Barack
Hussein Hoover?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Was
Obama Stampeded Into War?
Is the world
headed for a debt crisis to dwarf the one that befell us in 2008,
when Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson stood aside and let Lehman
Brothers crash?
No one knows
for certain. As Yogi Berra said, "it's tough to make predictions,
especially about the future."
But the probability
of a financial crisis increased this week after President Obama's
trashing of Rep. Paul Ryan's deficit reduction plan as dragging
us all back to the Dickensian days of "Oliver Twist."
For the savagery
of Obama's attack persuaded Standard & Poor's to begin to move
to downgrade U.S. sovereign debt from the triple-A rating it has
held since Pearl Harbor.
The British
newspaper The Guardian wrote of the dramatic news:
"With the political
infighting between the Republicans and Democrats on the deficit
now so bitter that there was a risk of the US government being shut
down earlier this month, S&P said it had taken the decision
to change its outlook because 'the path to addressing these issues
is not clear to us.'"
"We believe
there is a significant risk," said S&P credit analyst Nikola
Swann, "that congressional negotiations could result in no agreement
on a medium-term fiscal strategy until after the 2012 congressional
and presidential elections."
Obama adviser
Austan Goolsbee challenged the S&P rating and rationale behind
it. "They are saying their political judgment is that over the next
two years, they didn't see a political agreement. ... I don't think
that the S&P's political judgment is right."
But the S&P's
projection of gridlock got support this week when two polls showed
that the nation is much closer to Obama's resistance to Ryan's plan
than it is to Ryan.
A Washington
Post-ABC News poll found 78 percent of Americans oppose cutting
spending on Medicare to reduce the deficit, and 69 percent oppose
cutting Medicaid. Obama's plan to raise taxes on couples earning
$250,000 a year or more wins the support of 72 percent of voters.
A McClatchy-Marist
poll found 2 in 3 Americans favoring raising taxes on those earning
more than $250,000 but 4 in 5 voters opposing cutting Medicare or
Medicaid.
Obama's position
is in sync with three-fourths of the nation.
Why would he
retreat from this unassailable high ground to seek a compromise
with a hugely unpopular Republican proposal? Why not pound the Ryan
Republicans remorselessly as defenders of the rich and slashers
of the social safety net if America agrees with you?
Obama may have
found an issue to save his presidency.
He is today
upside-down in every national poll. Many more Americans disapprove
of the job he is doing than approve. Why would a president who has
lost the support of half his country surrender a strong position
that three-fourths of his country agrees with?
Democratic
allies on Capitol Hill would regard this as madness.
What of the
Republicans who appear today to be on the wrong side of the deficit
reduction debate? Will they look at these polls and say, "We must
stop trying to reform Medicare and Medicaid and move closer to Obama
and impose higher taxes on successful Americans"?
To ask the
question is to answer it.
Should Republicans
revert to their venerable role of pre-Reagan days – the tax collectors
for the welfare state – what would be the argument left for the
existence of the party?
Not only does
S&P's grim assessment of the prospects for U.S. deficit reduction
seem sound. News from across the pond points to a fast-approaching
day of reckoning in the financial world.
European investors
are now demanding and getting 22 percent interest on two-year Greek
bonds. And with Greek debt at 150 percent of its gross domestic
product – the same as Zimbabwe – the question is no longer whether
Athens will default, but when, how and what will be the losses to
European citizens, banks and governments who hold Greek paper.
Will Greece
be the only domino to fall, or will Ireland and Portugal follow
and the contagion spread across Europe and leap the Atlantic?
What makes
this appear more imminent was the triumph this week of a Euro-skeptic
and ethnonationalist party, the True Finns, which vaulted from five
seats in the Helsinki Parliament to 38 and will almost surely be
in the new government.
High
on the True Finns' agenda: tougher terms for any bailout of Portugal
and using Finland's EU veto to kill Angela Merkel's plan for a super-bailout
fund after 2013. Like other northern Europeans and even Germans
in Merkel's party, the stolid Finns are sick of subsidizing the
self-indulgent deadbeats of Club Med.
And here is
where the risk to Obama comes. Playing off Ryan may be smart short-term
politics, but if the world financial system were to come crashing
down – in part because of the absence of a U.S. deficit deal – no
one would blame Paul Ryan.
The Herbert
Hoover of that depression would be Barack Obama.
April
22, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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