Barack Obama As FDR
Will President-elect Obama be the next FDR? If he pulls the nation out of its economic slump, he has a shot at becoming just as beloved. If he doesn't, the opposite could occur.
His aides disclosed on weekend TV talk shows that:
Obama aides called on lawmakers to pass, by the Jan. 20 inauguration, legislation that meets Obama's two-year goal of saving or creating 2.5 million jobs. Democratic congressional leaders said they would get to work when Congress convenes Jan. 6.
Though Obama aides declined to discuss a total cost, it probably would far exceed the $175 billion he proposed during the campaign. Some economists and lawmakers have argued for a two-year plan as large as $700 billion, equal to the Wall Street bailout Congress approved last month.
Better yet, he's apparently breaking one campaign pledge that will serve him and the nation better by its absence. He will apparently not raise taxes on the so-called wealthy as promised:
With the downturn in the economy, those tax cuts may remain in place until they are scheduled to die in 2011, said William M. Daley, an economic adviser. "That looks more likely than not," he said.
Tax hikes in a recession, much less a depression, are not good for any income bracket. Bravo, Obama!
-- Click here to read more by Bonnie Erbe.
-- Click here to read more from the Thomas Jefferson Street blog.
-- Click here to read more about the Obama administration.
By Bonnie Erbe
US News His aides disclosed on weekend TV talk shows that:
Obama aides called on lawmakers to pass, by the Jan. 20 inauguration, legislation that meets Obama's two-year goal of saving or creating 2.5 million jobs. Democratic congressional leaders said they would get to work when Congress convenes Jan. 6.
Though Obama aides declined to discuss a total cost, it probably would far exceed the $175 billion he proposed during the campaign. Some economists and lawmakers have argued for a two-year plan as large as $700 billion, equal to the Wall Street bailout Congress approved last month.
Better yet, he's apparently breaking one campaign pledge that will serve him and the nation better by its absence. He will apparently not raise taxes on the so-called wealthy as promised:
With the downturn in the economy, those tax cuts may remain in place until they are scheduled to die in 2011, said William M. Daley, an economic adviser. "That looks more likely than not," he said.
Tax hikes in a recession, much less a depression, are not good for any income bracket. Bravo, Obama!
-- Click here to read more by Bonnie Erbe.
-- Click here to read more from the Thomas Jefferson Street blog.
-- Click here to read more about the Obama administration.
By Bonnie Erbe
Popular in Politics
- Officials on Benghazi: "We made mistakes, but without malice" 435 Comments
- Major immigration overhaul passes first big test
- Top IRS official to invoke 5th Amendment at congressional testimony 128 Comments
- U.S. IDs several men possibly responsible for Benghazi attack
- Anthony Weiner comeback try begins: Running for NYC mayor
- Va. GOP candidate: Planned Parenthood "more lethal" for blacks than KKK 1204 Comments
- Obama: "Full focus" is on recovery from Oklahoma tornado 87 Comments
- IRS scandal highlights leadership vacancies













