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Wall Street Weekly | 11/06/2009 11:45 am

Liz Peek: Obama Deaf to Election Warning But May Get Bailed Out

As bad as the recent jobs report is, the president is likely to receive some good news over the next several months …

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 11/2) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the unemployment rate rose from 9.8% to 10.2% in October, the highest level since 1983. Job losses were primarily in construction, manufacturing and retail, and were worse than expected. This is not good news; the terrible job market clearly weighs on consumer sentiment and spending, slowing the recovery. The debilitating payroll cuts also produced some cranky voters this past Election Day.

All politics may be local, but it is hard not to read national significance into Tuesday’s election results. Voters rallied against high taxes and the worrisome economy, while in Virginia, disillusioned young and independent voters crossed the aisle yet again to elect a long-odds Republican.

Astonishingly, the Obama administration has chalked up this apparent warning shot to circumstances beyond their control. Neither tea parties nor sinking polls or, now, pointed election returns seem to have made the slightest dent in their enthusiasm for policies that the majority of Americans do not embrace. Speaker Nancy Pelosi could barely contain her glee that the Democrats had picked up an extra House seat in New York – all the better to ram health-care legislation through. Remember Obama’s words on the night he was elected? "I will listen to you, especially when we disagree."

Americans are genuinely concerned about their country’s fiscal prospects, and about Obama’s programs that will create even worse deficits down the road. Fundamentally, they are worried that a shrinking number of people are supporting a growing segment of the population. The jobs being "saved" or added currently are mainly government jobs; the private sector continues to lay off workers. Even a caveman (with all due respect) gets that this is an unworkable trend.

In 2007 economist Gary Shilling wrote that 52.6% of Americans received "significant income from government programs, up from 49.4% in 2000 and 28.3% in 1950." These figures included, for 2007, 19 million Americans on food stamps, 57 million receiving Social Security payments, over 4 million collecting income from the Veterans’ Administration and millions more employed by the government. For sure, the figure has risen in the past two years as increasing numbers have received unemployment assistance and as the government has propped up banks and autos.

At the same time, a growing number of Americans do not contribute to our tax roles. The Tax Foundation reports that about one-third of our population files returns but pays no taxes, up from 18% in the early 1980s, while another 20 million Americans do not file returns at all.

This is not about social justice. It’s about a shifting of the economic burden in a way that is unsustainable. As baby boomers approach retirement and begin to receive Social Security, the number of people paying in more than they are taking out is going to shrink yet again. Add to that inevitability the millions that will receive health care under the legislation working its way through Congress and it is no wonder that young voters shifted gears. They see the burden contained in the legislation that Democrats are so eager to adopt. It is worth noting that, in 1980, 55% of Americans were receiving government handouts – a level that ushered in the Reagan revolution.

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

Leigh Hart
You know what’s shady Laurel? It’s taking money from you, me and our kids and giving it to someone who has not earned it in order to buy a house. We don’t manufacture here because unions and taxes have made it cost prohibitive.
By Leigh Hart on 11/07/2009 3:40 pm
Laurel Sayler
Taxes have made manufacturing cost prohibitive??? Don’t think so, businesses have so many tax breaks and subsidies that they pay very little in taxes. No one is taking any money from me for anything or my future kids. I know it is going to take a lot to get this country back on track and we are going to have to go into greater debt to stay alive as a nation. The big problem is that people don’t want to have to sacrifice their overindulgent lifestyles and actually pay for it. Those bonuses being paid to wall street should be going to the government to pay off the loans that saved Wall Street. And you really need to stop blaming the unions for everything. Unions have made it safer for the average worker. Granted they have more power than they should and pay for some jobs is out of control, but unions serve a purpose. I suppose you would rather have all your goods made in sweat shops because without the unions that is what we would have. 
By Laurel Sayler on 11/07/2009 5:53 pm
Mary E. Sayler
Laurel, maybe we should let Wall St. fail.  We could then go claim the farm land that once belonged to our family back in the 1630’s that was at the Wall.  You know our Arab/Dutch Muslim relatives.
By Mary E. Sayler on 11/08/2009 8:54 pm
Laurel Sayler
Mom you are too funny!!! We would once again be the richest people in the country. Let’s do it, imagine the rent we could charge.
By Laurel Sayler on 11/08/2009 9:21 pm
Sara Smile

Ah…….but the shadiest of all was the Republcians taking American taxpayers’ money and using it to rebuild Iraq and then saying — too bad. no money left to spend helping Americans.   We spent it all helping the Iraqis.

In the Republican vernacular — spend money in Iraq is called "rebuilding" — helping Americans is called a "hand-out".   

By Sara Smile on 11/08/2009 1:47 pm
Laurel Sayler
I don’t mind paying my taxes whatever they might be. I know that my taxes help keep the country running. What I do mind is the Earned Income Credit or EIC. I took it one year because H and R Block did my taxes for that year. I still feel guilty about taking money I didn’t earn. That year I got not only all the money I paid in taxes but I also got money back that I didn’t earn. I don’t understand why people want something for nothing.
By Laurel Sayler on 11/09/2009 2:49 pm
Wendy R
Great response Sara, funny how it is only significant when it is something that matters to that particular person. Bravo, I find the First Dem in 150 years to be significant and I’m not even a Democrat. Hmm makes you think huh?
By Wendy R on 11/06/2009 1:53 pm
Sara Smile

Hi Wendy — especially when you consider that Sarah Palin and a bunch of other conservatives were the ones who broke from the Republican party candidate and campaigned hard for their conservative candidate……….first Democrat win in 150 years.  =)   

By Sara Smile on 11/06/2009 2:02 pm
deber B
Wendy, obviously you and Sara do not understand the significance of electoral votes.  
By deber B on 11/06/2009 2:44 pm
Laurel Sayler
Please Cali has the most electoral votes and after the cenus is done next year some of those RED states may lose some votes while Cali will gain votes.
By Laurel Sayler on 11/06/2009 5:25 pm
True Grit

Seriously Sare, where do you get your stats?

But that doesn’t really matter because the facts stand that more people are identifying with being conservative than they are liberal.

Here’s something that you can count on; the Republicans are not going to give their elected officials a blank check. We are going to ride them like a Seattle Slew and make sure that they stay in line. We are going to make them responsible and not support them just because they are Republicans, or just not Progressive Democrats.

We will be watching them, and we will back on the steps of their offices if they get out of hand. We will not stand around and blow them kisses just because they are Republicans or Conservatives. They better perform, or they’re OUT.

That’s the difference between Progressives and Conservatives.

By True Grit on 11/06/2009 11:11 pm
True Grit
FYI Sara… Poll: Huge majority doesn’t want Democrats’ health care bill By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
11/06/09 3:41 PM EST

With House Democrats racing to pass their 2,000-plus page health care reform bill this weekend, a new CNN/Opinion Research poll shows that an overwhelming majority of those surveyed — 72 percent — want Congress either to make major changes, start over from scratch, or simply stop working on health care legislation. Just 26 percent want Congress to pass the current health care proposal as is, or with minor changes.

*ouch*

By True Grit on 11/06/2009 11:49 pm
deber B
True Grit, great words, my friend.   Democrats just aren’t facing the facts.   
By deber B on 11/07/2009 6:18 am
Mary E. Sayler
What happened to the Conservatives between 2000 and 2009?  Didn’t see them protesting or making their politicals toe the line.
By Mary E. Sayler on 11/08/2009 8:59 pm
S.J. Morgan

Since the RINO was equal to the Dem it was a draw.  I suppose all those votes for the Conservative were nothing?????

It sent a message that just because you call your self a Republican means nothing..you have to walk the walk! 

By S.J. Morgan on 11/06/2009 3:05 pm