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John Cronin

Obama Warned Over ‘Welfare Spendathon’

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article5733499.ece

RONALD REAGAN started it, Bill Clinton finished it and last week Barack Obama was accused of engineering its destruction. One of the few undisputed triumphs of American government of the past 20 years – the sweeping welfare reform programme that sent millions of dole claimants back to work – has been plunged into jeopardy by billions of dollars in state handouts included in the president’s controversial economic stimulus package.

As Obama celebrated Valentine’s Day yesterday with a return to his Chicago home for a private weekend with family and friends, his success in piloting a $785 billion (£546 billion) stimulus package through Congress was being overshadowed by warnings that an unprecedented increase in welfare spending would undermine two decades of bipartisan attempts to reduce dependency on government handouts.

Robert Rector, a prominent welfare researcher who was one of the architects of Clinton’s 1996 reform bill, warned last week that Obama’s stimulus plan was a “welfare spendathon” that would amount to the largest one-year increase in government handouts in American history.

Douglas Besharov, author of a big study on welfare reform, said the stimulus bill passed by Congress and the Senate in separate votes on Friday would “unravel” most of the 1996 reforms that led to a 65% reduction in welfare caseloads and prompted the British and several other governments to consider similar measures

Though some researchers have questioned the true impact of Clinton’s “workfare” reforms, they were wildly popular with millions of US taxpayers tired of subsidising what many saw as a generation of slackers.

Despite dire warnings that reduced benefits for single mothers and deadlines on entitlement would create a social calamity – one liberal senator warned at the time that children would be “sleeping on grates” – the 1996 reforms cut welfare rolls from more than 5m families in 1995 to below 2m a decade later without a discernible increase in hardship.

In the American political lexicon, welfare has since become a dirty word – often referred to as the W word – and nothing arouses US tabloid ire more than the hint that taxpayers’ money is being wasted.

When it emerged that Nadya Suleman, the mother of octuplets born in Los Angeles last month, was a “single mom” with six children already and was relying on welfare assistance, she was transformed overnight from fertility goddess to the target of death threats.

Obama argued last week that his bill was essential for reviving the US economy and protecting victims of the credit crunch. Yet his Republican rivals have seized on the billions lavished on new welfare spending to stir the conservative faithful from their postelection misery and reunite the opposition.

“If you like government dependence, you will love the plan they are jamming through Congress,” declared Michael Steele, the new chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Rector, a senior scholar at the conservative Heritage Foundation, argued that Obama’s spending proposals in effect encouraged individual states to add more families to their welfare rolls; the more Americans sign on to the dole, the more state budgets will benefit from US Treasury payouts.

“They have completely overturned the fiscal and policy foundations of welfare reform,” Rector complained.

Supporters of the bill argue that the current crisis is so grave that intellectual quibbling about the nature of welfare has to take second place to the upheaval transforming millions of American lives.
“How can you tell someone who has lost his income to look for another job if there aren’t any more jobs?” asked one Obama backer.

While some scholars are beginning to suspect that Clinton’s welfare reforms were fatally flawed – or at least viable only during an economic boom – Republicans are not alone in fearing that Obama’s hastily concocted package is the first step towards the creation of a quasi-socialist welfare state.
Even Mickey Kaus, a prominent liberal blogger, has denounced what he describes as the “get more people on welfare” provisions of Obama’s bill. Writing at Slate, the political website, Kaus said: “Lack of jobs isn’t a reason to loosen work requirements . . . Have the Dems never heard of ‘workfare’?

“Give recipients useful community service work, and if they do the work, then they get the [welfare] cash.”

Returning to Chicago for the first time since his inauguration last month, there were other pressing matters on Obama’s mind – not to mention the minds of millions of Americans still enthralled by his every move. Where would he take his wife Michelle for a romantic Valentine’s dinner? How much time would he spend in the gym? Would he fit in a game of basketball?

Opinion polls last week showed that for all his administration’s errors in his first three weeks in office, the new president has lost little of his personal appeal. He continues to enjoy an average 64% approval rating.

Yet after another fracas over the withdrawal of the Republican senator Judd Gregg as Obama’s choice for commerce secretary – the second time a nominee has given up the post – Obama’s chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, was obliged to insist that it was not “amateur hour” at the White House.

Obama also stumbled over a curious claim that his stimulus plan would enable Caterpillar, one of America’s leading manufacturers of heavy earth-moving equipment, to start rehiring workers. He was promptly contradicted by the company’s chief executive, who said he had no such intention and was planning more lay-offs.

The dangers are beginning to pile up for the novice president and his struggling economic crew. Tim Geithner, his treasury secretary, tripped up with opaque attempts to explain how the administration would fix the banking crisis, while from every corner of the country there were alarming indications that increased government intervention in the lives of ordinary Americans could prove an invitation to waste.

In Wisconsin, the state that forged a pioneering path in welfare reforms in the 1990s, residents were astonished by a newspaper investigation that disclosed that a $340m (£236m) programme offering taxpayer-financed child care to low-income working parents was riddled with fraud and expensive loopholes.

In one case, a family of four sisters who had 17 children between them put all of them together, took it in turns to babysit them and over the past three years claimed $540,000 (£374,000) in perfectly legal state childcare subsidies.

Examples like that fuel American suspicion that so-called “big government” invariably turns out to be inefficient, expensive and easily exploitable. And there has been no bigger government action in the US than the stimulus package presented by Obama.

Few dispute the need for some kind of stimulus, but has Obama got the details right? The Republicans do not think so and, led by Gregg, they are already shunning the president’s bipartisan overtures.

Perhaps more worrying for the president is that some of his natural liberal supporters are not feeling all that confident either. In a telling commentary last week, Paul Krugman, the 2008 Nobel prize-winning economist, declared that Obama’s stimulus victory “feels more than a bit like defeat”.
Krugman added: “I’ve got a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach – a feeling that America just isn’t rising to the greatest economic challenge in 70 years.”

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John Cronin

Obama vs. Pelosi

November 10th, 2008 | 114 Comments | Posted in Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Congress, Democrats, Republicans

Pollster Doug Shoen is quoted in the excerpt below warning the Democrats not to attempt to govern as if the Republican Party has vanished from the face of the earth. Bill Clinton & Co. tried it throughout 1993 and promptly got their little hands slapped by the voters in the 1994 mid-terms.

It is up to activists like the participants on this site to keep holding the feet of your respective Congressional delegations to the fire in order to limit the damage of the incoming administration. If they stray too far from the moderate path, it is up to us and many others across the nation to restore some balance to Congress in 2010.

~~John Cronin~~

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122609968752809797.html

Barack Obama obviously has thought carefully about mistakes made by previous Democratic presidential winners who wrongly believed a Congress controlled by their own party would help make them a success.

Pollster Doug Schoen, who helped Bill Clinton win re-election in 1996 over overwhelming odds after the 1994 Democratic debacle, recently warned in a Journal op-ed: “If the Democrats govern as if there is no Republican Party, they are likely headed to the kind of reaction that Bill Clinton faced when he made the same misjudgment after the 1992 election victory.” Mr. Schoen cites specifically a meeting in Little Rock after the election with Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell and House Speaker Tom Foley, when Mr. Clinton agreed to defer to Congress on key elements of his legislative agenda. The subsequent lurch to the left did incalculable damage to his presidency.

That may be one reason why Mr. Obama has chosen Rahm Emanuel, a respected member of the Congressional leadership, to become his new White House Chief of Staff. Mr. Emanuel has a reputation as a tough partisan, but he has also exhibited impatience with left-wing members of his party who have overly ambitious ideological agendas. A likely first assignment for Mr. Emanuel will be reminding House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid that, after only two years of Democratic control, Congress already has a lower approval rating than even President Bush’s.

To the extent Mr. Obama becomes a successful president, it will be because he remains his own man and trusts the brilliant political instincts that have gotten him this far, this fast.

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amanda

Mitt on Hannity and Colmes!

I hope the rumors about GMR being on McCain’s “short list” for Veep are TRUE! This economy needs Mitt SO BADLY. I think having Mitt Romney on the ticket would make the republicans darn-near unbeatable this year. Let’s all hope John McCain’s going to bust out Vice President Mitt Romney as the GOP’s “secret weapon” (that’s not so secret, I guess, since we all are dying to get him on the ticket!). Keep your fingers crossed, VP choices could be unveiled any day now! Enjoy the clips!

PART ONE:

PART TWO:

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John Cronin

I Didn’t Inhale Either

April 27th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Townhall

In the “lest we forget department” Austin Hill at Townhall.com has a good article on those two zany Democrat politicians, Bill and Hill. Worth the read to remind ourselves what we are up against in this election. If they somehow pull their bacon out of the fire and wind up the “co-nominees” of the Democrat Party, we will have to hit the ground running to prevent a re-run of the first scandal-plagued Clinton administration.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/AustinHill/2008/04/27/
the_democrats__indignation_over_the_clintons__better_late_than_never

Breaking news - - Bill and Hillary Clinton are nasty, frequently inauthentic, and dishonest.

Actually this is not “news” at all. But many Liberal Americans have just begun to discover this painful reality, and it’s an arduous process for them to stumble out of their denial.

My concerns about Bill’s relationship with the truth date back to his now-famous “I experimented with marijuana a time or two“ and I “didn‘t inhale” shtick of 1992. So many others seemed to revel in the entertainment value that then-Governor Clinton provided with those remarks. I, on the other hand, was horrified that a serious candidate for the presidency would utter such absurdities, and expect, as he apparently did, to be taken seriously.

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Vic Lundquist

THE CLINTONS’ SUNSET

February 26th, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in 2008 Election, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton


Artwork by Michael Ramirez — Courtesy of IBD Editorials

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Vic Lundquist

TRUTH REVEALED by the king

Flag Waving
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Artwork by Michael Ramirez — Courtesy of IBD Editorials

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Vic Lundquist

CLINTONVILLE

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Artwork by Michael Ramirez — Courtesy of IBD Editorials

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Ryan Jesperson

Bill Clinton: John McCain and Hillary are ‘very close’

hillary-and-mccain.jpg

From cnn.

If Hillary Clinton and John McCain become their party’s presidential nominees, the general election race is likely to be a love-fest.

At least according to Bill Clinton.

“She and John McCain are very close,” Clinton said. “They always laugh that if they wound up being the nominees of their party, it would be the most civilized election in American history, and they’re afraid they’d put the voters to sleep because they like and respect each other.”

Sens. McCain and Clinton last met publicly at an ABC debate earlier January, when presidential candidates of both parties shared the same stage. The two were seen exchanging pleasantries, and a Clinton side said she told the Arizona senator he’d done a “good job” staging a comeback in New Hampshire. He asked that she say hello to Bill Clinton for him.

Come on Florida, we are counting on you! You’ve got to stop McCain! No wonder it was Romney who led the charge against Hillary in the debate last night. McCain didn’t want to offend one of his “very close” friends.

~Ryan Jesperson

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Vic Lundquist

“The Thought of Bill Clinton in the White House with Nothing To Do . . . !”

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This first Op/Ed piece is excellent, as Noonan’s writings always are. One big criticism I have of her is that she has bought into the notion that Gov. Romney was somehow liberal in his political past. It simply is not true.

This first article speaks to Democrats (Clintons) and then to the Republican state of affairs:

DECLARATIONS — Breaking Up Is Hard to Do — By PEGGY NOONAN — January 25, 2008 [The primary campaign is tearing the Democrats apart]

Bill Clinton, with his trembly, red faced rage, makes John McCain look young. His divisive and destructive daily comportment—this is a former president of the United States—is a civic embarrassment. It is also an education, and there is something heartening in this.

There are many serious and thoughtful liberals and Democrats who support Mr. Obama and John Edwards, and who are seeing Mr. Clinton in a new way and saying so. Here is William Greider in The Nation, the venerable left-liberal magazine. The Clintons are “high minded” on the surface but “smarmily duplicitous underneath, meanwhile jabbing hard at the groin area. They are a slippery pair and come as a package. The nation is at fair risk of getting them back in the White House for four years.”

This next editorial is very brief, but telling, especially in light of events this week:

REVIEW & OUTLOOK — Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy — January 25, 2008

~ Vic

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Vic Lundquist

The Clintons’ “I Have a Dream” Dream

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Artwork by Michael Ramirez — Courtesy of IBD Editorials

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Stephanie Davis

Speaking of Billary, How ‘Bout this Hill-Billy?

January 23rd, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in Bill Clinton, Billary, Hillary Clinton

Hill-Billy-Clinton

Scary …

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