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No matter what happens, the top issue is jobs

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
November 10, 2009

(AP File)

In the last week, there have been four major events with the potential to dominate news coverage for many, many days: the off-year elections, the Fort Hood shootings, the House passage of Obama-PelosiCare, and the rise of unemployment to 10.2 percent. In most discussions -- in the papers, on television, and on radio -- unemployment has ranked fourth among the four. The others were newer, or more immediate, or more compelling, at least for a while.

But the news will always return to unemployment when other topics fade. "Any time you have unemployment this high, it is the number one story, whether it's being written about or not," says David Winston, a Republican pollster who for months has urged GOP officeholders to focus steadily on the issue. Double-digit unemployment is the default top story of the year; whatever else happens, the national conversation will come back to unemployment as long as the jobless rate remains unacceptably high.

You don't have to be a Republican strategist to agree. "Obama's focus on health care rather than jobs, when the economy is still so fragile ... could make it appear that the administration has its priorities confused," writes Robert Reich, former Clinton secretary of labor and a supporter of nationalized health care. "While affordable health care is critically important to Americans, making a living is more urgent."

Reich wrote those words nearly a week before we learned, last Friday, that unemployment had hit 10.2 percent. And on that Friday, the news about President Obama was that he had delayed, by a day, his pep talk to House Democrats preparing to pass the health care bill. Obama stayed in the news over the weekend with highly visible statements on health care.

What a difference from the first days of his administration when -- with unemployment at 7.6 percent -- the president seemed totally focused on jobs.

"Experts agree that if nothing is done, the unemployment rate could reach double digits," Obama said in his weekly address on Jan. 24, urging Congress to quickly pass a proposed $1 trillion stimulus bill.

The nightmare "double digit" scenario became Obama's mantra. "If we don't act immediately ... the national unemployment rate will approach double digits," he said in early February at a town hall in Florida. "Approach double digits," he repeated at a speech in Indiana. "Double digits," he wrote in an op-ed in The Washington Post.

The only way to prevent unemployment from approaching 10 percent, Obama said, was to pass the stimulus, which in the end cost $787 billion. With the stimulus, the administration claimed, unemployment would stay below 8 percent. Without it, joblessness could climb to 9 percent.

Now, with the stimulus passed and unemployment at 10.2 percent, the White House is not only distracted by health care but divided on its own record. On one hand, Obama and Vice President Biden say the stimulus is working, and will work more in the future. On the other, top economic adviser Christina Romer suggests the stimulus has run its course and unemployment will likely "remain at severely elevated levels" through 2010.

The stimulus is the one big issue that is entirely Obama's, and he's losing support on it. "He has not managed to accomplish the basic thing that the American people want, and that is to provide some sense that the economy is going in the right direction," says David Winston.

On Monday, Biden -- who famously admitted that the Obama economic team didn't really understand the depth of the economic crisis -- headed to Detroit to headline fundraisers for two Democratic congressman at the MGM Grand Casino Hotel. It cost $5,000 to get into the VIP reception.

Biden was met by a Republican ad, "Get Back to Work." "We've lost 178,000 jobs [in Michigan] since Congress passed the massive spending bill President Obama promised would help with jobs," the ad says. "While he's here, will the vice president be working on ways to reduce an unemployment rate of 15.3 percent, the highest of any state in the country?" The question answered itself; there were fundraisers to attend.

In coming weeks, Obama will be involved in contentious Senate fighting over health care. He may travel to Copenhagen for international global-warming talks. And he'll be in Oslo to pick up his Nobel Peace Prize -- a few days after the next set of unemployment numbers are due.

There will be a lot of news. But for millions of Americans, joblessness will remain the big story, no matter what the president does.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts appears on www.ExaminerPolitics.com ExaminerPolitics.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

syn

Nov 10, 2009

Oba Mao and his Ivy-Inbred need Americans to be poor so the poor will have to worship at the alter of Oba-Mao's evil Harvard Inbred.

Keeping America dumb, poor and haplessly stuck on the slave plantation is the Harvard way.

 

Karen

Nov 10, 2009

for those looking for employment right now, a quick online search will show the best companies to work for and another good site is SalaryFor.com http://www.salaryfor.com/ which has career advice, job listings and a huge database of real salaries that companies are paying for any position. you can post your own salary or view others for free.

 

JohnR

Nov 10, 2009

With huge congressional majorities and a far Left messianic president, there's no way the Dems are going to pass on their dreams of a socialist utopia. They're going to cram as much legislation down our throats as the can, as fast as they can...before voters figure out what the costs/impact really are. The bottom line is the Dems really don't care about the impact on the economy, unemployment, or foreign policy; they're focused on unprecedented redistibution of wealth that will permanantly grow the size and power of government.

 

Nov 10, 2009

Had to go to the mall last night on an errand. ghost town. No customers, I was getting mugged by salespeople. I suppose they were desperate for human contact. The "economy is fragile" is the new cover up phrase for the incompetence of this administration.

 

justin

Nov 10, 2009

Why would Obama care about unemployment? If anything unemployment makes us more dependent on the government. Healthcare reform is just another handout. If the economy tanks, a handout we need even more!

The democrats are like crack dealers. They don't care if crack will kill us, they just know getting us hooked is good business.

 

Elvin

Nov 10, 2009

Sheesh! Of those 15 or so millions out of work that voted for Obummer, it must be like waking up in the middle of a nightmare to realize he is not the Messiah/Savior after all! In fact, I don't think he either understands or cares about the unemployed whatsoever. He is too busy living the lavish lifestyle of a king to worry about such trivial matters as some bloke looking for a job so he/she can put a meal on the table for the family.

 

AA

Nov 10, 2009

Of course it is all about jobs, but it is all about jobs in fall 2010. Unemployment is a lagging measure in any economic cycle, if the current signs of growth continue by next year employment will be much more stable and the attacks will be stale (much like attacks on the high price of gas in summer lose their teeth as prices drop heading towards election day). If the economic growth is stunted and jobs don't catch up, then the democrats are in trouble (and all incumbents).

It really is that simple and all the other pontification is just pundits and editorial boards needing to fill space.

 

NK

Nov 10, 2009

AA--
no it's not that simple. the abominable legislation the Dems are cramming through Congress will kill job creation. Who will work 70% of their time to pay off the government before they see a penny of reward for their own work? Obvious answer, no one, therefor no new business enterprise and no jobs created. John R is unfortunately right about what this is about, agregation of government power.

 

kasteer

Nov 10, 2009

It will all add up to a revolution of some sort. True Americans will not tolerate this for long.

 

Charlotte

Nov 10, 2009

Kasteer: I believe you are correct.

Unsure of how the revolution will manifest itself. I have watched politics for a long time now, and I have never seen what is happening here.

NEVER. The disconnect between Washington DC (the elite) and the rest of us (the minions) is enormous. Apparently, all of these ELECTED officials believe they don't serve their constituents, but instead, know what is best for us 'coz we are so dumb.

Get the popcorn because in 2010 there is going to be a bloodbath for the Dems. They think that the minions will forget.

TRY AGAIN, idiots. Didn't I hear somewhere (could it have been the idiot Carville? LOL) that it's the economy, stupid!!

20% unemployment will be very hard to spin or hide next year, even by the lamestream media.

OH YEAH!!!!

 

Nov 10, 2009

Unfortunately, the state-run media will go into full Obama coverup mode next year. Predictions include articles like "Its not a Layoff, Its a Opportunity for Career Change" Any "good" economic number will be hyped relentlessly. (See Bloomberg News) "ISM Index Rises 0.2 Percent Indicating Strengthening Recovery" Add in some push-polling questions such as "Americans See Recovery Strengthening: Poll"

You get the picture. The State-run media bought this disaster. If they lose him, they lose as well. Faustian bargain to say the least.

Oh, and anybody who claims that the economy isn't recovering will be tarred a "RAAAAACIST" for good measure.


 

valwayne

Nov 10, 2009

Obama isn't really concerned about unemployment. Its just the bitter, gun toting, bible thumping, bigotted working class that has to worry about jobs. He seemed concerned about jobs to get the corrupt stimulous bill passed, but the real concern was paying off all those special interests that had worked so hard to get him elected. As everyone can see now with UNEMPLOYMENT at 10.2% its no big deal. Pushing his agenda through Congress, regardless of the cost in jobs, is Obama's priority. Obama has't kept many promises since taking office, but he is certainly bringing change and transforming America!

 

markit8dude

Nov 10, 2009

How unemployment was considered 4th of the 4 topics broached to the paneled subjects speaks volumes of the uninformed masses.

Only after it's too late do we understand..

 

No Carbone

Nov 10, 2009

Remember Stupido its still the economy

Red or Blue? no matter it don't matter
it all comes down to GREEN!

No Black or white !!!!!!!!!! Green

 

Army of Davids

Nov 10, 2009

It's worse than that.

A good case could be made that protectionist policies in the "Buy American" inserts to the stimulus have actually hurt employment more than the bill helped.

More and more in coming months we will see legitamate points made that PelosiCare doesn't just create a fiscal nightmare long-term...but that it is also a very big job killer.

 

You low-income whiners

Nov 10, 2009

Unemployment needs to remain high, in order to keep wages low and profits high. That is the only way stock prices can be restored to their high levels.

 

Mike C

Nov 10, 2009

AA:
I don't think in this case that unemployment is a lagging indicator. I would posit that unemployment has become a leading indicator, since HR directors and COOs now have access to much more information about economic conditions and what is likely to transpire.

With the mandates, fees, and taxes written into the medical-insurance legislation (which is what it really is), and the possibility of cap-and-tax becoming reality, nothing good is likely to transpire.

 

Elbert

Nov 10, 2009

Kasteer has it right. It is all adding up to a revolution. If Obummer is not careful he is going to get the "Georgia Rednecks" and the "Texas Cowboys" of this country all stirred up. He will realize that he hadn't ought to have done that but I am afraid it will be too late.

 

djaymick

Nov 10, 2009

Unemployment will continue to take a back seat to the Democratic agenda as long as they have the MSM in their pocket. Does anyone really think it was a coincidence that the Sunday news programs started to touch on "global warming" and Al Gore is on the cover of Newsweek? When the healthcare takeover dies down in Congress (CNN reports that it won't pass this year), they have the media to pick their next topic of interest, cap and trade.

 

Orion

Nov 10, 2009

"Unemployment is not a leading indicator."

Rising unemployment does not portent economic recovery, either. Before last Friday's numbers came out the predictions were for 9.9% or slightly less. Blowing through 10% like that shows the economy is not on the recovery track, that the jump in GDP last quarter was most likely a fluke caused by the "Cash for Clunkers" program, and that the recession isn't over by half. Bottomline is that almost no one's hiring. That's not because owners find the look of idle factories aesthetically pleasing.

 

dennymack

Nov 10, 2009

10.2 % Unemployment is not that big a deal. The jobs that have been lost are exploitative anyway, and high unemployment numbers illustrate the need for a more comprehensive and compassionate safety net for the working class.

This safety net could take the form of a "public option" in employment. If the private job market is not offering labor a fair deal, a public option will put pressure on them and give taxpayers more choice.

Sound familiar? What could be more "Alinsky" than magnifying a problem , preventing competing solutions, demonizing those who disagree, and then personalizing the results?

When most of us see the unemployment figures, we think "Angry voters, incumbents out!!"

When leftists see the unemployment figures they think "Constituents, advocates for our cause, tearful anecdotes on the ills of capitalism!"

The next election and the fate of our nation both hinge on control of the narrative. Strange, isn't it?

 

bobc

Nov 11, 2009

Unemployment and the drop in the dollar should be the #1 priority of Obama!

For Republicans, please get on board with FAIR trade, not FREE trade.

We cannot create a prosperous economy on service jobs..we need to make things again!

 


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