Wall Street Weekly | 08/14/2009 10:30 am
Dog Days Augur Political Gridlock, Happy Markets, by Liz Peek

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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.
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550 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
No Dee…people fear lies. Obama has lied one time too many and they are taking a closer look at this bill. This bill is not the one that Americans want.
So…reform is needed…back to the drawing board. America is ready for a change, not a total take over.
FSM~
Just out of curiosity:
1. Name the lies that Obama tells
2. What bill do Americans want?
3. What kind of reform?
4. what kind of change is America ready for?
5. What would be a total takeover?
Oh…..here’s another good one, Stacy………."Govt will have direct access to your banks’ accounts for election funds transfer" — you know DIRECT DEPOSIT.
Exactly my point DeBúrca obj, ergo my comment “ against the wind”.
BTW did you perhaps try my suggestion re the translation? It startled me when I unexpectedly fell upon it. I liked it and saved it to pass-along some day when appropriate. This seemed the right time.
Hi Lauriate……..it’s been a couple of weeks of the same stuff over and over again……..after a while it just becomes so comical. BS is all they know, and if you notice — posting on this board seems to be all some have to do with their life — day in day out.
Calm down MK P…not to worry…unless of course…you have ripped those warning tags off of your pillows as well…;]
FSM~
Hmmmm…….I think I may have a problem then. =)
Here was one lie that was answered to Phyllis:
Saturday, August 15, 2009 Orthopaedic Surgeons Slam Obama For "Blurring Reality" & "Wild Misrepresentations" Dear Leader ticked off US surgeons during a recent town hall.This week they responded to the president’s "wild misrepresentations."
The American Thinker posted the letter from the Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons responding to Obama’s exaggerated claims: