Day: March 20, 2009

Southern Governors and the Stimulus Package Controversy

The governors of some of the poorest states in the Union, all Southern, have joined Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, in turning down some of the stimulus package money made available by the Obama Administration, supposedly based on principle.

This includes Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, Rick Perry of Texas, Haley Barbour of Mississippi, Bob Riley of Alabama, and Mark Sanford of South Carolina.  These states have such dire poverty and desperately need any federal aid made available, but for political and ideological reasons, their governors are ready to sacrifice their population, in a number of cases for strategy reasons, with the Presidential race of 2012 on their minds.  I am referring not only to Sarah Palin here, but also all the above named Southern governors except maybe for Bob Riley of Alabama.

All I can say is that IF the GOP goes ahead and nominates Palin, Jindal, Perry, Barbour, or Sanford as their 2012 Republican nominee, the party will have committed suicide, and finally will disappear as the opposition party.  These six governors, including Sarah Palin, should be ashamed of themselves, and it is interesting how many of them have incurred the wrath of their own state legislatures. Hopefully, these legislatures will be able to reverse the crazy decisions of their irresponsible governors!

The Changing Attitude of Joe Lieberman and Arnold Schwarzegger Toward President Obama

During the 2008 Presidential campaign, Independent Senator Joe Lieberman  of Connecticut and Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California made clear their strong support of Senator John McCain, the GOP Presidential nominee. 

Suddenly, two months into the Obama Administration, both political figures have major compliments and positive statements to make about the President’s programs, actions, and rhetoric.

It is almost like one wonders how these two men could have so quickly switched their loyalties from McCain to Obama.  The transformation is amazing, but it is also a testimonial to both men that they could realize the principled intentions and strong actions of the President are good for the country, at a time when we have divisive radio talk show hosts working very hard to divide the country and promote the failure of the President’s agenda.

It is good to see some good people show their loyalty to the nation’s welfare despite earlier political differences, and this includes not only Lieberman and Schwarzenegger, but also GOP senators Arlen Specter, Olympia Snowe, and Susan Collins, and Republican governor Charlie Crist of Florida.  In the midst of demagoguery, there is also present, thankfully, some real statesmanship!

Conservatives, Republicans, and Marginal Tax Rates on the Rich

It is absolutely amazing how Republicans and conservative talk show hosts complain about President Obama’s plan to raise the marginal tax rate on the top five percent of the population from 36 to 39 percent.  They tell us that Obama is a socialist because of this attempt  to make the super rich pay more after years of very low marginal tax rates which have seen the wealth of the country flow ever more into the hands of a small elite, at the same time that the middle class has been collapsing.

When one looks at the highest tax rates on the wealthy throughout the past century, one discovers that the tax rate was above 60 percent from 1932 to 1980 and reached a peak of 90 percent in the Eisenhower (Republican) Presidency! It was only 40 percent or lower since 1988, even being 50 percent in the Reagan years.The only time it was in the mid 20s was in the Coolidge-Hoover years in the 1920s. 

So, in other words, the only times it was really low was when poverty grew, the middle class shrunk, and corporate corruption and greed and materialism prevailed, the 1920s and the years since 1988.  Is that not enough evidence of the need to raise the rate to try to address the horrible inequities that have developed in the last generation?  Realize in the two periods just mentioned, the result of the low tax policy on the elite was the coming of the Great Depression in the 1930s and the coming of what is now called by many the Great Recession that we are suffering right now. 

So my thought is that if the elite rich have a problem with paying more taxes, I would just say "sorry", but to assert that the time for selfishness and greed is over, and it is time to be thankful for the great opportunities this country has presented to you, and you now owe the country your appreciation by paying up at a higher tax rate without complaint!

Senator Arlen Specter’s Future

Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, one of the three GOP senators to back the President’s economic stimulus bill, now faces a tough reelection battle and must make a decision as to strategy for the 2010 senatorial battle.

If he chooses to run as an independent, he will be involved in a three way race, and would be unlikely to win.  If he runs in the Republican primary, he is likely to lose to a more conservative Republican, and then under Pennsylvania law, could not run as an independent, as Joe Lieberman did in Connecticut in 2006 after losing the Democratic primary to an antiwar Democrat.

Of course, since he will be reaching the age of 80 and has been courageously battling cancer twice in the last few years, he could also retire after 30 years in the Senate. However, he seems to be leaning against retirement,and certainly continues as an active, involved member of the Senate.

Were he to choose to switch parties and run as a Democrat, it is likely he would have little opposition in the Democratic primary and would win reelection in a state heavily tilting to the Democratic party in recent years.  He actually was a Democrat early in his career in the 1960s, and since he votes so often with the Democrats and is often considered a RINO (Republican in Name Only), it would be a natural move on his part.

Senator Specter has had a long, distinguished and also controversial career.  Looking back over three decades, I see him as a Senator who has contributed much to the Senate and the nation, so I hope he will decide to switch over to the Democrats, the party that he probably never should have left over 40 years ago.

President Obama, Sarah Palin, and Special Needs

President Obama went on Jay Leno’s nighttime show last night and made a major gaffe.

Referring to his improved bowling score (129) after performing miserably in a bowling alley during the campaign, Obama compared his effort to the Special Olympics athletes.  He realized immediately after the appearance that he had blundered, and from Air Force One, called Timothy Shriver, the head of the Special Olympics and profusely apologized, and his press secretary also issued an apology for Obama’s poor choice of words and his using the comment as a joke.

This was obviously an insensitive action and use of words by the President, but out of it may come a realization that special needs people need more recognition and understanding, and it seems likely that the President will take action to promote a commitment to doing more and showing more sensitivity to this very important part of our population.  He can set an example for the nation by learning from this gaffe and applying the lesson in public policy.

Meanwhile, Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska, who had a special needs child last year, just months before her entrance into the Presidential campaign, denounced the President for his insensitivity and poor choice of words.  One could actually agree with Palin on this, but then she joined a few other GOP governors in  rejecting some of the federal stimulus aid offered to her state.  That in itself may seem irrelevant, but get this:  The aid rejected was for education, including for special needs children.  Now if that is not hypocrisy on her part, then what is it?  She had a good point in her favor, and then went ahead and lost the credibility she had momentarily earned. 

Somehow, I would rather trust that Obama will deal with this issue of special needs better than Sarah Palin, based on her rejection of aid to help these people, most of whom do not have the fortune of being related to the governor of the state, who has her own assets to help bring up her own special needs son.  Obama may have blundered, but Sarah Palin symbolically shot herself in the foot.  A moment of moral superiority was quickly lost by her extremely narrow minded, insensitive and totally political action shortly after issuing her criticism of the President.