Presidential Bait-and-Switch What Obama once promised, and what he's
delivering. By KARL
ROVE<http://online.wsj.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=KARL+ROVE&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123621161271234665.html

Barack Obama won the presidency in large measure because he presented
himself as a demarcation point. The old politics, he said, was based on
"spin," misleading arguments, and an absence of candor. He'd "turn the page"
on that style of politics.

Last week's presentation of his budget shows that hope was a mirage.

For example, Mr. Obama didn't run promising larger deficits -- but now is
offering record-setting ones. He'll add $4.9 trillion before his term ends
and $7.4 trillion if given a second, doubling the national debt in five
years and tripling it in 10. Mr. Obama's deficits will be much larger than
he admits because he relies on rosy economic assumptions and gimmicks that
mask spending and debt (like assuming popular new programs he supports won't
be renewed).

Nor did Mr. Obama run promising more earmarks. Instead, he said he'd reform
the earmark culture and "scour the federal budget, line by line, and make
meaningful cuts." Now he wants to wave through a $410 billion omnibus
spending bill with about 8,500 earmarks. This is on top of the $787 billion
stimulus bill signed into law two weeks ago.

His justification comes to us from the White House's budget director, Peter
Orszag, who recently called the omnibus spending bill "last year's
business." But it will fund the federal government for the next six months.
Mr. Obama could veto the legislation or push congressional Democrats to
ditch the earmarks. But he has given little indication that he will do
either.

Nor is it credible to claim that the spending spree on Mr. Obama's watch is
someone else's responsibility, as Mr. Orszag did by saying the president had
"inherited" these deficits.

Mr. Obama ceded authority to congressional appropriators, who wrote the
stimulus bill that is history's largest spending increase. Then Mr. Obama
got behind the pork-laden omnibus-spending bill. And Mr. Obama has also
proposed $4 trillion in outlays this fiscal year and $3.6 trillion next
fiscal year.

Mr. Obama cannot dismiss critics by pointing to President George W. Bush's
decision to run $2.9 trillion in deficits while fighting two wars and
dealing with 9/11 and Katrina. Mr. Obama will surpass Mr. Bush's eight-year
total in his first 20 months and 11 days in office, adding $3.2 trillion to
the national debt. If America "cannot and will not sustain" deficits like
Mr. Bush's, as Mr. Obama said during the campaign, how can Mr. Obama sustain
the geometrically larger ones he's flogging?

There is more. Mr. Obama pledged "no tax hikes on any families earning less
than a quarter million dollars." What he didn't draw attention to was $600
billion in higher energy taxes he wants to impose through a cap-and-trade
system on carbon emissions. These taxes will hit everyone who drives, flips
a light switch, or buys anything manufactured, grown or shipped.
Mr. Obama devoted four times as much space in his campaign stump speech to
cutting taxes as he did to talking about raising taxes on the wealthy. In
the election's most widely watched speech, his Denver Convention address, he
didn't even mention raising taxes, instead stressing he'd "cut taxes -- cut
taxes -- for 95% of all working families." Yet higher taxes are what every
American is going to get.


Today's White House health-care summit should also remind us of one of Mr.
Obama's most popular ads, which declared, "On health care reform -- two
extremes. On one end, government-run health care, higher taxes. On the
other, insurance companies without rules, denying coverage. Barack Obama
says both extremes are wrong."

Mr. Obama's plan will lead us to the extreme of government-run health care.
And in an effort to reach that goal, Mr. Obama's budget proposes, as a
starting point, a $630 billion fund to expand government-run health care.
And that $630 billion comes not from reduced spending, but higher taxes.

Mr. Obama's personal popularity remains higher than support for his
proposals. A raft of opinion surveys show Americans take the conservative
side on issues ranging from the efficacy of government spending, to
nationalization of banks, to bailouts for auto companies, to whether tax
cuts or government spending will create more jobs. Packaging Mr. Obama's
proposals is easier than rigorously defending them. Team Obama will find
this out as the details of their budget and other plans are scrutinized.

Barack Obama has been president for a little more than five weeks. During
his speech to a joint session of Congress last week, he showed what a
skilled speaker he is and how persuasive he can be. But words delivered from
a teleprompter, while important, have to line up with actions. Promises have
to be met. And a president who promised to be one thing cannot be another.
At some point, the gap between good feelings and results, between perception
and reality, closes.

Eloquent words and "spin" work better in a campaign than they do while
governing. And as Mr. Obama is discovering, the laws of economics won't
change, even for him.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to