going on in the streets. In Obama's case, the GOP cannot then turn
"out of touch" into an accusation of insensitivity (as the Democrats did
to Bush-41). But they can push the idea that Obama is so wrapped up in
his liberal ideology that he cannot see the reality in front of him --
that big spending stimulus hasn't worked and won't work.
The Fox News poll now shows that 55 percent of all likely voters feel
that it is appropriate to call Obama a socialist. This epithet, which
most Americans did not see fit to use even a few months ago, fits him
well. Republicans should make the point that he is willing to sacrifice
all for his ideology and that he is blind to the reality of the damage
his spending and borrowing are causing.
When a president runs around the country saying things that two-thirds
of America does not believe, it is time to counterattack vigorously and
show how out of touch he really is.
Then, with every invocation of optimism, Obama will be digging himself
deeper and deeper into the hole.
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DickMorris.com to read all of Dick's columns!
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