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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sandintoes who wrote (66712)9/20/2013 1:39:29 PM
From: LLCF  Respond to of 71588
 
LOL... I've been traveling the last couple weeks so seeing the news.... Republicans are insuring they crater in the next election. Another vote against Obama-care... = another vote against the constitution and the way the founders set forth the way our system works.

How many is that??? Trying something over and over that clearly doesn't work... isn't that called something?? Some sort of psychological pathology... look it up... "deranged" comes to mind- ha ha

DAK



To: sandintoes who wrote (66712)10/6/2013 10:02:57 AM
From: greatplains_guy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 71588
 
Obama's Reckless Default Fear-Mongering
By Larry Kudlow - October 5, 2013

Never before has an American president threatened and risked the U.S. economy and financial markets the way Barack Obama has in recent days. For his own narrow political ends, Obama and his minions have actually accused the Republican party of deliberately provoking a Treasury debt default because they don't agree with the Obama position on the continuing budget resolution and the debt ceiling.

"As reckless as a government shutdown is ... an economic shutdown that results from default would be dramatically worse," Obama said on Thursday. Clearly targeting Republicans, he said a default would be "the height of irresponsibility."

Then, on the same day, Obama's Treasury Department released a brutal statement that said a default would prove catastrophic, causing credit markets to freeze and leading to "a financial crisis and recession that could echo the events of 2008 or worse."

So who exactly in the Republican ranks is calling for a Treasury debt default? Who? The GOP disagrees with Obama on the budget and health care, but no Republicans have ever said they favor defaulting on the nation's debt.

What's going on here?

I have a strong suspicion that Obama and his troops are trying to provoke a massive sell-off in stocks and bonds to further their political position. And a massive sell-off like that could conceivably become a self-fulfilling prophecy, driving the economy into recession. Indeed, it could drive the whole global economy back into recession, since U.S markets are the epicenter of the world's system.

This kind of political tactic is beneath the presidency. No president -- not Nixon, Carter, Reagan, the Bushes or Clinton -- has ever menaced and assaulted the financial world to achieve short-term political gains the way Obama has. This has never happened before.

And frankly, because of the extraordinary importance of our financial system, especially after the crisis of 2008, Obama's selfish tactics border on the unpatriotic. Presidents don't act that way. They are custodians of their office. They attempt to create a positive legacy for the future. And they don't try to pull down the whole system for their own gain.

This is negativism to a fault. The people in the White House and Treasury know better. But apparently they know no political bounds.

According to a Wall Street Journal story, one senior Obama official went so far as to say, "We are winning ... it doesn't really matter to us how long the shutdown lasts, because what matters is the end result."

Right now the hero of this sad episode is House Speaker John Boehner. He countered Obama by issuing a statement that he is determined to prevent a federal default. He then stated, "I don't believe we should default on our debt, it's not good for our country." Boehner even indicated he would rely on Democratic votes in the House to pass a debt-limit increase and avoid default.

The difference between Obama and Boehner on this and other subjects is that Mr. Obama lacks a sense of historical experience and doesn't recognize what a high-stakes game he is playing. Mr. Boehner, on the other hand, has the benefit of years of high-level experience, and he knows how dangerous loose lips can be in affecting the markets and economy.

Earlier this year, House Republican Tom McClintock and 106 co-sponsors introduced the Full Faith and Credit Act, which would protect the payment, principal, and interest on U.S. Treasury securities, including those held by Social Security funds, even in the event that the federal debt reaches the statutory limit. In other words, by law, not default. Two years ago Senator Pat Toomey introduced similar legislation. And more recently, House Financial Services chairman Jeb Hensarling renewed the campaign for that bill. But Obama and the Democrats have always opposed it. And how bizarre is it that Obama opposes the one piece of legislation that would make it impossible for him or anybody else to make Treasury-default accusations?

Down through the years, presidents have made policy mistakes that severely damaged the value of stocks and bonds. And roughly 100 million Americans now own stocks, while countless others own bonds. And in our interconnected world, foreign investors around the globe participate in these markets. Yet our current president would risk all these assets by making phony default charges and by virtually threatening a financial and economic catastrophe if he doesn't get his way on the shutdown and the debt ceiling.

Here's a little bit of good news: Stocks and bonds were virtually flat across the first four days of the shutdown.

They have so far ignored Obama's phony default charges. And they know that the U.S. will never -- never -- default on its Treasury obligations.

So once again I argue that markets are smarter than politicians. Let's hope I'm right.


Lawrence Kudlow is host of far left CNBC's The Kudlow Report and co-host of The Call. He is also a former Reagan economic advisor and a syndicated columnist. Visit his blog, Kudlow's Money Politics.

realclearpolitics.com



To: sandintoes who wrote (66712)10/10/2013 8:35:41 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
The Bigger Battle Behind the Shutdown
A staggering $250 billion per month, 80% of spending, runs on autopilot without congressional control..

By DAVID MALPASS
October 9, 2013, 7:58 p.m. ET

At its core, the shutdown is part of a much bigger battle to restrain the federal government. It is spending $3.6 trillion per year without a budget, and its expenditures are expected to increase rapidly in the years ahead.

Meanwhile, the government has piled up $17 trillion in debt and $60 trillion more in unfunded spending promises. The Federal Reserve will borrow $1.1 trillion in 2013 alone to buy bonds—and it reserves the right to borrow unlimited amounts for future bond purchases without congressional or presidential permission.

These are crisis-level problems. Whether the government is open or closed, they are surely grounds for immediate talks between the president and Congress on ways to pare ineffective federal programs, restrain spending and reduce borrowing.

Ducking governance decisions year after year will leave the U.S. too weak to face global challenges. Big government has meant slow growth, painfully high youth and minority unemployment and falling median incomes—except in the Washington, D.C., area, which recent census data show is growing ever richer.

Under current law, the federal government and Federal Reserve are in a sharp upward trajectory in their power and the riskiness of their policies. Federal domination of the economy and financial markets is only increasing. The government shutdown reflects a Republican demand for permanent new checks and balances—to restrain a government that spends wildly without a budget, buys $1 trillion per year in overpriced bonds from an already-rich Wall Street, and micromanages federal medical care but exempts unions and Congress from the sting of regulations that affect others.

Washington's panic prior to the budget sequester that took effect earlier this year gave a glimpse of the truth: Much federal spending can't be justified. The government shutdown is giving more insight into the problem—a staggering $250 billion per month, 80% of spending, runs on autopilot without any congressional involvement or control. So much for the Constitution's bedrock principle that "No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law."

To break the impasse, and to address the government's disastrous finances, the president must lead the way. Mr. Obama has made clear that he will not change ObamaCare, but given the challenges the country faces, a blanket insistence on keeping the whole government unchanged isn't defensible.

One good starting point for presidential leadership is the fraud-plagued federal disability programs that cost taxpayers $200 billion annually. There are innumerable other such programs, as well as roughly 200 independent federal agencies, many with little purpose and certainly not enough purpose to justify more debt.

To avoid future stalemates like the current one, making a legislative change is clearly imperative: The current debt-limit law, despite its name, operates to make the debt larger, not smaller. The law should be rewritten to mandate continuous spending restraint when debt exceeds the ceiling.

Fortunately, an actual default is a red herring. The president has sweeping powers through Treasury to continue paying the national debt. Mr. Obama alluded to this on Tuesday by listing the non-debt obligations that might be paid late, including government contractors, veterans and Social Security recipients (whose checks are due Nov. 1). In effect, the government would choose to pay them late and use newly arrived tax revenues to maintain debt payments.

Treasury Secretary Jack Lew's weekend appearances on four major networks made the same point. He complained about Republicans extorting the president—then defined default as "choosing not to pay bills on time."

The administration is frustrated that Wall Street is largely ignoring its talk of default, hence the president's cautioning the stock and bond markets—on Tuesday afternoon, in the heart of the trading day—about the potential for catastrophe.

Democrats are hoping that the political consequences of a broader shutdown of government payments, what the president is calling an economic shutdown, will force House Republicans to allow a vote on a short-term extension of the debt limit.

Maybe so, but the president might have a tough time convincing House Democrats to vote for more debt with no reforms. The better course would be to agree on reforms now—there's ample common ground—and put an end to the downward spiral in rhetoric.

Rather than discuss restraint, the administration has increasingly turned to the Federal Reserve as a crutch. The Fed is borrowing and spending $85 billion per month on bonds, and it claims the legal authority to increase its debt at will. Wall Street is intensely focused on supporting this profligacy and profiting from it. The Fed's debt will reach $4 trillion at year-end, with at least $200 billion of it not counted properly in the national debt.

The Fed is choosing to buy long-term bonds with short-term debt. The result is a rapid shortening in the effective maturity of the national debt that benefits current politicians but puts taxpayers at risk. Like an adjustable-rate mortgage, the borrower, in this case the government, gets a lower interest rate now but will have to refinance at higher rates later.

Compounding the taxpayer risk, Treasury has scheduled a November launch of a new class of floating-rate debt that will compete with the Fed's debt when interest rates begin to normalize. This leaves a huge portion of the national debt exposed to higher interest rates. And as Europe's weak southern flank demonstrated in their 2010-12 crisis, financial markets treat floating-rate and short-term debt like blood in the water.

The president keeps telling the public that Republicans would, in effect, "burn down your house" if he doesn't negotiate. Republicans should ignore the outrageous charges of extortion and blackmail coming from the other side and continue to seek positive change. The upside is clear: Growth, jobs, the dollar and financial markets would surge if the shutdown leads to restraint.

Mr. Malpass is president of Encima Global LLC. He served as deputy assistant Treasury secretary in the Reagan administration.

online.wsj.com



To: sandintoes who wrote (66712)12/5/2013 9:44:52 AM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation

Recommended By
sandintoes

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
Obama's Red-Line Presidency
The next president will have to restore the tradition of durable U.S. foreign commitments.
By Daniel Henninger
Dec. 4, 2013 6:59 p.m. ET

"We have communicated in no uncertain terms with every player in the region that that's a red line for us and that there would be enormous consequences if we start seeing movement on the chemical weapons front or the use of chemical weapons."— Barack Obama, Aug. 20, 2012

"First of all, if you've got health insurance, you like your doctors, you like your plan, you can keep your doctor, you can keep your plan. Nobody is talking about taking that away from you."—Barack Obama, multiple versions


What would you rather be: an American lost inside an ObamaCare exchange or a Syrian rebel? No matter who gets touched by the helping hand of Barack Obama, the problem is not merely the broken promise but the chaos that follows the break.

Start with ObamaCare. When Mr. Obama addressed the nonperformance of HealthCare.gov, here's one of the things he said: "What we're also discovering is that insurance is complicated to buy."

Come again? You're discovering this? It sounds as if ObamaCare was sprung over beer-and-pretzels by a bunch of guys watching hoops at the White House.

The one group of people in the world who would believe this is how ObamaCare came to life would be the Syrian rebels. They also got hit by a glitch.

In August, Bashar Assad gassed and killed some 1,400 people, many children. He crossed the famous Obama "red line." John Kerry, Susan Rice and Samantha Power gave powerful speeches about the need to respond. Policy makers in Washington, Paris, Riyadh, Jerusalem and Damascus expected the U.S. to hit Assad's air-force assets.

Didn't happen. Mr. Obama pivoted to Russian President Vladimir Putin's idea that Assad would let his cache of chemical weapons be destroyed.

The first tangible result of this post-red-line deal was that the Syrian civil war evaporated from the news. The war didn't stop; it vanished.

The Wall Street Journal this week reported an update on the Obama-Putin deal to destroy Assad's murderous chemicals. It made one blink in disbelief. No country in the world is willing to dispose of Assad's chemical weapons on its territory. Too dangerous. So on Sunday of Thanksgiving weekend the Obama White House put out Plan B.

It's somehow going to move the most lethal chemicals—mustard gas, sarin, VX—to a ship outfitted "with field deployable hydrolysis system technology," sail out onto the ocean somewhere and destroy the stuff with neutralizing caustic chemicals. Where are the save-the-whales people when you need them? Even the ocean has to take the fall for another Obama policy lurch.

Mr. Obama has now committed the U.S. to another major project: slowing or ending (it's hard to tell which exactly) Iran's nuclear-bomb program. Here Mr. Obama decided he would largely dismantle the economic sanctions regime against Iran. This was an international red line painstakingly assembled over 10 years. It was working. Three days before Mr. Obama announced the interim deal, the National Iranian Gas Co. declared bankruptcy.

Rather than let the mullahs deal with the rising stress of economic disintegration, Mr. Obama replaced the sanctions with his own negotiating red line: a six-month moratorium, which is "reversible."

It wouldn't matter if Team Obama was improvising policy with things no one cares about, say, wrecking a bank. But skateboarding through the U.S. health-insurance system or America's foreign-policy commitments can produce broad-based ruin.

The U.S.'s postwar system of foreign alliances is cracking, or even collapsing.

Saudi Arabia, a U.S. ally since the 1930s, is now openly derisive of the president. Egypt's military government just announced an era of "historic strategic relations" with Russia. Israel calls the Iran initiative a "historic mistake." What all these American allies have in common is that their insurance agreements with the U.S. have been canceled. But no worries; it'll be replaced with something "better."

The famous Obama "pivot" toward Asia has gone slack. Vice President Joe Biden is now visiting Japan, China and South Korea—and not only because of China's multiple claims to hegemony over the region's waters.

As with Russia in the Middle East, China's top leaders exploited Mr. Obama's hither-and-thither foreign policy. When the president skipped two Asian-nation summits in October (blaming the government shutdown morass), China's attending leadership proposed an array of economic cooperation plans for the region.

This is a troubled moment in the U.S.'s relations with the world. What's missing, astonishingly, is a sustained Republican voice on foreign policy. The Democrats carpet-bombed George Bush because he was so unpopular in places like Sweden. The GOP's major figures look frozen in the headlights of opinion polls that put isolationist sentiment above 50%. This vacuum of ideas will default the commander-in-chief issue in 2016 to the only candidate who was formerly secretary of state.

It's looking to the world outside our borders as if America's red lines can be blurred, moved or erased at whim. The next president will have to restore the idea of a U.S. commitment to its original, more durable meaning.

Write to henninger@wsj.com

online.wsj.com