As many on the right struggle to respond to encouraging economic news, several Republican officials have crafted yet another talking point to consider: the nascent, fragile recovery isn’t as strong as the one we saw in 1983 and 1984.
Several [House GOP] members compared the current economic recovery unfavorably to the rebound from recession during the Reagan administration. In January 1984, as Reagan was preparing to run for reelection, the unemployment rate fell to 8 percent, marking an even more marked decline from a jobless rate of 10.4 percent a year earlier.
Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) said Reagan inherited a “more difficult, deeper recession” than Obama, who has repeatedly called the economic collapse he inherited the most serious since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
At a certain level, this gives away the store, in much the same way Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) did yesterday — once Republicans argue, “This recovery isn’t as good as the one in the ’80s,” they’re necessarily conceding that the economy has improved under Obama. They are, after all, referencing a “recovery” directly.
But let’s put that aside for now. Looking at this on the substance, proponents of the “tale of two recoveries” argument deserve credit for creativity, but the GOP talking points on this are deeply misleading, if not ridiculous.









