About a month ago, shortly after the last jobs report was released, The Daily Show ran a game-show-style segment called “Polish That Turd.” The point was, after awful jobs news, Republicans were on the attack, and it was up to the Obama White House and its allies to put a positive spin on disheartening data.
It was a funny bit, and it was premised on the widely-held conventional wisdom: the burden is on the president, and no one else. When the job numbers are good, it’s proof of Obama’s wisdom; when the job numbers are bad, it’s proof of Obama’s missteps.
Perhaps now would be a good time for a reality check. Last fall, Obama said the job market wasn’t nearly strong enough, and he proposed an ambitious jobs plan called the American Jobs Act. Independent estimates showed that the policy, if implemented, would create as many as 1.9 million U.S. jobs in 2012 alone. Congressional Republicans, however, killed it.
Indeed, consider this pattern of events:
1. With the job market struggling, Obama unveils the American Jobs Act, a State of the Union agenda filled with economic measures, and an economic “to-do list.”
2. Republican lawmakers ignore the proposals, and the job market deteriorates.









