Ask Democratic candidates for president how they
would challenge President Trump’s boasts about the economy, and the initial
response tends to be less an attack than a concession.
“The overall numbers about G.D.P. or the stock market are
great,” said Elizabeth Warren after a town hall here last week, before
discussing long-term wage stagnation and health care costs.
“Yes, we are at a moment of stability, and we’re at this moment
of expansion,” said Amy Klobuchar at an economy-themed talk at Dartmouth,
before saying that made it a good time to address inequality and climate
change.
“So Donald Trump is elected in the last two years — and I will
confess, even he couldn’t screw up the momentum,” said Michael Bennet on “Meet
the Press,” before mentioning housing, health care and higher education costs.
This speaks to the fundamental challenge that the eventual
Democratic nominee is likely to face next year: an economy that is easily the
strongest in two decades, with an unemployment rate at 50-year lows. How does a
Democrat answer Mr. Trump’s inevitable claims that he has done more for the
economy than any president ever?
Economists have some perfectly good rejoinders, which Democratic
candidates for the presidency and many of their supporters are happy to
articulate when asked.
In particular, since Mr. Trump’s inauguration, the United States
has experienced more a steady continuation of an expansion underway for the
last seven years of the Obama administration than a meaningful acceleration of
growth.
Tax cuts and spending increases have fueled the recent good
times, raising the budget deficit and implying a slowdown could occur as those
effects wear off. And while wages have started to grow a bit faster — 3.2
percent over the last year, versus 2.6 percent at the time of the 2016 election
— they are not rising nearly as fast as they did during other prosperous
periods in recent decades.
But these kinds of nuanced arguments are usually not the stuff
of campaign rallies. And if the overall economic numbers remain strong, the
Democratic nominee will be looking for a pathway to defeat Mr. Trump that is
distinctly different from those taken the last two times an incumbent president
lost. Historically, when a president seeks re-election, it amounts to a
referendum on the state of the economy.
The last two one-term presidents were undone by economic
slowdowns; they battled jobless rates of 7.4 percent (George H.W. Bush) and 7.5
percent (Jimmy Carter) on Election Day. The unemployment rate currently stands
at 3.6 percent.
Moreover, voters appear to be more positive about the economy
than they have been in many years. In polling by Gallup this spring, the share
of Americans who described the economy as “excellent” hovered near its highest
levels since 2000, and only 13 percent of Americans mentioned economic issues
as the nation’s most important problem.
That helps explain why the candidates are avoiding frontal
assaults on the economy. Most prefer to change the subject to longer-term
problems than to get wrapped up in debates over the Obama economic record or
budget deficits.
“The challenge that Trump could run into in 2020 is that people
don’t measure the quality of their economic life in the jobs numbers they see,”
said Jacob Leibenluft, who worked in the Obama White House and was a senior
policy adviser on Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign. “If you look at what Trump
has done from a policy perspective, there’s very little to suggest that he’s
addressed the acute problems that people feel in their economic lives.”
Indeed, Democratic base voters — like those who showed up at
campaign events recently in New Hampshire — tend to latch onto problems deeper
than what macroeconomists normally talk about when evaluating the economy.
“Unemployment isn’t much of a problem, but I know many people
here in Nashua who are extremely poor,” said Robyn Robison, 58, at a campaign
event for Senator Warren. “They’re working for 50 hours a week to make the rent
payment and basic utilities and don’t have anything left over to save for the
future. Meanwhile, the tax cuts went to Fortune 500 companies and the
wealthiest people.”
That view aligns with how Ms. Warren and other candidates have
cast their economic arguments — not so much litigating the state of the
near-term economic cycle as making the case that something deeper has gone
wrong in recent decades that Mr. Trump has done little to fix.
Speaking with reporters, after acknowledging the overall numbers
are “great,” she said: “But they don’t reflect the experience of most
Americans. Go around a room like this and for most people wages haven’t gone up
in a generation. And yet the cost of housing, the cost of health care, the cost
of child care, the cost of sending kids to college has all gone through the
roof.”Perhaps unsurprisingly, Joe Biden has chosen a strategy of attributing
much of the economy’s strength to the Obama administration in which he served
as vice president.
“I know President Trump likes to take credit for the economy and
the economic growth and the low unemployment numbers,” Mr. Biden said at a
rally in Philadelphia. “President Trump inherited an economy from the
Obama/Biden administration that was given to him, just like he inherited
everything else in his life.”
That matches the views of many Democratic voters.
“Trump inherited a good economy,” said Walter Hoerman, a
pediatrician who lives in Portsmouth N.H. “He never talks about a particular
policy he’s done that has helped because he hasn’t really done anything but
this tariff stuff.”
“The stock market is fine, but that’s about it,” said Dr.
Hoerman, who was attending the Rockingham County Democrats Clambake last
weekend where Senator Warren spoke.
Sabina Chen of Pelham, N.H., is a small businesswoman, the owner
of a microelectronics manufacturing company that employs 14 people. “It’s been
a good couple of years for us — I was able to give my folks bonuses this year,”
she said at a gathering for Senator Klobuchar in Salem.
But she then began listing ways that the Trump administration
has either made things worse or failed to make them better. “Our health care
costs are high, and our health insurance program is not great,” she said.
Tariffs resulting from the administration’s trade wars are on track to increase
costs of many of her raw materials in the months ahead, she said, which could
prove a strain on business.
Moreover, “I’d like to see more investment in education so that
my work force is prepared to come in and work at a skilled level,” Ms. Chen
said. “As a small-business owner, we can see things that are good for us now,
but what are the things we need to continue?”
Democrats are already making more direct criticisms of Mr.
Trump’s failure to deliver on some of the economic promises of his 2016
campaign: He has not produced a much better, cheaper health care system, nor
made huge investment in infrastructure.
If the economy wobbles between now and Election Day 2020 —
something the escalation of the trade war with China could make more possible —
expect more of those head-on attacks, and less willingness to concede that the
overall economy is doing pretty well.
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FULL NEWS : https://worldfoxnews.com/2019/05/26/democrats-arent-challenging-trump-economic-record/
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