![]() by Ted Rall |
COMMENTARY
The Democratic ticket for president holds jut a narrow lead over the Romney-Ryan Republican ticket. What’s going wrong for the Democrats? Mainly, it’s the economy. It sucks. Still. Democrats say the president inherited the meltdown from Bush. But Americans blame Obama.
“The nation’s painfully slow pace of growth is now the primary threat to Mr. Obama’s bid for a second term, and some economists and political allies say the cautious response to the housing crisis was the administration’s most significant mistake,” reports The New York Times. Obama’s big screw-up: “He tried to finesse the cleanup of the housing crash, rejecting unpopular proposals for a broad bailout of homeowners facing foreclosure in favor of a limited aid program—and a bet that a recovering economy would take care of the rest.”
Recovery? What recovery?
The depressed housing market, coupled with the reduced purchasing power of tens of millions of Americans who saw their homes’ value fall to below that of their mortgages, as well as the millions who lost their homes to eviction and/or foreclosure, makes recovery unlikely to impossible for the foreseeable future.
Many people, including yours truly, warned that the millions of Americans who were evicted under foreclosure, many of them illegally, were more “too big to fail” than Citigroup. So where was our leadership?
Some, like former Congressman Jim Marshall of Georgia voted for TARP, but urged the Obama administration to condition the bailout on forcing the banks to refinance mortgages and write down principal to reflect the new reality of lower housing prices. “There was another way to deal with this, and that is what I supported: forcing the banks to deal with this. It would have been better for the economy and lots of different neighborhoods and people owning houses in those neighborhoods,” Marshall said.
Voters aren’t mad at Obama for not being clairvoyant. They’re pissed off because he ignored people who were smart and prescient in favor of those who were clueless and self-interested, like Tim Geithner, U.S. Sec. of the Treasury. He may be about to pay a price for that terrible decision.
Tens of millions of Americans already have.
In order to be a good leader, Disraeli said, “I must follow the people.” Americans haven’t seen much real leadership on the federal level since Reagan. Where there’s been progress, such as on gay rights, the president only stepped forward after public opinion had shifted enough to make it safe.









