Townhall
On
Every Big Issue, Obama's Presidency is Found Wanting
Donald
Lambro
Jul
04, 2014
WASHINGTON
- Republicans have a wealth of political issues that will dominate
the 2014 midterm election races and determine their outcome.
The
national news media has done its best to try to bury these issues,
play them down or sugar coat them, but the American people know
better. They have persistently put these issues at or near the top of
every voter poll in the last six years of Barack Obama's
scandal-ridden, trouble-plagued administration.
It's
hard to break through and overcome the power of the Washington news
media that has worked hard to cover up the Obama White House's
blunders. But this will be the GOP's chief challenge in the next four
months as we race toward the fall elections.
Here
are the issues Republicans must pound between now and then, and where
they stand today.
1.
The Obama economy: No other issue is more critical in the minds of
the voters as they have watched the once mighty U.S. economy grow
weaker, repeatedly turning in one mediocre, lackluster performance
after another.
Six
years into the so-called recovery, economic growth wasn't just weak.
It was actually shrinking in the first three months of this year by a
shocking 2.9 percent. Our exports were anemic, and business
inventories were down. It was the worst quarter for economic growth
since the middle of 2009.
Obama's
been running around the country telling us that manufacturing is
exploding. In fact, orders to U.S. factories fell in May by 0.5
percent.
It's
not going to get much better. The Federal Reserve forecasts that
growth will stumble along at little more than 2 percent this year,
held back by Obama's anti-business, anti-growth policies.
2.
That leads to the second most important issue: jobs.
The
average unemployment rate has fallen to 6.1 percent. But that's
largely due to millions of discouraged, long term jobless workers who
have stopped looking for work and thus are no longer counted among
the unemployed.
If
the same percentage of these adult workers who've dropped out of the
labor force were looking for work again, as when President Obama took
office, the real jobless rate would be 10.2 percent, says economist
Peter Morici at the University of Maryland's Smith School of
Business.
Fed
Chairman Janet Yellen says this is one of the most serious problems
confronting the economy and the labor force participation rate is not
going away soon. Our once muscular workforce is shrinking, a
disturbing sign of an economy and a nation in decline.
Hidden
or downplayed in the June jobs numbers is the harsh reality that many
of them are low paying temp jobs. Nearly 80,000 of them were added to
the labor force last month, according to the ADP payroll processor's
latest survey.
3.
Persistently sky high, $600 billion budget deficits and a growing,
$17 trillion debt threaten our economic security as never before.
Americans
are justifiably worried about our debts and want the government to
abandon its spendthrift ways. The GOP House has passed one budget
after another to do that, only to see the Senate refuse to negotiate
common sense ideas to slow down the rate of spending.
Hundreds
of needless programs need to be shut down, like the Export-Import
Bank that dishes out tens of billions in corporate welfare.
Departments need to be consolidated and reduced in size. Entitlements
need reforming to return them to fiscal health for the next
generation.
4.
Obamacare: There's a huge scandal brewing in the president's 2010
Affordable Care Act that was revealed in two reports this week by the
Inspector General's Office in the Department of Health and Human
Services...
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the rest of the article at Townhall
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