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Wall Street Weekly | 08/14/2009 10:30 am

Dog Days Augur Political Gridlock, Happy Markets, by Liz Peek

© Shutterstock

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 8/10) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and the author of wOw’s SHEconomics.

It’s a darned good thing that President Obama has access to excellent health care. He appears to be suffering a severe case of "tin ear," and clearly needs help.

With Congress mercifully in recess, the country should be enjoying the political silence that normally accompanies the dog days. Instead, the airwaves are full of ranting and shouting as Americans attempt to question proposed health-care legislation. The more the Obama administration and its allies in Congress deride and belittle the outbursts at town halls across the country, the angrier people get. They don’t see "right-wing operatives" or "an ugly campaign" on their TV screens; they see gray-haired Middle Americans who are anxious about their futures.

The Obama camp casts the uprising as the mischief of cable TV shows, or something akin to Hillary Clinton’s infamous "vast right-wing conspiracy." Nancy Pelosi, feeling at one with the common folk as always from her GIV, described the outbursts as un-American. The upshot? The president’s entire program is now on the ropes.

While a tamer White House, and possible political gridlock, is probably good news for investors, the sense of dismay across the land is almost palpable. It turns out that "transparency" in this administration has its limits, that lobbyists are as shakable as barnacles, that reaching out to despots like Kim Jong-il or Hugo Chavez is like inserting your fist in a bear trap, that managing your own party is no walk in the park and that turf wars in Congress can trump almost any meaningful regulatory reform. Somehow, briefly, we suspended our disbelief, and for at least a moment we saw this president as different from all who had gone before.

Most Americans acknowledge that we have serious challenges. We need to cut back on energy imports, we do need to freshen our infrastructure – our airports, tunnels and subways – we need to seriously confront the shortcomings of our public schools if we want to compete around the globe, and we need, after all, to rein in health-care spending.

Unhappily, Obama’s approaches to these problems have not been popular, and now they are stymied. At the same time the economy is, to use Fed Chair Ben Bernanke’s idiom, "leveling out," so the sense of urgency to some of the president’s initiatives is fading. My prediction is that the administration will work hard to pass a watered-down health-care bill, but very little else will get done.

Where does that leave us? There will be some tinkering around the edges of financial sector regulation, granting the Fed increased oversight responsibilities and passing a diluted consumer protection bill. These measures will not keep Wall Street from dreaming up new exotic money-making schemes, nor will they prevent the next investment bubble. Excess is as inevitable as Thanksgiving turkey; just not as savory.

Cap-and-trade, legislation that already embarrasses those environmentalists who endorse the concept and that is bitterly opposed by coal-state Democrats, will languish. The administration can’t possibly dive into immigration reform – a third-rail topic if ever there was one. And gay marriage will be left at the altar indefinitely.

While the stock market rejoices in the prospect of the status quo, significant covering by short sellers – those who bet the market will decline – has also fueled gains. Also, news that John Paulson invested heavily in Bank of America last quarter lifted expectations for the financial sector. It was Paulson who made a billion dollars betting against the subprime mortgage market; if he says the worst is over for banks, I believe him.

550 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Maggie W

Obama… blah, blah, blah.

"the airwaves are full of ranting and shouting as Americans attempt to question proposed health-care legislation…"

Ranting and shouting are not attempts at civil discussion.  Both parties should "deride outbursts" and perhaps responsible behavior would allow information/discusssion to flow.

Of course, Obama could always do what GWB did when campaign events didn’t go his way.  Those wearing protester T shirts were ejected by his thugs.

By Maggie W on 08/14/2009 10:46 am
DeBúrca obj

Maggie,

What the GOP is terrified of, is that President Obama will get his healthcare reform through, with a public option, and that after their lies and fearmongering the GOP will not win a major election for many years to come. Check out Bill Clinton’s opinion on this, I think he is spot on:

Clinton Urges Progressive Push On Health Care, Shoots Down Euthanasia Myth

PITTSBURGH — In a speech rallying progressives to make one last major push to pass health care reform, former President Bill Clinton accused Republicans of propagating a campaign of disinformation reminiscent of the effort to bring down his own attempt at reform.

"Do you want to go through that again?" the 42nd President asked the crowd of bloggers, online activists, and a slew of Democratic lawmakers at the Netroots Nation convention in Pittsburgh. "Of course you don’t. I’m telling you no matter how low they drive support for this with misinformation, the minute the president signs a health care reform bill his approval will go up. Secondly, within a year, when all those bad things they say will happen don’t happen, and all the good things happen, approval will explode."

The remarks fit into the wider theme of Clinton’s more than hour-long address. Fresh off a trip to North Korea, in which he negotiated the release of two imprisoned American journalists, and with a sore voice, the former president declared the moment to be ripe for a progressive political era that could last "30 to 40 years."…

He pinpointed three ways in which Barack Obama’s health care agenda faced an uphill battle: the complexity of the topic, the cost of reform, and the natural concern among the populace about changing the status quo. But he urged Democrats not to "lose their nerve."

"I’m pleading with you," he said, "try to keep this thing in the lane of getting something done. We need to pass a bill."

More than anything else, it was the memories of past failures that should compel current action, Clinton added. Unlike 17 years ago, he explained, the stars are now aligned to get legislation passed, in terms of the temperament of the American public, the genuine need for a systematic overhaul, or simple voting calculus in the United States Senate.

"Right now the Republicans are sitting around rooting for the President to fail," Clinton said. "And one of the reasons people are so hysterical at all these health care town-hall meetings… is they know they have no chance to beat health care this time, unless they can mortify with rigid fears some moderate conservative Democrats. Why do I know? Because they don’t have the filibuster this time."" 

 

 

By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2009 10:54 am
Maggie W

These town hall meetings have turned into fear fests.  It is disgraceful.  The very way we teach our children not to behave is precisely what they are seeing adults do in public settings.   Many of these organizers are the same who helped railroad health care in 94.  Throw in that nut case Betsy McCaughey, the American Spectator, the talking heads, and viral emails.  These are the same people who persisted the rumor about the birth certificate and still believe Obama to be a terrorist Muslim.   

Remote Area Medical is in California.  About 10,000 people are expected to visit where 45 medical rooms , 100 dental chairs, and 25 optometry stations are set up.   This is where we are in health care in America.  How pathetic that people suffer an infected tooth for weeks or finally have a chance for a mammogram or diabetes screening or new glasses. 

The most frequently asked question at these town hall meetings? 

"Will the government be able to pull the plug on elderly sick people?"

Says AARP.. "The rumors out there are flat out lies.

Former President Clinton is spot on.  Health care reform will happen.  Meanwhile, the Secret Service is investigating a man who held the " Death to Obama"  and " Death to Michelle and her two stupid kids". The far right must be so proud.

By Maggie W on 08/14/2009 11:58 am
DeBúrca obj
"Meanwhile, the Secret Service is investigating a man who held the " Death to Obama"  and " Death to Michelle and her two stupid kids". The far right must be so proud."…. boy you can sure say that… what a way to try to undermine reform, fire up the crazies with lies and scare tactics so they go out and do idiotic things like that. I hope they throw the book at that guy because this is getting out of hand. You are also right about the Bush rallies, where people were ejected just for having t-shirts on that questioned policy!
By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2009 12:11 pm
Maggie W

For David Brock, a former conservative journalist who once impugned Clinton’s health care plan, the current uproar is a reminder of what has changed since ’ 94.   " In the 90’s, every misrepresentation under the sun was made about the Clinton plan, and there was no real capacity to push back.  Now there is that capacity, and that has the critics increasingly nervous".

There is an avalanche of information that dispels the twisted accounts and lies.  It’s time to push back with that information.  Today and Saturday, the President will be at forums in Montana and Colorado.

By Maggie W on 08/14/2009 12:35 pm
DeBúrca obj
We need to support President Obama on this every way we can, and get the correct information out at every opportunity.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2009 12:38 pm
Suzanne Frazier
I beg your pardon….BUT…….the health care bill is being designed and created by our elected officials in Congress on Capitol Hill based on suggestions made by Obama and input from the public….and I imagine some pressure from insurance companies.  What a balancing act they are performing and no one seems to be giving them any credit for intelligent decisions based on the "the right of the pursuit of happiness"  (ie. Bill of Rights) through viable health care coverage.
By Suzanne Frazier on 08/16/2009 10:29 am
Irish Eyes NY

Do you, deburca, even know what the "correct" information is??

Even BO doesn’t know what his program consists of, so how can you?

By Irish Eyes NY on 08/20/2009 8:33 am
deber B

DeBurca, you do realize the same thing happened to George Bush.  Being ignorant and behaving badly spares NO political party. We will always see these lunatics surface.

You act like Obama is the only president to experience this.  Do some research!!!  It happens to all presidents!

By deber B on 08/14/2009 12:54 pm
Irish Eyes NY

Hu deber: Save your breath, or in this case save your typing fingers. THEY don’t care, period. They don’t care about anything that happened to any Republican, they only care about the libs. They are always right, the right is alway wrong.

Anyone who critisizes  BO or his policies is called UN-AMERICAN. Just ask Nancy Pelosi. But of course the psycho (her name escapes me now) who camped out in Crawford Texas to protest the war is a great American.

By the way, why isn’t she camping out in DC protesting the war. He ran on "bringing home the troops". Why no talk about that? They are so one-sided, don’t ya think?

By Irish Eyes NY on 08/16/2009 9:03 am
deber B

Mornin’ Irish, you are absolutely right!!   Update:   Here in Virginia, we already have a republican ahead in the polls for 2010….Virginians love him.  

Pelosi said a few years back that she liked "DISTRACTORS."   Now she calls those same  DISTRACTORS….UNAMERICAN."  The dems have trouble with their memory.   Memories are important when one is lying all of the time.

No one is talking about bringing home the troops because everyone knows it’s not a good idea….thank you,  George Bush.   Afghanistan and the healthcare bill will be Obama’s "waterloo."   I believe "The Gang of Six" will get it right and make Obama and his czars look like the overeducated no common sense  brigade.    Ironic, isn’t it?   Obama hasn’t gotten anything right yet.   Obama wanted the original healthcare bill passed before the August recess!!!   Which indicates that Obama thought he could jam this bill through in a hurry before people had a chance to examine the details just like the stimulus plan.    (and cap and trade).   I mean, Irish, can you believe this?   Obama wanted to ram this healthcare bill through….and now that he has been  stopped the death panel clause has been thrown out and the clause that abortions would be paid for.    Obama will never be re-elected in 2012.    Amercians fortunately have very good memories.

 

By deber B on 08/16/2009 9:31 am
Suzanne Frazier
Deber B - from your statements am I correct in assuming that the issue before the American public is not about health care but the next Presidential election?  If this is true, then what a great price this country is paying for positioning for the the 2012 elections.  The US is ranked 37th on the list of Economic Viable Countries providing viable health care insurance to their citizens.  I’m embarrassed about that ranking.  As leaders of the free world, we should be number 1.  Where are our priorities?
By Suzanne Frazier on 08/16/2009 10:37 am
Kelly In Texas

Suzanne…do you have any idea of how they come to those numbers of ranking? Do you know what they count in differing countries and why? Kind of like poll Suzanne…do you know the questions and why the numbers are as they are?

FSM~

By Kelly In Texas on 08/17/2009 10:39 am
Suzanne Frazier

They use statistics such as number of people in the country who access to health care, quality of health care provided to all residents in the country,  the number of deaths attributed to causes other than natural causes, number of low weight births, child mortality rates, life expectancy of citizens.

The US is low in the listing on life expectancy of citizens as well, because of our lack of available health care services to all residents.  Most people in this country must wait until they become an emergency situation before anyone (hospitals or insurance) will cover their medical costs.  Preventive care is so low on the list in America and so much higher in the economically viable countries of the world that is why the US is not out performing other countries.  

By Suzanne Frazier on 08/17/2009 1:07 pm
Kelly In Texas

Not exactly Suzanne…try again….What country do you think has the most to report?

FSM~

By Kelly In Texas on 08/17/2009 6:48 pm