February 10, 2009

Things I’d to Post About Today ….. (021009, Morning)

Filed under: TILTpatBIDHAT — TBlumer @ 8:28 am

….. But I Don’t Have Any Time For:

  • “Pelosi, Reid have ‘failed,’ (North Carolina Congressman Heath) Shuler says.” Shuler is referring to “bipartisanship.” But Pelosi and Reid haven’t failed at what’s really important to them.
  • Mickey Kaus, a liberal who has been on the welfare reform bandwagon all the way back to before its passage in 1996, has detected a possible back-door return to the no-questions-asked dole (HT Brain Shavings) in the mislabeled “stimulus” package. As usual, this is putting the need to create a dependent Democratic constituency ahead of the well-being of the dependents, and of the economy, which boomed like crazy when millions who had been economic drains became economic contributors.
  • Headline — “Prosecutors Want (former DC Mayor and current Councilman Marion) Barry Jailed Over Tax Returns.” Instapundit snark — “I guess a Cabinet slot can’t be far away.”
  • 50 De-Stimulating Facts.” The true total is probably more like 500. Maybe 5,000.
  • Dan Spencer at Red State — “Obama backs away from war on terror.” I’d saying “backing away, ominously.”
  • A state employee in New York says he gets paid for no work. Bright side: At least he’s not proactively inflicting harm.
  • Joe Biden revived trickle down, and invented “trickle up,” in his “Middle Class Task Force” speech on January 30 (HT to a caller) — “With this task force, we have a single, highly visible group with one single goal: to raise the living standards of the people who are the backbone of this country — the middle class. Because when they, in fact — their standard is raised, the poor do better. Every — and by the way, the wealthy do better, as well. Everyone does better.” Who knew?
  • Must-read, from James Simpson at American Thinker — “Barack Obama and the Strategy of Manufactured Crisis.” It goes back to 1960s radicals, and it’s being executed before our very eyes.

Obama Press Conference: Very First Question, Epic Fail

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 8:00 am

NYT Transcript is here.

Here is the first question Obama received after his opening statement (bolds in excerpt are mine):

QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. Earlier today in Indiana you said something striking. You said that this nation could end up in a crisis, without action, that we would be unable to reverse. Can you talk about what you know or what you’re hearing that would lead you to say that our recession might be permanent when others in our history have not? And do you think that you risk losing some credibility or even talking down the economy by using dire language like that?

MR. OBAMA: No, no, no, no. I think that what I’ve said is what other economists have said across the political spectrum, which is that if you delay acting on an economy of this severity, then you potentially create a negative spiral that becomes much more difficult for us to get out of.

We saw this happen in Japan in the 1990s, where they did not act boldly and swiftly enough, and as a consequence they suffered what was called the “lost decade,” where essentially for the entire ’90s, they did not see any significant economic growth.

Japan’s “lost decade” occurred because that country did what Obama and his party want to do for about 10 years running. It did nothing but create a zombie economy and massive public debt. Obama wants to out-Japan Japan. No thanks.

Here is exactly what Obama said in Elkhart, Indiana yesterday:

Economists from across the spectrum have warned that if we don’t act immediately, millions of more jobs will be lost. The national unemployment rates will approach double digits not just here in Elkhart, all across the country. More people will lose their homes and their health care. And our nation will sink into a crisis that at some point we may be unable to reverse.

He acts as if these “Economists from across the spectrum” all support the stimulus package as the action that has to be taken immediately. Horse manure, says Harvard’s Robert Barro (faculty home page):

This is probably the worst bill that has been put forward since the 1930s. I don’t know what to say. I mean it’s wasting a tremendous amount of money. It has some simplistic theory that I don’t think will work, so I don’t think the expenditure stuff is going to have the intended effect. I don’t think it will expand the economy. And the tax cutting isn’t really geared toward incentives. It’s not really geared to lowering tax rates; it’s more along the lines of throwing money at people. On both sides I think it’s garbage.

Back to the press conference question. The reporter reasonably believes that Obama, in his Elkhart statement, has adopted the views of his alleged “economists across the spectrum” who believe the economy could get to a point of being “unable to reverse.”

His answer pretends that he didn’t say “unable to reverse” in Elkhart, and that he only said “much more difficult for us to get out of.”

Wrong. He said “unable to reverse.”

Epic fail. Obama lied; the economy continues to slide.

The Only Thing They Have, or Know, Is Fear

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 7:05 am

Ed Morrissey at Hot Air (HT commenter Dscott) has a succinct summary of what drives the creators of the POR (Pelosi-Obama-Reid) Economy, and why employers aren’t hiring, even at rates seen in prior recessions (bolds are mine) –

Why has this recession generated such bad job opening rates? Isidore quotes Robert Brusca of FAO Economics as saying that “fear is running the show right now,” and small wonder. Instead of trying to calm the nation, Barack Obama, Harry Reid, and Nancy Pelosi have transformed themselves into Chicken Littles, abandoning FDR’s “All we have to fear is fear itself” in favor of “We’re all going to DIE!” Why? Their stimulus package keeps losing support, and only fear can propel it to passage, but that same hysteria has employers locking their doors, which creates a self-fulfilling prophecy of economic doom.

Before that, it was “We need to get elected.”

It started in earnest in  June. I wrote in early July that “Businesses and investors are responding to their total lack of seriousness by battening down the hatches and preparing for the worst.” That is exactly what happened, and continues to happen.

This is partisan irresponsibility in the name of political power on a scale I haven’t seen in my lifetime. All of their rhetoric can’t hide that obvious fact that their possession of power is more important than the welfare of their citizens.

Positivity: Neighbours rescue family from burning house

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 6:34 am

From New Zealand:

Mon, 09 Feb 2009 6:41a.m.

Quick-thinking neighbours helped rescue a family from a burning house in west Auckland early today.

Six occupants, including several children, were hospitalised suffering from burns and smoke inhalation, after the fire at Bahari Drive in suburban Ranui.

The house was well alight when firefighters arrived just before 2.30am.

Sam Vetui, 28, was watching DVDs with his wife Lynette, 23, when he went outside for some fresh air.

“He could see flames and heard a man yelling for help,” Mrs Vetui said.

She called the fire brigade, while Mr Vetui rushed to the burning house with some other neighbours to help two young girls out of the single storey building.

Two other occupants had already managed to escape.

“We saw a woman lying down on the grass outside, and we heard that a boy had been taken to a neighbour’s house,” Mrs Vetui said.

“Two little girls were still stuck inside so they broke a window.

“One girl was hiding under a blanket near her bedroom door and the other girl was lying on the floor in the same room.”

Mr Vetui and another neighbour, known only as Steve, managed to get the girls out of the house and handed them over the fence.

Mr Vetui noticed the girl who had been hiding under the blanket was not breathing, so he did CPR and she quickly started breathing again.

Another neighbour put the other girl in her shower to cool her down.

Mrs Vetui said her husband had a first aid certificate but he had never had to use it in an emergency before.

She said that her husband and another neighbour who went to help suffered from asthma, but that did not stop them from going into the burning house.

Mr Vetui was later taken to North Shore Hospital suffering from smoke inhalation.

When asked if she thought her husband was a hero, Mrs Vetui said he was just happy that everyone was fine. …..

Go here for the rest of the story.

February 9, 2009

IBD Poll: Americans Solidly Behind Tax Cuts As Stimulus

Filed under: Economy,Quotes, Etc. of the Day,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 10:53 pm

Well duh. That’s because they’ve seen them work time, and time, and time again:

“We can’t embrace the losing formula that says only tax cuts will work for every problem we face,” President Obama said Friday. But based on preliminary results of this month’s IBD/TIPP Poll, Americans would welcome with open arms tax reductions as part of any stimulus plan. Of 568 adults surveyed last Monday through Thursday, 67% favored cutting federal taxes on businesses, 79% favored cuts in individual income taxes and — despite the fact that only half of Americans are investors — 62% even favored cuts in capitals gains taxes.

Pictorial goodies that graphically depict these results are here.

All You Need to Know About the ‘Stimulus’ Bill: It’s 47% Earmarks, 80% ‘Doesn’t Create Jobs’

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 6:30 am

Based on Nebraska Senator Ben Nelson’s own description, it’s at least 47% earmarks (courtesy of Political Calculations):

EarmarksStimulus0209

Based on Idaho Democratic Congressman Walt Minnick’s assessment, the bill is five times as big as it should be (HT Red State):

Minnick’s bill is called The Strategic Targeted American Recovery and Transition Act (START Act) of 2009.

“The biggest difference is that I’ve cut out everything that doesn’t create jobs in this year and next,” Minnick said Thursday. “It’s only $174 billion, $650 billion less than what the House passed and probably $750 billion less than the trillion dollar bill the Senate is talking about. It focuses on infrastructure spending, there’s $70 billion on bridges, roads and school construction and there’s $100 billion on tax cuts to middle and low income people.

Minnick said his proposal would spend all the money by the end of 2010, while the White House proposal would only spend 30 percent of the larger amount they’re proposing.

The price tag for the House bill that passed a couple of weeks ago is $824 billion ($174 + 650). That’s 4.7 times larger than Minnick’s proposal.

If we use the “$750 billion less” figure cited above, the Senate bill is $924 billion ($174+750), which is 5.3 times larger.

Minnick was one of 11 Democrats who voted against the House version of the bill.

Bottom line: A member of the Party of the POR (Pelosi-Obama-Reid) Economy has called out the fact that roughly 80% of the mislabeled stimulus bill “doesn’t create jobs in this year and next.”

Paraphrasing a statement made yesterday on the lack of oversight in the bill (“This is dereliction of duty on a scale never seen”): This is false advertising by government on a scale never seen.

Positivity: Boy, 5, helps save diabetic dad

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 5:56 am

From St. Petersburg, Florida:

Published Sunday, February 1, 2009

Five-year-old Jude Stephen thought his dad was speaking Japanese.

“Ma-ma-ma!” That’s what it sounded like to Jude.

Jude’s dad, 43-year-old Danny Stephen, is a diabetic. He had a severe reaction Saturday morning and was barely conscious for most of the day.

Around dinnertime, Stephen felt a rush of adrenaline. He knew he needed help. He tried to tell Jude to get juice, but Jude thought his dad was saying his name.

Finally, they had a breakthrough.

Jude helped him drink from juice packs, the kind with a straw. Then Jude hand-fed his father two cupcakes. Finally, Jude squeezed honey into his mouth.

As Jude held the phone, Stephen called his mother, who called 911.

When paramedics arrived, Stephen walked down to meet the truck.

“That’s really unusual with diabetic calls,” said David Fraser, a paramedic with St. Petersburg Fire and Rescue, who said patients are usually comatose. “I told the father, I’ve been doing this 30 years. Anyone who makes my job easier is a hero to me.”

….. Stephen felt tired and lay down to sleep about 9 or 10 Saturday morning. Jude watched TV alone with their German shepherd, Kiki.

Stephen says he hasn’t had such a severe reaction in years. If he’s awake, he’ll feel a change and make sure to eat something. But since he was napping, he couldn’t stop the spell from coming. “It’s like being in a dream,” Stephen said.

Jude said his dad was making weird sounds and staring at him.

When Jude started feeling hungry at dinnertime, he tried to wake his dad up. After Stephen helped Jude eat, Stephen told him to call 911. He dialed 9.

“I forgot one,” Jude said.

Jude brought his dad’s cell phone to him. Together, they got help.

“You almost died,” Jude told his dad Saturday evening, after his grandmother drove to their house to make sure they were okay.

“You saved my life,” Stephen answered.

•••

After all that, Stephen didn’t even need to go to the hospital. Paramedics checked him out and he signed a release form.

Fraser told Stephen that his son was a hero.

“The guy is down on his luck, way down on his luck, but he just seemed so happy,” Fraser said. “It just felt good being there.”

Stephen says he’s going to teach Jude to dial 911.

“I was crying,” Jude said. “I’m not crying anymore.”

Go here for the rest of the story.

February 8, 2009

‘So What?’

Filed under: Economy,Scams,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 11:04 am

The word games currently being played in Washington are amazing.

This NPR report claims that the mislabeled “stimulus” bill supposedly has no “earmarks.” The implication, I suppose, is that there’s no “pork.”

Well of course there is, but it’s worse. The bill just throws a lot of money at its beneficiaries. It’s then up to those beneficiaries to spend it prudently, apparently in many cases on anything they darn well please.

The proper expression of all of this is “massive, unprecedented pork.”

Oh, I forgot, there’s supposedly “oversight.” But it’s all after the fact. That’s not oversight. That’s documenting how we were robbed after the robbery occurred and it’s too late to get what was misappropriated back.

Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin told NPR that he’s fine with all of this:

U.S. Rep. David Obey (D-WI), the chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, helped write the bill and says he doesn’t like being asked about earmarks.

“We simply made a decision, which took about three seconds, not to have earmarks in the bill,” he says. “And with all due respect, that’s the least important question facing us on putting together this package.”

Leaving out the earmarks does mean Congress will have less control over how the money is spent. But, Obey says, “So what? This is an emergency. We’ve got to simply find a way to get this done as fast as possible and as well as possible, and that’s what we’re doing.”

That doesn’t mean Congress will be responsible if the money is spent badly, he says.

Of course not. Congress only has the power of the purse, yet it’s not “responsible” for its handiwork.

This is dereliction of duty on a scale never seen.

Positivity: New babies never grow old for veteran nurse

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 10:02 am

From Wichita, Kansas (HT Catholic News Agency):

Thursday, January 15th, 2009 at 3:58 pm

Even after 18 years working as a registered nurse in labor and delivery, Linda Pulliam never tires of the excitement and joy of bringing new lives into the world each day.

“When they are born it’s just a miracle, and it never gets old,” Linda Pulliam, a registered nurse at the NewLife Center at Via Christi Regional Medical Center said. “It’s an exciting place to work because grandma and grandpa are waiting outside the door waiting to hear that baby cry.”

When they do, it is music to her ears, “especially after it’s been a long labor. It’s such a relief and joy for everybody to hear that,” she said. Besides the cries of newborns, Brahm’s lullaby plays each time a baby is born, to Pulliam’s delight. “It’s exciting to hear the music, even if you weren’t involved in the birth.”

For Pulliam, working as a labor and delivery nurse is something of a calling. During her rounds in nursing school something clicked when she went through a rotation in labor and delivery. She just knew she had found her niche.

Over the years she’s been involved in too many births to count. Last year alone there were nearly 3,000 babies born at Via Christi Regional Medical Center’s St. Joseph Campus. The names of the families and infants are hard to recall, too, but a description of a scene during the labor or birth process will take her back to the moment.

“In labor you get to bond with [the patients] because you have been with them and you get to know them. Sometimes I see them in the grocery store and they say, ‘You delivered our baby!’ It’s pretty neat,” she added.

Patients can request the nurse they want to help deliver their baby, and Pulliam’s been tapped numerous times. Because of her length of service, she’s starting to see babies she delivered come in to have babies of their own. …..

Go here for the rest of the story.

February 7, 2009

WaPo ‘Sleuth’ on White House Census Power Grab: A ‘Tom Delay-Style Strategy’

CensusBureauPic0209.jpgThe Washington Post’s Mary Ann Akers, aka “The Sleuth,” has (Tom) Delay Derangement Syndrome (DDS), and she’s got it bad.

Akers’s DDS outbreak occurred as she reported on the plan by the Obama Administration to have the director of the Census Bureau report to the White House instead of the Director of the Commerce Department.

(On Thursday evening, after my original post [at NewsBusters; at BizzyBlog], CQpolitics.com separately updated its original coverage by reporting that “the White House but sought to define the relationship as one in which the director would ‘work closely with’ rather than report to President Obama’s senior staff.” Uh huh.)

As if to justify the administration’s plan, Akers incoherently compared the Obama White House’s attempt to coopt the entire Census Bureau to what Texan Delay and other Republicans did a few years ago to maximize the number of GOP-majority districts in one state.

Here are the opening paragraphs of Akers’s Friday evening bellyache (link is in original):

Get Ready For the U.S. Census Fight, Chicago-style

Republicans are fit to be tied over the Obama administration’s Tom DeLay-style strategy of removing the U.S. Census Bureau from the jurisdiction of the Commerce Department and transfering it to the White House.

Their biggest fear, of course, is that with the 2010 census looming, Democrats will attempt to redraw congressional districts to their party’s ultimate benefit. (Not that Republicans have ever used politics as their guiding tool in carving out congressional districts to their liking, right Mr. Delay?)

“With all of its political implications, hijacking the Census from the Commerce Dept. and letting it be run out of Rahm’s office is like putting PETA in charge of issuing hunting permits,” a Senior Republican Senate Aide fumed to the Sleuth. (The aide said he needed to remain anonymous for fear of “being redistricted — Chicago style.”)

So is the White House trying to pull a Tom DeLay?

“All DeLay did was rearrange the deck chairs,” said the irate GOP aide, adding, “this would allow Rahm to redesign the whole ship affecting everything from congressional districts to who and where eligible S-CHIP children, adults and ‘poor’ rich people live.”

But the June 28, 2006 New York Times article Akers flagged as alleged support for her criticism shows that Mr. Delay mostly won when the matter was taken to the Supreme Court. Geez Mary, the headline even says so:

Justices Back Most G.O.P. Changes to Texas Districts

The Supreme Court today upheld the basic outlines of a Republican Congressional redistricting plan in Texas, refusing to toss out a sharply contested political map engineered by the former House majority leader, Tom DeLay.

The court handed a smaller victory to the Democratic plaintiffs in the case, ruling that one Congressional district in southwestern Texas had been drawn in a way that violated the rights of Hispanic voters there.

But the court rejected the larger premise — that Texas Republicans had unconstitutionally reorganized the political map to solidify their majority in Congress. The decision means that Texas will be required to adjust some boundaries.

The court upheld the state’s ability to break with the tradition of redrawing Congressional districts only right after the official federal census every 10 years, potentially opening the door for legislatures in other states to rewrite their own Congressional maps at will throughout the decade, or when a new party takes over a state capital.

The outcome was something of a vindication for Mr. DeLay …..

“We reject the statewide challenge to Texas redistricting as an unconstitutional political gerrymander,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion.

You can be assured that when the Times has to admit that “The outcome was something of a vindication for Delay,” it really means that he essentially wiped the floor with his opponents’ arguments.

There will be a major constitutional element to the White House census takeover if it attempts to dictate the use of statistical sampling to estimate national, state, and area populations instead of using “enumeration” (i.e., counting and only counting), which the Constitution requires. In 2000, the Supreme Court ruled that stat sampling could not be used for “apportionment,” but left open the possibility that it might be acceptable for use in “redistricting.”

Another obvious problem with the reporting by Akers, whose blog description promises to give readers “better than a front-row seat to the show,” is that she didn’t show us how the results of Delay’s handiwork compare to those achieved by the Chicago-dominated Democrats in Illinois.

If you do that, you’ll see that the Lone Star State GOP was indeed pretty “creative.” But it’s obvious that the real gerrymandering “experts” are in the Land of Lincoln (Links: Texas congressional district map; Illinois; enlarged metro Chicago):

TexasCongressionalDistricts2009
IllinoisCongDistrictMap0209 ChicagoDists2002

For emphasis: If you think you’re suffering from double vision because you see the number “4″ twice in the Chicagoland map, you’re not. You’re just looking at what is probably the most distorted, democracy-discouraging congressional district in the country — the Illinois Fourth:

IL04congressionalDistrictMap2009

Another person in the White House should be familiar with the incumbent-protecting powers of gerrymandered Congressional Districts. He tried to win this Congressional seat, the Illinois 1st, which is also doubly identified in the Chicagoland map above, less than a decade ago:

Il01congressionalDistMap

That White House person would be its occupant, President Barack Obama, who lost badly in 2000 (61% – 30%) when he tried to unseat incumbent Bobby Rush.

Mary Ann Akers should realize that we will be lucky if the Obama Adminstration is only “trying to pull a Tom Delay.” Sadly, it is much more likely that it is trying to pull a Chicago.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

The President’s No-Confidence Game

Note: This item originally appeared at Pajamas Media on Thursday.

________________________________________

The Obama Administration seems bound and determined to keep the economy in the doldrums. Why?

________________________________________

The Obama administration’s economic rhetoric thus far has been alarmingly irresponsible.

Let’s start with the President’s reaction to the government’s advance estimate of fourth-quarter economic growth.

Before its release, experts predicted that the economy Gross Domestic Product (GDP) had contracted by an annualized 5%-6% during that period. The actual annualized -3.8% from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) was not nearly that bad.

Why not? Though the result could change in BEA’s February and March revisions, it appears that businesses built up inventories during the quarter in anticipation of revived demand early this year. If it weren’t for that, the annualized contraction would have been 5.1%.

The media spin that the inventory build-up masks larger overall weakness misses this important point: Businesses don’t build up inventories for the heck of it. They do it because they either have customer orders in hand, or because their forecasting models tell them they can reasonably expect future orders.

It wouldn’t be surprising if this were indeed the case, because there are underlying indications of a nascent recovery. Gas prices have stayed well over 50% lower than they were last summer, keeping an estimated $1 billion a day in consumers’ pockets. Record low mortgage rates have fueled a wave of refinancing around the country, with lower monthly mortgage payments freeing up additional billions of spendable dollars a month.

But it’s almost as if President Obama has seen these early signs of improvement and said, “We can’t have that.”

One thing those inventory forecasting models can’t figure in is the ability of a country’s chief executive and his party to throw cold water on consumer and business confidence. The leaders of what I have been referring to as “The POR Economy” — Nancy Pelosi, Obama, and Harry Reid — began doing this in earnest, both in actions and words, in June of last year. Since the November elections, their downbeat decibel level has done nothing but increase.

Commenting on the GDP report, Barack Obama could at least have cited the fact that it beat expectations as a hopeful sign. Instead, he took the opportunity to ramp up the hyperbole of horror, and engaged in an all-too-easy deception (bolds are mine):

“Today we learned that our economy shrank in the last three months of 2008 by 3.8 percent. That’s the worst contraction in close to three decades,” said the president at a White House gathering.

“This isn’t just an economic concept. This is a continuing disaster for America’s working families,” he warned. “The recession is deepening, and the urgency of our economic crisis is growing.”

This is really infuriating. Thanks to the president and many media reports, most Americans really believe that the fourth quarter’s economy was 3.8% smaller than the third’s. It wasn’t. It was 0.94% smaller — a pace, which if continued for a year, would lead to a 3.8% contraction. The result was bad enough. Why present it as if it was four times worse?

The president’s “continuing disaster” characterization might be forgivable if it weren’t part of a consistently catastrophic theme. In his January 31 weekly video address, he repeated what he and his advisers have been saying for months — that “Americans know that our economic recovery will take years — not months.”

No sir, we don’t know that. And it doesn’t have to take that long.

Nobody wants “prosperity is just around the corner” sugar-coating. But deliberately or not, this administration’s unrelenting pessimism has had an effect on public opinion.

That pessimism, and years of dreary stage-setting business reporting, even during the 2003-2007 expansion, largely explain why consumer confidence is at the lowest level in its 40-year history. It isn’t because the current economy is the worst in 40 years — at least not yet. December’s unemployment rate of 7.2%, is less than or equal to every single month in 1992, 1981-1984, and 1975-1976. Inflation, which hit 13% in 1979 and 1980, barely exists. The economy has had larger single-quarter contractions four different times in the past four decades.

This brings us back to the reported inventory buildup. If Obama and his people keep on talking down the economy, and their gloom keeps consumer and business confidence in the pits, many anticipated orders won’t materialize, and other existing orders will be cancelled. If that occurs, businesses will be left sitting on merchandise they can’t move. This will lead to large price reductions, production cutbacks, and more job losses. The economy will contract even further.

On top of that, the administration’s proposed “stimulus” solution is wholly inadequate at best, and counterproductive at worst.

A January 28 Wall Street Journal editorial estimated that only about 12% of the plan’s $800 billion-plus price tag “can plausibly be considered a growth stimulus.” That editorial also cited a litany of items whose only purpose is to address “just about every pent-up Democratic proposal of the last 40 years.” Many of them would get in the way of an economic recovery, as they would enable or encourage people to stay out of the workforce longer than they otherwise would have. Finally, most of whatever stimulus there is won’t get into the economy until 2010 or later. Thomas Sowell compares it to “mailing a letter to the fire department to tell them that your house is on fire.” Across-the-board tax cuts, which would have an immediately stimulating effect, are nowhere to be found.

If we’re supposed to believe that Team Obama doesn’t want to keep the economy down — at least long enough to get its mislabeled “stimulus” passed — this question remains: What would they be doing differently if they did?

February 6, 2009

Boehner Objects to Reported White House Census Takeover

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 2:32 pm

From a GOPleader.gov press release earlier today, concerning a development I posted about yesterday (bold is mine):

Washington, Feb 6 – House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) today issued the following statement regarding reports that control of the U.S. Census Bureau will be stripped from the Department of Commerce and placed with the White House staff:

“I am disturbed by reports that control of the traditionally nonpartisan Census Bureau is being stripped from the Commerce Department and placed with the White House staff. This action appears to be motivated by politics, rather than the interests of our country, and the burden will be on the new administration to prove otherwise during Senator Gregg’s confirmation hearings. The United States Census should remain independent of politics; it should not be directed by political operatives working out of the White House.

That’s for sure.

Based on Boehner’s release, it looks as if not only will the director of the Census Bureau report to the White House, the entire operation will apparently be micromanaged from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Yesterday, based on objections raised in the CQpolitics.com article I referenced, I thought the White House was “merely” going after the decennial 2010 count.

Thus, I understated the dangers.

A full-blown White House census takeover has the potential to corrupt data coming from any government group that uses the bureau’s information for any purpose. That would include, among many others, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which produces the employment reports. If the economic data we receive becomes suspect for non-technical reasons, the professional credibility of the data coming out of Washington will be in jeopardy.

There is no justification for a bunch of White House cronies running anything to do with the Census Bureau.