Coop's Corner
By

Charles Cooper /

CNET/ December 4, 2009, 5:09 PM

Time For The GOP To Figure Out New Jobs Mantra?

4963930You can't do much about the timing. On the same day that Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele took a swipe at the Obama administration's record on jobs creation, the Labor Department announced that the nation's unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 10% with payrolls falling by just 11,000.

Perhaps of more significance was the downward revision of job losses in September and October. The government obviously employs four-eyed gerbils since they never manage to get the numbers straight the first time. Nonetheless, it turns out that 159,000 fewer jobs evaporated in September and October than previously thought.

While the latest report - and accompanying revision - is hardly reason to celebrate the return of Fat City, - even President Obama noted that ""good trends don't pay the rent"- economists said they liked the direction of that trend. One of them, Stephen Stanley of RBS, even described it to the Wall Street Journal as "one of those game-changer reports that should fundamentally alter the perception regarding the economy."

Economists aren't immune to hyperbole but even by more sober measure, the economic outlook is much improved from last January, when monthly unemployment hovered around 700,000 and the stock market was in a free fall. All of which presents the Republicans with a dilemma. If the White House mishandles the economy, the GOP obviously stands to gain at election time. Still, they have to be careful. Steele and his cohort can't whoop it up like Rush Limbaugh say out loud that they hope this president fails. They obviously would like nothing better but that's something they keep to themselves (for the most part.)

But this latest jobs number really screws things up for the GOP. If it's a harbinger and the economy begins to generate big employment gains, what then? The Republicans made clear this winter that the Democrats own the giant stimulus passed by Congress. Obama and Co. will be only too glad to claim credit if the economy returns to posting hundreds of thousands of new jobs each month.

Maybe that helps explain why Steele's sounding so shrill of late. On Thursday, he went on Fox to ridicule the White House jobs summit. He followed up today with a statement describing the event as "a distraction" meant to disguise "the fact that President Obama has managed to create more bureaucracy in Washington than jobs for American families." OK, no party chairman aren't immune to hyperbole, either.

Speaking of shtick, remember this one? By now, though, the "where are the jobs" mantra is showing its age. When I asked around at the RNC, I was told that the new idea will be to play up the different approaches the parties apply to the question of jobs creation. In other words, it will be about the road not chosen (since the Republicans weren't the ones in power.)

"When you look at 2012, the most important thing will be the way you get (job growth.)," a source said. "There's a stark contrast between how the Democrats want to get there and how we would like to get there and what we would have done - which is through incentives and tax cuts."

Good luck with that idea if unemployment keeps dropping.
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    Charles Cooper is an executive editor at CNET News. He has covered technology and business for more than 25 years, working at CBSNews.com, the Associated Press, Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. E-mail Charlie.

4 Comments Add a Comment
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Damnshame says:
Good point. Instead of lowering taxes and giving incentives for small business owners, that will allow them to hire people let's just tax the **** out of them and give the money to the potential workers under entitlement programs. That is until they run out of money as well and either move their operation to another country like Mexico or just go out of business and take their place on the public dole.

Cronyism ? You mean like when Axelrod says the main people behind the meltdown were the people in the NY Fed? Hmmm if you wanted that person as a crony, where would you put him? Hmmmmm I know Secretary of Treasury. Wouldn't THAT be a stupid move? I wonder what happened to the former NY Fed while all this transpired. Anyone know where Timothy Geitner went?

If you check your facts a bit better you will find that the people most responsible are still in the congress. The incentive tax program is the only reason companies stayed in America instead of all running elsewhere like they did in the late 70's. (The first time Jimmy Carter was president.) It was the Reaganomics and incentives to business that brought American manufacturing back. Now that JImmy Carter re-incarnate is president again, all the companies will move elsewhere again like Microsoft is planning to do.


Just sit back kiddies and don't spill the kool-aid.
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P0STING_AWAY says:
I do not know about you ... but I am anxious to put more
Repuglicans into the unemployment line ......
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noloyalisti says:
Good point, the Bush Crime Family pushes us off the economic cliff by energizing elite his corrupt base and then they do everything that can to further destroy America. Their economic schemes of cropny and predatory capitalism have been shown to be a complete failure. Again. And again.
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BuddyBeanbags says:
The Republican cure for unemployment, incentives and tax cuts ... exactly what got us into this mess. Talk about beating a dead elephant.
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