In a must-read editorial this morning, The  Wall Street Journal writes, “[T]wo months before an election, and 19  months after the mother of all spending programs, President Obama said yesterday  he's rolling out one more plan to stimulate the economy. . . . [T]he effort  itself is a tacit admission that his earlier proposals have  flopped.”
Discussing the Obama administration’s previous $814 billion  stimulus bill, the WSJ points out, “[Obama economic adviser Larry] Summers  promised this would have a 1.5 ‘multiplier’ effect on GDP growth, and White House economists Christina Romer and Jared Bernstein famously predicted the  spending would keep the jobless rate below 8%.” The editors explain, “[N]ever  before has government spent so much and intervened so directly in credit  allocation to spur growth, yet the results have been mediocre at best. In return  for adding nearly $3 trillion in federal debt in two years, we still have 14.9  million unemployed.”
However, President Obama used a Labor Day speech in Wisconsin  to call for even more stimulus spending. According to The  New York Times, “President Obama, looking to stimulate a sluggish  economy and create jobs, called Monday for Congress to approve major upgrades to  the nation’s roads, rail lines and runways — part of a six-year plan that would  cost tens of billions of dollars and create a government-run bank to finance  innovative transportation projects. With Democrats facing an increasingly bleak  midterm election season, Mr. Obama used a speech at a union gathering on Labor  Day . . . to outline his plan. It calls for a quick infusion of $50 billion in  government spending that White House officials said could spur job growth as  early as next year — if Congress approves.”
Obama declared,  “[T]he bottom line is this, Milwaukee — this will not only create jobs  immediately, it’s also going to make our economy hum over the long haul.” And  “Labor Secretary Hilda Solis told NBC’s Today program the proposal ‘will put  people back to work immediately,’” writes McClatchy.  But Obama and Solis seem to be the only people in the administration under that  impression. As McClatchy  notes, “White House aides conceded, however, that the proposal, which still  would have to be approved by Congress and then implemented, is not likely to  start creating jobs until next year. “We’re not like trying to put out an idea  today that, in October 2010, this is going to create a lot of jobs,” said a  senior administration official . . . . ‘This is not what this is.’” And the  AP writes, “Even if he can get the plan through Congress, at a time when  lawmakers and voters are worried about federal deficits, the transportation  spending plan envisioned by President Barack Obama wouldn't create jobs right  away. Senior administration officials say the initial projects would lead to new  jobs over the course of next year.”
As Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said  yesterday, “After the administration pledged that a trillion dollars in  borrowed stimulus money would create 4 million jobs and keep the unemployment  rate under 8 percent, their latest plan for another stimulus should be met with  justifiable skepticism. After failing to deliver on their economic promises for  more than 18 months, the administration wants to do it again--this time with  higher taxes for even more new spending. . . . A last-minute, cobbled-together  stimulus bill with more than $50 billion in new tax hikes will not reverse the  complete lack of confidence Americans have in Washington Democrats' ability to  help this economy.”
Abysmal new polls for Democrats released today bear that out.  The Washington  Post/ABC News poll shows 57% disapprove of Obama’s handling of the economy  and more now say the President’s economic policies are making things worse, 33%,  than better, 30%. And NBC News writes  that the new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll “puts Obama’s approval rating at 45  percent, which is down two points from the last poll in early August. What’s  more, only 39 percent approve of his handling of the economy — his lowest mark  on this question.” These numbers follow a Saturday  CNN poll showing 59% disapprove of Obama’s handling of the economy, while  only 40% approve, “a new low for the president in CNN polling.”
Describing its poll, NBC writes, “Americans are deeply  pessimistic about the state of the economy. Only 26 percent think the economy  will improve in the next 12 months . . . and just 26 percent believe their wages  will increase in the next year.” And Politico’s Mike Allen points out, “In the  ABC/Washington Post poll, an astonishing 92 percent of respondents described the  state of the nation’s economy as bad, compared with 8 percent who said it was  good.”
In the face of all this President Obama’s solution is  more government spending and more tax increases! Now it is his own  administration admitting his proposal won’t put people back to work  quickly. Do You trust the Washington Democrats asking for more of their money?  Where are those ‘shovel-ready’ jobs they were  promised more than a year ago?
Tags: democrats, economic policies, unemployment, no jobs, stimulus failure, Obama Administration, polls To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. Thanks!
New Polls Find Americans Fed Up With The Democrats Economic Policies
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