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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
October 20,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
E-MAIL
WEB SITE |
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President Bush and
the Great Republican Shellacking
On Election Day, voters will take
Republicans to the woodshed, and they
can thank George Bush.
At some point, politicians have to
deliver on their promise not their
shallow campaign promises and deliver a
government that reflects the aspirations
of their supporters. Whether we are
talking about foreign affairs or the
domestic economy, George Bush comes up
short.
For years, Republicans have boasted
they can do a better job of defending
American shores, better manage the
national economy, and better shield our
civilization against the decadent social
agenda embraced by the likes of John
Kerry and Nancy Pelosi.
Without the missiles and European
army of the old Soviet Union to worry
about, no one can doubt the greatest
threats to U.S. national security come
from radical Islamic terrorism, nuclear
proliferation and our tightening
dependence on Middle East oil.
After Nine-Eleven and the invasion of
Afghanistan, President Bush ignored the
root sources of Islamic terrorism: Saudi
Arabia and several other gulf states,
where the Madrassas teach contempt for
the West and oil wealth finances and
provides safe passage for terrorists.
Instead, the President trumped up
intelligence and invaded Iraq, a country
with a contemptuous regime but little
documented connection to terrorism.
Ultimately, President Bush has
transformed Iraq into a country full of
terrorists, and inspired hatred for
Americans among disaffected young
Muslims throughout the region. Americans
are less secure, not more, for this
misadventure.
On arms control, the President,
earlier this year, gave India access to
critical U.S. civilian nuclear
technology, while ignoring its advanced
nuclear weapons program. The President
did not seek consent from the other
significant signatories to the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty, like China, our
allies in Europe, and Japan. Having
unilaterally welcomed India into the
club of nuclear weapons powers, is it
even a small puzzle why President Bush
is hamstrung in his efforts to do
something about the weapons programs in
Iran and North Korea?
Since Mr. Bush took office, our
monthly bill for petroleum imports has
nearly tripled, rising from $9.5 billion
to $27 billion. Yet, a 2004 Rocky
Mountain Institute study, endorsed by
former Republican Secretary of State
George Schultz, concluded the United
States could eliminate most U.S.
dependence on foreign oil, without
sacrificing our SUVs. This could be
accomplished by deploying technologies,
such as hybrid engines and light weight
materials that are already at hand and
could be built out fairly quickly at a
reasonable cost. Instead, Mr. Bush's dark
alter ego, Vice President Cheney cooked
up an energy policy that makes Exxon and
other oil giants happy, and increases
the choke-hold the Saudis and other
friendly Middle East states enjoy over
U.S. foreign policy.
On the economic front, the President
boasts creating 7.1 million new jobs and
booming house prices on the East and
West Coasts and in the Sunbelt. What he
does not remind Americans is that,
during his tenure, the monthly U.S.
trade deficit has rocketed from $35
billion to $70 billion.
Americans have enjoyed a flood of
cheap Chinese goods that benefit from
government subsidies exceeding 25
percent from state banks that don't
expect loans to be repaid and an
undervalued currency.
To finance the U.S. trade deficit,
Americans borrow about $60 billion each
month from Chinas central bank and other
foreign governments and investors, and
that debt will top $6 trillion by early
2007. The interest the United States
pays to China and others comes to about
$2000 a year for every working American,
and that is quite a legacy to bequeath
our children.
In the bargain, United States has
lost 3 million manufacturing jobs, and
7.5 million more adults have quit
looking for work. Falling real wages,
vanishing health benefits, and in
several Mid-Western cities, collapsing
housing prices bedevil working class
families, even as the rest of the
country boasts good times. Many of those
jobs lost are in congressional districts
that define the border between Red and
Blue America, spanning from western New
York and Pennsylvania to Michigan and
down the Ohio Valley into the upland
South. Enough Reagan Democrats will
return to their roots in those districts
to deliver a majority to the Democrats
in the House of Representatives.
On social issues, the President on
has come up weak on affirmative action,
Title 9 for gender neutral funding of
college athletics, fringe benefits for
gay partners, and just about every other
issue, save stem cell research, that
social conservatives care about deeply.
Intellectuals and comfortable
professionals can think what they like
about those issues, but Republican
conservatives are irked enough that many
will just stay home on November 7.
On Election Day, Republicans in House
and Senate will take a shellacking.
They need only look up Pennsylvania
Avenue for the man responsible.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.