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McCain Gets Remedial Economics Lesson

Posted by Scarecrow , Firedoglake at 6:04 AM on March 28, 2008.


McCain's advisers had to explain that he really did want to help deserving homeowners and really would consider regulatory remedies.
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On Tuesday, John McCain attempted to address the economy by promising he would only do what makes sense and never be dogmatic. He then repeated standard Republican dogma by excusing the Fed's massive bailout of Wall Street investment bankers while offering nothing to its Mainstreet victims. The problem was a few bad actors (including irresponsible homeowers) but surely didn't require a fundamental overhaul of regulatory oversight.

"It is not the duty of government to bail out and reward those who act irresponsibly, whether they are big banks or small borrowers," McCain declared, giving only scant attention to "deserving" homeowners while using the same tone he uses when promising never to surrender in Iraq.

But then he got hammered in speeches by Senators Clinton and Obama.

By Thursday, faced with Democratic criticism, McCain's advisers had to explain he really did want to help deserving homeowners and really would consider regulatory remedies.

In a speech Tuesday, McCain pointedly stopped short of offering the kind of wholesale measures to stem the subprime mortgage and bankruptcy crises that Obama and Clinton are tossing about, suggesting that to do so would only reward bad behavior at taxpayer expense. Instead, McCain repeated his call for the lending industry to do all it could to help struggling homeowners with a legitimate claim to assistance. . . .
So the McCain campaign revisited the issue today, issuing a statement saying that he would not be opposed to all attempts to help struggling homeowners, as long as speculators were not bailed out. . . .
McCain's economic adviser, Doug Holtz-Eakin, chimed in by seeking to associate McCain with Obama's call for more effective financial regulation in a Wall Street speech today.
On Tuesday, McCain had warned that undue new regulations would threaten economic recovery, but Holtz-Eakin argued that Obama's proposals were in essence little different than what McCain was talking about. " They are wonderful words and they are words that you could hear out of a Republican or a Democrat," he said of the Obama speech. "I don't think there is any grand disagreement about the need for effective regulation. The bottom line that Senator Obama came up with is what Senator John McCain said on Tuesday."

Right.

The reference to Obama's economic speech is telling. Senator Clinton proposed remedies for the housing/mortgage crisis months ago. Monday she gave an economic speech on the mortgage crisis and focused on the topic again on Thursday (transcript). Her proposals -- except for asking Greenspan to help design further remedies -- merit as much attention as those in Obama's speech.

But Obama has the ability to reframe the discussion, just as he did on race. He can change the conversation, and the McCain people must know this. McCain is vulnerable on the economy, because the Bush Administration has blown it big time and because McCain realizes he hasn't a clue what to do about it. It was his economic advisers who came out to respond, and they weren't citing Alan Greenspan, but Barack Obama.

More on the Obama speech in the next post.

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Tagged as: mccain, clinton, obama, economy, housing market, mortgage crisis

Scarecrow is a regular blogger for FireDogLake


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We are Doomed with these three Candidates
Posted by: ronheri on Mar 28, 2008 7:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hillary will bring back Greenspan? The mastermind who helped create the subprime mortgage meltdown. Obama has as one of his top advisors, none other than Illumaniti/Zbigniew Brezinski, of the good old Jimmy Cater days. One Hundred Year War and I know little about Economics McCain? Those are what we must choose from? Yep, we are doomed!

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ECONOMIC REALITY
Posted by: BLOOMIE on Mar 28, 2008 9:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
None of the candidates has presented anything approching a comprehensive pogram to address the disaster that we face. A patch will not do. We have to totally overhaul the system which is now in total collapse. The problem begins with the Federal Reserve, a privately held corporation, owned by the banking industry for its own advantage. Most Americans believe it a government agency. It isn't. The President is empowered to nominate the Chairman. Currency is issued by the Fed which is nothing more than IOUs encumbering the populace by debt instruments, bonds which are auctioned.The Fed loans this money to its member banks, and we pay the debt.

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Can you believe-----------
Posted by: Sissy on Mar 28, 2008 11:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that McCain has been a U.S. Senator for some 30 years? No wonder we're in such a gawdawful mess in this country. AND now he wants to be president in one of the most horrific times in our history? Go figure.

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oxheadone
Posted by: oxheadone on Mar 28, 2008 11:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whoever inherits the mess that the Bush administration has created deserves our deepest sympathy. So many very difficult and unpleasant actions will be required while the US remains very divided and very weakened on virtually every front. Perhaps it is time for a new America First movement. We need something to unify the people. We really cannot afford most of what we are doing with a big federal budget deficit, a big balance of payments deficit, and a falling dollar, and a huge growing debt owed to foreigners. American capitalism is trying to self-destruct by weakening confidence in its financial institutions while sitting on the edge of a depression. The terrorists are succeeding by making us behave stupidly.

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