President Obama smacked down Republicans today by
contrasting his record of economic success with the reality of their
trickle down failures.
The president said:
Now, I want to return to the issue of the debate
that we were having then because it bears on the debate we’re having
now. It’s important to note that at every step that we’ve taken over the
past six years we were told our goals were misguided; they were too
ambitious; that my administration’s policies would crush jobs and
explode deficits, and destroy the economy forever. Remember that?
Because sometimes we don’t do the instant replay, we don’t run the tape
back, and then we end up having the same argument going forward.
One Republican in Congress warned our policies
would diminish employment and diminish stock prices. Diminish stock
prices. The stock market has doubled since I came into office.
Corporate profits are — corporate balance sheets are stronger than they
have ever been — because of my terrible business policies.
One Republican senator claimed we faced
trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. Another predicted
my reelection would spike gas prices to $6.60 a gallon. I don’t know
how he came up with that figure — $6.60. My opponent in that last
election pledged that he could bring down the unemployment rate to 6
percent by 2016 — next year — at the end of next year. It’s 5.5 now.
(Applause.)
And right here in Cleveland, the leader of the House
Republicans — a good friend of mine —- he captured his party’s economic
theories by critiquing mine with a very simple question: Where are the
jobs, he said. Where are the jobs? I’m sure there was a headline in
The Plain Dealer or one of the papers — Where Are the Jobs?
Well, after 12 million new jobs, a stock market that
has more than doubled, deficits that have been cut by two-thirds,
health care inflation at the lowest rate in nearly 50 years,
manufacturing coming back, auto industry coming back, clean energy
doubled — I’ve come not only to answer that question, but I want to
return to the debate that is central to this country, and the
alternative economic theory that’s presented by the other side.
Because their theory does not change. It really
doesn’t. It’s a theory that says, if we do little more than just cut
taxes for those at the very top, if we strip out regulations and let
special interests write their own rules, prosperity trickles down to the
rest of us. And I take the opposite view. And I take it not for
ideological reasons, but for historic reasons, because of the evidence.
We know from the facts that are there for all
to see that America does better, our economy does better, everybody does
better when the middle class does better and we’ve got more ladders for
people to get into the middle class if they’re willing to work hard.
We do better when everyone grows together — top, middle, bottom. We do
better when everyone has a chance not only to benefit from America’s
success, but also to contribute to America’s success. And we know from
more recent history that when we stray from that ideal it doesn’t turn
out well. We’ve now got evidence there is a better way, there is a
better approach. And I’m calling it middle-class economics.
For the first eight years of this century,
before I came into office, we tried trickle-down economics. We slashed
taxes for folks at the top, stripped out regulations, didn’t make
investments in the things we know we need to grow. At the end of those
eight years, we had soaring deficits, record job losses, an economy in
crippling recession.
In the years since then we’ve tried
middle-class economics. Today we’ve got dramatically lower deficits, a
record streak of job creation, an economy that’s steadily growing.
President Obama demonstrated why Republicans are
going to have a difficult time selling their ideas as good for the
economy. None of the Republican ideas have changed. The same ideology
that killed the Clinton economy by led to an economic collapse is still
being touted by the GOP today.
Obama’s rebuttal to the Republicans can be summed up as we’ve been there, done that, and all we got was a lousy recession.
It was nice to see this president taking a small
measure of credit for the growing economy. A consistent criticism of the
Obama White House has been that they have not taken enough credit for
their accomplishments. President Obama went beyond reminding people of
what he has achieved. The president also contrasted his economic record
with what came before him under George W. Bush. The Bush economic record
is still relevant because Republicans are putting out budgets that are
based on the same ideology that Bush failed with during his time in
office.
Obama
delivered a heaping spoonful of bitter reality to the Republicans.
Every single one of their predictions were wrong. The Republican
economic ideology is a failure, and Obama’s successes demonstrated once
again that middle-class economics will always triumph over the great
trickle down fraud.
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