| More than once in the morning after 
                      the President’s jobs speech, I had the same conversation: 
                      “it’s more than I expected.” “It’s a far cry from enough.” 
                      “It doesn’t really matter because the Republicans will kill 
                      it.”  Therein 
                      lay the quandary for progressives. Should we rally around 
                      a program that is deficient, or continue to press for more 
                      effective measures? My answer has been: both.
 Unquestionably, passage of the American 
                      Jobs Act would be a good thing. As the President outlined 
                      it, the proposal aims to “to put more people back to work 
                      and more money in the pockets of those who are working,” 
                      and “create more jobs for construction workers, more jobs 
                      for teachers, more jobs for veterans, and more jobs for 
                      long-term unemployed.” To say that it doesn’t matter is 
                      to turn our backs on the millions of people out there struggling 
                      to maintain themselves and their families amid a faltering 
                      economy. “It’s not nearly as bold as the plan I’d want in 
                      an ideal world,” wrote economist Paul Krugman. “But if it 
                      actually became law, it would probably make a significant 
                      dent in unemployment.” Will the jobs plan “provide a jolt 
                      to an economy that has stalled, and give companies confidence 
                      that if they invest and if they hire, there will be customers 
                      for their products and services”? Well, it’s hard to say. 
                      Every day, the economic crisis appears to get worse. The 
                      President says the economy has stalled. Some economists 
                      suggest it has stalled like an airplane that has lost engine 
                      power and is poised to begin another descent. Combine what 
                      is happening here at home with developments in Europe 
                      and you have the makings of this current crisis of capitalism 
                      turning really ugly. At the moment, it seems to me, we 
                      should endeavor to put aside our policy wonk hats and concentrate 
                      on the politics of the situation. The battle lines are pretty 
                      clear: It’s the White House proposal, or doing nothing. 
                      There’s nothing else on the table. AFL-CIO President Richard 
                      Trumka holds out hope that the pot will be sweetened. “The 
                      plan announced by the president is only the opening bid,” 
                      he said. “We expect to see more proposals in the next weeks 
                      and months to put America back to work.” We shall see.  The 
                      danger remains that those in the Administration’s camp who 
                      are never anything but political operatives will prevail, 
                      opportunity will give way to political expediency and fall 
                      prey to the notion that the 2012 election trumps all. That 
                      camp argues that all that matters is the vote of ill-defined 
                      “independents” and everything must be “bi-partisan” That 
                      notion should have been put to rest by the most recent Republican 
                      Presidential candidates debate. The GOP has no plan for 
                      job creation. The candidates presented a united front: the 
                      issue in the next election is “Obama.” They seem to have 
                      figured out that the public is more concerned with unemployment 
                      than deficit reduction, and if the jobs crisis is to be 
                      pinned on the President then surely nothing should be done 
                      to alleviate it over the next 13 months.
 “Helping the country is unlikely 
                      to be enough of an incentive for Republicans to pass a bill, 
                      any bill, that Obama supports, even a bill, like this one, 
                      that is assembled mostly from refurbished spare parts collected 
                      from their own ideological warehouse,” wrote Hendrik Hertzberg 
                      in The New Yorker blog. “No doubt many of them sincerely 
                      believe that the end (upping the chances of defeating Obama 
                      and his nefarious agenda of turning America 
                      into a socialist hellhole like Western 
                      Europe) justifies the means (deepening the extent of mass 
                      unemployment, human suffering, and ancillary damage to the 
                      economy and to society).” The Republican approach to tackling 
                      unemployment was well summed up by Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), 
                      who said the party was hoping the President would roll back 
                      regulations, take up entitlement reform, facilitate the 
                      production of more energy, and spur free-trade agreements. Obama has already done too much regulation 
                      reform with his relaxation of air quality standards.  Of 
                      course, the GOP wants to take a hatchet to Social Security, 
                      Medicare and Medicaid. More energy means mountain top strip 
                      mining, and dangerous shale oil pipelines, courtesy of the 
                      big oil companies. As far as trade pacts are concerned, 
                      Corker evidently wasn’t listening when Obama said, “ Now 
                      it’s time to clear the way for a series of trade agreements 
                      that would make it easier for American companies to sell 
                      their products in Panama, Colombia, and South Korea – while 
                      also helping the workers whose jobs have been affected by 
                      global competition. If Americans can buy Kias and Hyundais, 
                      I want to see folks in South 
                      Korea driving Fords and Chevys and 
                      Chryslers. I want to see more products sold around the world 
                      stamped with three proud words: ‘Made in America.’” That’s another question. In the real 
                      world, such agreements are not the panacea they are touted 
                      to be; sometimes they have devastating effects on working 
                      people at both ends of the pacts. Then, there was the out-to-lunch 
                      John Podhoretz writing in the New York Post that 
                      the President “did propose incentives to private-sector 
                      employers, but those incentives do not involve much in the 
                      way of lessening their regulatory or tax burden. Obama mentioned 
                      he had initiated a review of onerous federal regulations 
                      but had so far identified only 500 he could do away with.” Only 500? (I cringe to think what 
                      they might be). “And he spoke once again of making 
                      the wealthy pay more in taxes, which directly affects the 
                      ability of small-business owners to employ more people,” 
                      Podhoretz went on. Actually the two things have very little 
                      to do with each other. The Administration’s proposed hiring-tax 
                      incentives are intended for small business. 
 “The President has delivered a good 
                      start for putting Americans back to work that includes elements 
                      we as progressives have been calling for,” read a joint 
                      statement from Congressional Progressive Caucus co-chairs 
                      Reps. Raul M. Grijalva and Keith Ellison following the president’s 
                      speech. “Our country will finally make essential repairs 
                      to America’s 
                      roads and bridges. Wall Street and multi-millionaires will 
                      start to pay their fair share and support the country that 
                      has helped them prosper. The long-term unemployed, who have 
                      been hit hardest by the recession, will have the support 
                      they need while they find jobs.” “For eight months, the Republicans 
                      have successfully paralyzed the national conversation by 
                      holding the people’s business hostage. They have shown no 
                      interest in putting the livelihoods of millions of working 
                      families ahead of their own narrow political goals. They 
                      have refused to take job creation seriously. As a result, 
                      we have seen record numbers of laid-off teachers, returning 
                      veterans struggling to find work, and firefighters and first 
                      responders hurting for funding.” “The crisis is so severe that we 
                      must do more than the president has proposed,” the Caucus 
                      leaders said September 9. “That’s why next week the Congressional 
                      Progressive Caucus will unveil our Framework to Rebuild 
                      the American Dream. It offers a bold, comprehensive progressive 
                      vision for America 
                      based on what we can do, not the Tea Party vision of what 
                      America can’t do. As we showed with the People’s 
                      Budget, we can create millions of jobs and eliminate the 
                      deficit within ten years if we choose the right priorities 
                      and make good decisions.”  “We 
                      join the President in calling on Congressional Republicans 
                      to put the national interest ahead of partisan stonewalling. 
                      We stand ready to move forward and put American families 
                      back to work.”
 Back to the quandary. A reoccurring theme in much of the 
                      media commentary on the Obama proposals has been futility, 
                      summed up by a Washington Post columnist’s declaration 
                      that “long before the speech, both sides had concluded it 
                      didn’t much matter: Obama has become too weak to enact anything 
                      big enough to do much good.” “I thought it was a great speech,” 
                      the columnist quoted Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) as saying. 
                      “But the odds of Obama getting his plan through Congress 
                      are probably as good as the Nationals winning the league 
                      this year.” Liberal columnist, Harold Meyerson, 
                      called the President’s speech: “Good plan, good vision, 
                      good politics - That was an enlivened President Obama we 
                      saw earlier this evening - impassioned, indignant, non-professorial,” 
                      he wrote in the Washington Post. “And enlivened he 
                      should have been, because the American economy trembles 
                      on the brink of a double-dip recession, and the Republican 
                      opposition has been seized by an ideology that would erode 
                      what remains of the once-great American middle class. Not 
                      to mention, Obama’s own political future and that of his 
                      party are on the line as well.” “The size and the substance of this 
                      new stimulus give Obama and his party the ability not only 
                      to rally many of his disenchanted core supporters but to 
                      reach out to voters in the middle of the political spectrum,” 
                      wrote Meyerson. “That’s partly because more than half the 
                      package - roughly $240 billion - takes the form of a one-year 
                      payroll tax reduction for employees and employers that will 
                      be difficult for Republicans to oppose.  The 
                      tax credits for employees who hire veterans are also a political 
                      winner, though the tax credit for companies that hire the 
                      long-term unemployed (which in Republican-speak will mean 
                      minorities, whose votes they’re not going to get anyway) 
                      is one that the GOP is almost sure to resist. Also likely 
                      to meet a Republican rejection are Obama’s proposals to 
                      build roads and schools, and to fund the retention and rehiring 
                      of tens of thousands of teachers.” Perhaps the most overused word this 
                      year has been “compromise” and we’re going to hear it a 
                      lot more over coming weeks. The danger here is that if the 
                      compromisers in the Administration – the ones too often 
                      anxious to split the difference with the opposition - hold 
                      sway, the Republicans and their “blue dog Democratic allies 
                      will get what their corporate backers want (the tax cut 
                      part) while the long-term jobless, the teachers, students 
                      and poor people are left out in the cold. But wait. It gets worse. Those who 
                      want to take a knife to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid 
                      are still lurking out there. And the President isn’t helping 
                      matters with his repeated ambiguous statements about “reforming” 
                      Medicare. He says this is necessary because of “an aging 
                      population and rising health care costs” Why not tackle 
                      the latter instead of taking from the elderly? Robert Borosage 
                      of the Campaign for America’s 
                      Future noted “the president went out of his way once more 
                      to put Medicare and Medicaid on the table for a grand bargain 
                      with Republicans for dramatic deficit reduction over the 
                      next decade. He promised to detail this in another presentation 
                      next week, threatening to once more deflate the debate we 
                      need over jobs with a return to a debate that is utterly 
                      divisive over deficit reduction.” 
 Then, there is another problem with 
                      the President’s plan. “Putting Americans back to work is 
                      also critical to keeping Social Security and Medicare strong,” 
                      says Max Richtman, president of the National Committee to 
                      Preserve Social Security and Medicare. “However, this proposal 
                      to extend and expand the payroll tax cut threatens Social 
                      Security’s independence by forcing the program to compete 
                      for limited federal dollars from general revenues, and by 
                      breaking the link between contributions and benefits. As 
                      we predicted back in December, ‘There’s no such thing as 
                      a temporary tax cut.’ Just months after being reassured 
                      that diverting contributions from Social Security would 
                      last for just one year, Congress is now being asked to extend 
                      and even increase this diversion of payroll taxes for another 
                      year. Doubling-down by also cutting employer contributions 
                      greatly worsens the situation, and makes it even harder 
                      to restore the Social Security system to self-financing. 
                      If this extension passes, there is no guarantee that Congress 
                      won’t be asked to extend it yet again, for a 3rd or even 
                      a 4th year or longer, and expand it even more, making it 
                      a de facto permanent part of the tax code. This is death 
                      by a thousand cuts. “Social Security is paid for, earned 
                      by, and promised to American workers. We call on the President 
                      and the Congress to reaffirm the fact that Social Security 
                      has been, is, and will continue to be, a self-financed insurance 
                      program; and that this temporary payroll tax cut does not 
                      constitute a precedent that would undermine this principle.”  Ari 
                      Berman wisely asked in The Nation, “Could Obama’s 
                      to-be-determined deficit speech undermine the momentum from 
                      his jobs speech? Perhaps,” he continued, “The president 
                      left open the possibility for significant changes to Medicare 
                      and Medicaid, which won’t be popular with many Americans. 
                      The super-committee still has the power in Washington. Once its deadline nears, the conversation may once again 
                      revolve around deficits instead of jobs, especially since 
                      there’s no built-in incentive forcing the committee to focus 
                      on jobs, as compared to the triggered spending cuts.”
 Labor leader Trumka Richard L. Trumka 
                      clearly senses the danger here. In the P.S. to his statement 
                      welcoming the President’s speech, he said. “Some politicians 
                      claim cuts to our social safety net, deregulation and lower 
                      taxes for the rich will fix our problems. But they’re flat 
                      wrong. If we continue down this road, it only will destroy 
                      more jobs and send us into a vicious downward spiral. Our 
                      country is too good and too rich to weaken our commitment 
                      to safety net protections such as Social Security, Medicare, 
                      Medicaid and unemployment insurance. “We don’t have time to waste on the 
                      same old failed policies that drove our economy off a cliff 
                      in the first place. Tell Congress: Working families will 
                      judge our elected leaders by whether they act with integrity 
                      and energy to create good jobs now.” “Progressives are demanding action 
                      on jobs,” wrote Borosage. “An inspired president on the 
                      stump is vital to making that case. His agenda is a first 
                      step, designed to attract bipartisan support. If Republicans 
                      oppose this, they will be turning their backs on working 
                      people, either out of misguided ideological extremism, or 
                      for partisan political advantage. The president is right. 
                      It is time to act. “President Obama has taken a step 
                      in the right direction with his speech and jobs plan. It 
                      was a small step - but it has to be to present Republicans 
                      with the choice to cooperate or get pushed out of the way,” 
                      said Dave Johnson of the Campaign for America’s future. “If this 
                      passes it is a win for jobs and the economy - and therefore 
                      the President’s re-election. If Republicans block it, the 
                      President wins because voters will push Republicans out 
                      and the country will be able to get moving again. But it 
                      all depends on follow-through. The President has to keep 
                      out there, pounding on this, and only this, every single 
                      day until there is a vote. Every. Single. Day. That is the 
                      key.” BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member 
                      Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of 
                      the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and formerly worked for 
                      a healthcare union. Click here to contact Mr. Bloice. |