No news here.O's incompetence was known before he was elected.

 

B

 

LAMBRO: Mounting White House woes

Bad news in bunches casts new doubts on Obama agenda

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By  <http://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/donald-lambro_/> Donald Lambro

-

The Washington Times

Thursday, September 15, 2 011 

Description: Description: Illustration: White House woesIllustration: White
House woes

Bottom of Form

Barack Obama's troubled presidency was hit hard again this week on several
fronts that shook the White House and raised fears in his party of deeper
losses in Congress next year.

Republicans won a special election for a long-held Democratic House seat in
New York that the GOP turned into a referendum on Mr. Obama's failed
economic policies. Internal administration emails revealed the White House
pushed budget officials to rush a review of a nearly half-billion federal
loan to a solar manufacturer championed by Mr. Obama that ended up going
bankrupt. A new report says poverty in America surged in the past year to
its highest level since 1993. And, especially troubling, the 2011 high
school scores for graduating seniors have fallen to their lowest point in
four decades.

Just a few days after Mr. Obama unveiled yet another jobs stimulus plan
before a joint session of Congress, the Democrats' embarrassing failure to
keep a House seat they' ve held since 1920 was an early warning shot that
the GOP could expand its hold on the House and win control of the Senate in
2012.

The pivotal issue that dominated the special election won by Bob Turner, a
70-year-old retired cable television executive making his first try for
elective office: an economy that was teetering on the edge of recession and
creating few if any net new jobs. Mr. Turner called on voters to "send
Washington a message," turning the election into a referendum on Mr. Obama's
handling of the economy.

New York's 9th Congressional District, which includes parts of Queens and
Brooklyn, is also home to a large number of Orthodox Jews, many of whom
oppose Mr. Obama's plan for Palestinian statehood drawn along Israel's 1967
borders. That, too, raised questions about whether many of his party's
Jewish supporters would turn against Democrats next year.

Campaign strategist Dick Morris, a former adviser to President Clinton, said
the GOP victory "sends a pointed warning to House Democrats who were
formerly comfortable in their safe Democratic districts: No Democrat is
safe."

Republicans crushed the Democrats in another special House election Tuesday
in northern Nevada that focused largely on the Obama economy in a state that
has a 12.9 percent unemployment. The GOP's ad in that race also said, "Send
Washington a message, not a rubber stamp."

Then came the Washington Post's story that the White House had "tried to
rush federal reviewers for a decision" on a $535 million guaranteed federal
loan to build a solar panel factory for the Solyndra company, despite
warnings that this firm had financial problems.

Repeated emails from the White House to reviewers at the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) pressured them to speed up and clear the loan so
Vice President Joseph R. Biden could announce its approval by the government
at a September 2009 groundbreaking. One email to an OMB official noted "the
time pressure we are under to sign off on Solyndra."

But the loan was shoved through, despite doubts about the company, and the
manufacturing facility was built. Mr. Obama spoke at the factory, calling it
a great example of the kind of businesses and jobs his policies would
create. But Solyndra declared bankruptcy just two weeks ago. The factory is
shuttered and fenced and Congress is in the midst of investigative hearings
into what has all the earmarks of a major abuse of power for political
purposes.

Earlier this year, Solyndra executives told administration officials they
were in financial stress and would go out of business if it did not receive
an additional loan of $67 million. OMB reviewers warned that it would be
better to let the company liquidate rather than sink more money into it,
according to emails.

Green technology has been a centerpiece of Mr. Obama's jobs plan, even
though many economists have questioned whether many, if not most, of these
new technologies are economically viable industries without their heavy
federal subsidies.

Throughout the nearly three years of his presidency, Mr. Obama has made
often outlandish claims that these clean-technology loan programs would
produce thousands, if not millions, of new jobs in the future. But a new
investigation by the Post reported Thursday that his $38.6 billion loan
guarantee program "has created just a few thousand jobs two years after it
began."

Perhaps no programs begun or enlarged under Mr. Obama have proven to be a
bigger failure than those to combat poverty. Despite hundreds of billions of
dollars spent on stimulus programs to create jobs and, in the process, help
lift people out of poverty, the Census Bureau reported this week that the
number of people living in poverty climbed sharply last year to nearly 1 in
6 Americans.

According to the Census figures, 46.2 million people now live below the
poverty line, which is $22,314 a year for a family of four. This is the
fourth year in a row that poverty has risen.

Mr. Obama, apparently, is doing no better with his costly plans to spend
more to improve education. He has poured hundreds of million s of dollars
into his "Race to the Top" program to reward states that win what critics
say is a politically-influenced awards competition.

But the College Board reported Wednesday that reading scores for graduating
high school seniors dropped to their lowest level in nearly 40 years.

All of these cases testify to a level of incompetence and political
influence, not to mention outrageous exaggeration, that permeates this
administration.

This week's special House elections were an important preliminary referendum
on this administration. The big one comes in Nove mber of 2012.

Donald Lambro is a syndicated columnist and former chief political
correspondent for The Washington Times.

C Copyright 2011 The Washington Times, LLC

 

 



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