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Amid a Painful Economic Meltdown, Will Obama Be Bold Enough to Win?

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted September 13, 2008.


Americans are ready for deep and substantive change -- will Obama deliver what they seek?

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Voters may not follow every twist and turn of the election -- they may not brush up on each of the candidates' policy proposals -- but they know when they're hurting economically, and almost unprecedented numbers now say the country is on "the wrong track."

The Bush years have been bad. In fact, as economist Jared Bernstein noted, when one compares the economic peak of the past cycle, in 2000, with the high point of the business cycle that just ended in 2007, households in the middle actually lost ground, earning $300, adjusted for inflation, less than they did in 2000. The worst this group had done in previous business cycles occurred during the 1970s, when median income "only" increased by about $2,000. In comparison, the income for a family in the middle rose by almost four grand during the 1990s.

It's the first time since they started keeping records of family income after World War II that the economy has gone into a recession before the middle class, those iconic "American families" that dominate our political discourse, had rebounded fully from the previous downturn. That represents an immensely painful double-dip for those in the middle and at the bottom -- only those in the top fifth of the economic ladder have seen any gains whatsoever since the last recession (officially) ended in 2001. (The wages of the bottom fifth fell by 6 percent, while those in the top 1 percent saw their incomes rise by about 50 percent during what some conservative pundits have called the "Bush Boom").

But it's important to understand that Bushenomics only represents an extreme iteration of the ideology that's prevailed since the 1973 energy crisis and the dawn of the "Reagan Revolution." The pain that working America feels today is the culmination of a far longer trend. An analysis by economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez offers perhaps the most compelling indictment of neoliberal economics. They sliced and diced the American economy, going back to the beginning of the last century, and they found that between 1973 and 2003, despite several periods of healthy growth, the average real income of all but the top 10 percent of the economic ladder -- 9 out of 10 American families -- actually fell by about 4 percent over those 30-plus years. Meanwhile, the incomes of the top 10 percent of American households increased by around two-thirds.

It's a unique moment in history, with the country facing a deep, structural energy crisis, with a tattered reputation and dwindling influence abroad and a sputtering economy at home. But in moments of crisis, there is often opportunity. The public now appears to be uniquely receptive to a bold progressive agenda, more so than at any other point in recent memory.

The question that will be answered over the coming weeks is how aggressive the Obama campaign will be in articulating such an agenda -- whether a campaign that has moved to a steady but generic drumbeat of "change" can widen the discussion from the failures of the Bush administration to the disastrous consequences of the larger conservative project over the past 30 years and offer the voters some concrete proposals to restore Americans' tattered sense of economic security.

What Kind of "Change" Are We Talking About?

The neoliberal project -- the idea that business, when largely unregulated, has some sort of magical virtue that renders the idea of a healthy social safety net a quaint but antiquated notion -- has failed, and done so spectacularly over a long period of time.

Noam Chomsky has said (and I'm paraphrasing) that for the adherents of neoliberalism, the answer to each and every one of its failures is more neoliberalism, and John McCain epitomizes that approach. His economic prescriptions are as simple as they are familiar: Cut taxes for top earners, privatize as many chunks of the public sphere as possible, and let "the market" deal with whatever dislocations result. To keep the masses from becoming unruly, throw some crumbs their way -- job retraining, trade "adjustment assistance," maybe a grudging increase in the minimum wage (actually, McCain has voted 19 times against raising the minimum).


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Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

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View:
the heart of our nation
Posted by: jreal on Sep 13, 2008 12:26 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OK, so Obama wants to win.

First, before going into other issues, he needs to support an initiative for runoff ballots. With the electoral election, afer all state votes are tallied up, if a 3rd party or independent candidate wins a state but is irrelevant on the national stage, just like a runoff ballot on the local level, the next relevant candidate gets the state. That's what a runoff is all about, if your first choice is irrelevant, the next choice trumps.

This is imperative because there is a truly progressive sector in America whose hearts are not with the corporate parties and really want progressive party values to matter in politics. And the truth is, if 3rd parties and independents get a voice, America will progress towards a more democratic America, not only at the voting booth, but in every sector of everyday life.

This sector of America has a revolutionary mindset as breathtaking of the revolutionary years itself. They are grassroots. They are the Constitution. They are the patriots of the forefathers mentality. They are the truth of our nation. The symbol of all our liberties, the pioneers of justice, and the definition of humanity. But yet they are denied representation. They are ran over by special interests, lobbyists, corporate america, and soccer moms. They are the symbol of our country, but they are instead cast aside by the infringing of what we expelled during the Revolutionary War.

These are the hearts of our nation, but yet they get no voice. Give these people a voice Obama. This is your shot. Are you the patiot that will give these people a voice. These people whom have captured the spirits of the patriotic descendants of the Revolutionary War.

These people will vote for you Obama, if you give their hearts freedom of choice in 4 years and elections beyond.

3rd parties and independents usually vote based on facts and evidence and what's really best for the people and America. So this will only help Democrats as partners in congress.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: the heart of our nation Posted by: djnoll
» RE: the heart of our nation Posted by: mattbrown46
» RE: the heart of our nation Posted by: LOVELYT.
» RE: "OK, so Obama wants to win." (?) Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: "OK, so Obama wants to win." (?) Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: the heart of our nation Posted by: LOVELYT.
The issues. The heart. The blood. The guts.
Posted by: jreal on Sep 13, 2008 12:30 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now as for other issues, this is easy.


Democrats are for unions. Republicans are for welfare.

With unions, you get higher wages, more benefits, and less of us paying for their medical bills and food stamps. Republicans hate unions because they want slavery back in America and want us to pay for their employees medical bills. How fair is that. Republicans want more monopolies, less taxes to support our fire departments and schools, and they want us to pay for their employees medical bills and food stamps. Democrats are for unions and fair working conditions. Republicans are for welfare.


Obama is for legislation that protects childeren from sexual predators. McCain/Palin have shown that they support sexual predators. And they will publicly attack you for protecting the childeren from these predators.


Hey Americans, do you make 250,000 dollars a year or more? No? Well then under Obama, you get a tax break.

Hey Americans, do you make 250,000 dollars a year or more? No? Well then under obama, you get a tax break.

Hey Americans, do you make 250,000 dollars a year or more? No? Well then under obama, you get a tax break.

Vote for McCain if you want Paris Hilton, Walmart, and Exxon-Mobile to get a tax break.

Vote for Obama if you want yourself to get a tax break.


If you think it doesn't matter if childeren have health insurance or not, vote for McCain.

If you think all childeren should have health insurance, vote for Obama.


If you think Veterans who shed their sweat and blood should deserve an education, vote for Obama

If you say, "fuck the veterans, let them rot in poverty" vote for McCain.


McCain graduated 892nd out of 896 gradu ates, and shouldn't have been flying aircraft after crashing 4 times(2 may have not been his fault) but with the help of his father was able to keep earning his wings and then managed to be keep being wreckless and crashed a 5th time this time with horrible consequences.



Do you want a president who graduated 4th from last out of almost 900 graduats. And do you as a nation want to suffer the "horrible consequences" of a wreckless operator at the seat. Just remember, this time it won't be in a prison camp. This time it may be in a mushroom cloud.



It was a nice heroic story Mr. McCain. But I don't want to live in your wreckless path to destruction.





I'll vote for Obama. He's got sense. People like him. He's intelligent. He knows how to talk to heads of state in a constructive manner. And people like him. So you want to make fun of him for bein popular. Well, that's better than being a nuclear enemy now isn't it.





McCain/Palin are the candidates of liars and deceit and 4 more years of evading investigation, corruption, and lobbyists drunk with our money and lobbyists as their real constituents instead of us.





McCain/Palin is also clearly playing follow the leader. Obama should call them on that. Obama is the leader and they are playing "follow the leader". Follow the leader on feminism, women in the workplace, alternative enrgies, the theme of "change" and many many other ideas.



McCain/Palin is the follow the leader candidates. Just vote for the real thing. Vote for Obama.

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» Obama must win by a LANDSLIDE! Posted by: itzamirakul
» X-POLYGAMIST WIFE in ARIZONA Posted by: X-POLYGAMIST WIFE
All we can do is hope
Posted by: VetAgainst McCain on Sep 13, 2008 12:41 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
John McCain and I have one thing in common: we don't know shit about economics. So I will vote for Obama and hope he can get our country back on course.

One more thing. I want to thank AlterNet for improving my retired lifestyle.

Since I began commenting on the best progressive blog ever, I've lost all interest in talking-head TV, such as my former favorites: MSNBC's "Hardball," Keith Obermann's hoot and most recently, the six p.m. program hosted by Rachel Maddow.

I also ignore the Sunday morning shows, like "Face the Nation" and "Meet the Press." Happily, I've discovered, the print media, online transcripts and investigative Web sites provide more than enough information to satisfy my curiosity.

Thanks to AlterNet, I have more time during the week for writing, gardening, swimming, seeing movies, shopping with my wife and visiting our kids -- to name a few pleasurable afternoon activities.

Then, at midnight before going to bed and after AlterNet posts its newest articles, I'm back on the blog having fun attacking Manchurian Candidate McCain, Appalling Palin and the rightwing GOP.

I even enjoy jousting with LyingHeart -- I mean, LionHeart.

Have a great weekend, everyone!

Vet against McCain
To find out why, click on the links below:

American View
(now my favorite anti-GOP Web site)
Vietnam Veterans Against John McCain
(self-explanatory)
Vote Vets
(maintained by Iraq and Afghan war vets)

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» RE: All we can do is hope Posted by: Moira61
» Back to Fundementals Posted by: edgar1
Obama May Win Anyway ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 13, 2008 12:43 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As for what I see of Obama's approach to the crises that face our country I would say he definitely doesn't get it.

To be fair, almost all of Congress doesn't get it. They don't want to get it because like Obama their bread is buttered by the campaign contributions and later by the lucrative jobs offered by the special interests.

The issues facing the United States haven't been this serious since the Civil War. We are facing a total economic meltdown, two wars ongoing and governance that can only be described as catastrophic.

As far as the campaign, Obama has boxed himself into mediocre incremental change by appealing to the special interests that paid his way. Incremental change that, by the way, will fall far short of addressing the depth and breadth of the problems we face. It is too late in the contest for Obama to lay the foundation for the radical change needed. He will get pummeled for changing positions, because clearly he needs, the country needs, far more serious ideas than he has on the table now.

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» RE: Obama May Win Anyway ... Posted by: nochicagoboys
Obamarama just doesn't get it!
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Sep 13, 2008 12:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have said it multiple times before but it is worth repeating...FDR is a hero and national treasure. Every Dipocrit candidate should be invoking his "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself" and pound the opposition at every level with Bush/Cheney incompetence, crimes and misdemeanors. Instead, all have been swift-boated again by a certified ding-dong [McCain] and upstart piss-ant with no credentials to do more than pump up pentacostal lunacy coupled with more neocon horseshit [Palin].....yet this despicable tandem is kicking the Dipocrits ass at every stop and now seem likely to retain the White House and fare no worse otherwise than the current divide in Congress. Unbelievable developments after 28 years of Reagan smoke and mirrors now rendered vile and unsustainable under Bush/Cheney. To think that Americans still buy it is an indictment of capital offense proportion that sends one clear message to the lucid.....get the hell out of this penal colony before self-inflicted genocide gets all of us. Is Obamarama the answer to anything? Wot.

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I work...
Posted by: adp3d on Sep 13, 2008 3:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...at a major midwestern university(Big Ten) and the last "good" contract increase we have received has been 4% about ten years ago. Since then it's been stuff like 3% over three years with 0% the first year and 1.5% the next two years, and we are unionized. The campus has been one big construction zone for the last three years so there is money out there(anyone paying tuition?). Our health care is slowly being peeled away while they charge us more to park(my last pay increase is less then the increase in parking). Now I know that I'm fortunate enough to have all this and I don't take it for granted for one minute but is this the way I should feel? I have been backsliding for about 6 years now and guess what - every year the ol' U tries to hit me up for a donation. Except for PBS you know that sucker goes in the circular file.

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» RE: I work...I worked... Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
» RE: I work... Posted by: jareilly
Then how do we explain the current poll numbers?
Posted by: brilliantatbreakfast on Sep 13, 2008 3:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm rapidly coming to the conclusion that there is a conspiracy between the Republican Party and the media to sustain Republican rule. That conclusion isn't all that ridiculous anymore, now that Keith Olbermann essentailly said as much the other night.

Americans may know in their heads that they favor a greater role for government, but so far they are responding to media memes about mavericks and hockey moms, and resorting to the old reptilian brain tap of "He's not like us" and "The VP should be a mom just like me" and the other Memes of Stupidity that have led to Republican victory over and over again.

If the media put as much effort into contrasting the plans of the two presidential candidates, instead of behaving like adolescent boys who think they're going to get the chance to bang Sarah Palin, perhaps I could have some hope for this country.

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» Like me? Posted by: lywog
» Statistics 101 Posted by: robbie.seal
» Some corrections Posted by: ReallyBearish
» I agree 100%! Posted by: itzamirakul
Obama told us what policies he would try to support (remember the president is an administrator, not
Posted by: Suzon on Sep 13, 2008 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
a legislator), at this point it's not his job to be bold.

It's our job to be smart.

Don't throw your vote away, even though it can make you feel good momentarily--or up until the day that wealth being sucked up to the top really destroys personal security and any hope of salvaging the environment.

Elect Democrats and put their feet to the fire. Obama's policies have flaws but he is unlikely to add to the sum total of harm to ordinary people and the planet.

McCain has always been a big risk taker and Pailin is no improvement on that score.

Let's put it in these stark terms: The Democratic candidates are flawed but sane while the Republican candidates would happily go to hell in a handbasket.

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» RE:I confess: Posted by: oregoncharles
» Voting for ANYONE... Posted by: pdxjoe
Voters about to be conned again
Posted by: Democritus on Sep 13, 2008 4:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama leads McCain on the issues. Obama leads McCain on ethics and personal attributes. McCain's selection of Palin is a joke. So why isn't Obama trouncing McCain in the polls? The most recent polls show McCain in the lead--especially among white, working-class men, the very voters who have been screwed by Bush and Cheney for the last seven years, with McCain promising to do it to them yet again.

There are two reasons I see. (1) Despite appearances to the contrary, most American voters are grossly uninformed. High-minded discussions on public policy put them to sleep. They are receptive to distorted, 30-second sound bites, but not to the details of any long-range plans affecting them; (2) They vote on emotion and not on facts and reason. This is why the "swift-boating" of Kerry worked. They see McCain as a tough war hero (when he really should have been court-martialed for providing propaganda for the enemy of his country in time of war).

So what can Obama do to convince people to vote in their own best interests? I say that facts and reason go only so far. He has to appeal to people's emotions. For instance, although he has to inform the electorate that people making less than $250,000 will get a tax break under his plan, he has to excoriate those who have benefited unfairly from the Bush-Cheney years and demand that they pay their fair share. Is this engaging in class warfare? You bet it is. Soak the plutocrats, they deserve it. Sock it to them in those 30-second sound bites. No more trickle down. Give those working-class, white male Americans something to get angry about. These tactics have worked for Republicans for years. It's time to take the gloves off, give them a bashing--hoist them on their own petard.

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» when sarah palin is POTUS... Posted by: Annapurna1
Obama Talks Big & Will Deliver Nothing -- McCain will be Worse Yet
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Sep 13, 2008 4:40 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's Good Cop or Bad Cop depending which of these corporate monopoly selected hired play-actors Americans "choose" to pose at the White House Rose Garden.

With ruling class handlers like George Soros (who bought the Rose Revolution at puppet Georgia for Rothschild allies) and Zbignew Brzezinski, Obama's performance is more or less a given. His cheap cave-in on FISA along with support of a completely phony 9/11 "war on terror" leave little doubt what kind of front man he is to be for the nation.

No need to explore glassy-eyed NeoCon cum sellout McCain (handled by AIPAC Leiberman) who had his Jacob and Nathaniel Rothschild parasite robber baron fundraiser out of London earlier this year.

So, it's Tweedle Dee-Dee or Tweedle Dee-Dumber that will pose for their paymasters and cook more of the same disastrous policy for the nation. And more self-serve blood money profits for the usual monopoly oligarchs.

(By the way, "neoliberal" is merely bankrupt code for FASCIST rule.)

I do wish I could be more optimistic but facts keep getting in the way.

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What a choice!
Posted by: trel on Sep 13, 2008 4:50 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Never in the history of this Republic has the choice for president been worse than it is today, when you look at the republican and democratic candidates. And we've had some pretty bad choices in the not to distant past.
Ron Paul and Bob Bar of course have no chance of winning, so that leaves us with an insane man in McCain, or a communist in Obama.
God help us!

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» RE: What a choice! Posted by: Suasponte
» Obama? A communist? Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: What a choice! Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: What a choice! Posted by: oregoncharles
» Not so unusual Posted by: edgar1
» RE: What a choice! Posted by: weenie
» RE: What a choice! Posted by: progdem
Obama has just taken even the tax cuts for the wealthy elite off the table.
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 13, 2008 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» RE: So tell me again: Posted by: oregoncharles
» Well what do you think? Posted by: maxpayne
» RE: Well what do you think? Posted by: oregoncharles
Otto .
Posted by: otto on Sep 13, 2008 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I keep wondering why there isn't more publication and emphasis of the connection between a "strong military" economy (about 50% of our budget), the loss of infrastructure and basic needs of life, the waste (Reagan's $400 hammers and Rumsfeld's no-bid companies today (Haliburton), the borrowing of money for war and empire abroad, and the gradual disintegration of the whole economy. At first it's just those at the bottom who slip through the cracks, but gradually it's the majority of the people. Only the crooks at the top keep making more money. The Repubicans have taken over the Democrats' place as "the war party". And by the way, Josh, I wish the Obama campaign would sign you up to help and advise them.

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Also, I have warned before that no matter how bad things get, as long as
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 13, 2008 5:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the rightwing can frame events to their liking, as long as Democrats keep pandering to the rightwing base, and as long as Democrats refuse to be pro-populist progressive/liberal be it campaigning or legislating, the rightwingers will always win. I don't think the Democrats will ever listen to us voters especially the base. Obama has been more mean to the progressive/liberal base than Dukakis, Kerry, Gore, or even Clinton.

And this just isn't Obama. The problem is long term. The Democrats keep pandering to the GOP rightwing when they vote. As a result, they have fewer issues to run on to show that they actually support/oppose against their opponents. That itself means that they already lost half the war. Second, to add insult to the injury, the Democrats keep hiring sellouts and war hawks to further weaken their candidacies and basically prevent them from being populist. That's why the Democrats keep losing. If they were long term populists from campaigning to legislating instead of sellouts and backstabbers, they wouldn't be getting into the habit of putting themselves on the "defensive". A poor record can add up to poor campaigning.

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The Next Phase of Campaign is About To Commence...
Posted by: drricklippin on Sep 13, 2008 5:27 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Silly season" will soon fizzle because there is too much economic pain among too many to allow it to continue.

Exposing the bizarre Palin choice for VP mistake by McCain began with the Gibson interview of Palin-More meltdown to come

The debates are coming up. I sincerely doubt if the tough questions will be avoided.

Bill and Hill are ready to roll for Obama.

Hang in folks

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
ralippin@aol.com

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» Good one, Dr. Rick! Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: Good one, Dr. Rick! Posted by: badkitty
» Here in northeastern PA... Posted by: sharonsylvie
Agreed! As is the Main Stream Media owned by the corporations
Posted by: itzamirakul on Sep 13, 2008 5:28 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I tend to get most of my political input from C-Span's Washington Journal since it seems the least biased and that is saying a lot because that network is owned by several cable companies and it is ridiculous to think that they do not have influence over what is broadcast over their stations despite their disclaimers. In the last few weeks, C-Span has doubled its support of McCain by criticizing Obama much more and having far more Republican guests than Democrats.

C-Span was even worse during the 2000 and 2004 elections in their support of Bush-Cheney. Even Media Matters took them to task for having nearly 4 times the number of GOP guest speakers as they did Democratic guest speakers. C-Span has never again had a Media Matters guest speaker on their show that I know of. Perhaps I missed one.

The fact that I still watch C-Span tells you how very bad the rest of the Main Stream Media News is.

PBS was taken over by the right-wing in the early 2000s when the executive management of the network was totally replaced by GOP loyalists. I no longer donate to PBS (and I used to contribute large sums) since the takeover and I very nastily tell them to get their support from the right-wing audiences that supposedly demanded such change whenever they solicit contributions.

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» Thanks for the information. Posted by: Last Chance
Deep and Substantive?
Posted by: R7fel on Sep 13, 2008 5:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Obama wants deep and substantive change what is warhawk, status quo, credit card companies darling Joe Biden doing on his ticket?

" Experts say hundreds of thousands of Americans may have lost their homes due to a bill championed by Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., Barack Obama's vice-presidential running mate.

At least two studies have concluded that the United States' foreclosure crisis was exacerbated by a 2005 law that overhauled the nation's bankruptcy law. That conclusion is echoed by other experts, although the banking and credit industry disputes it.

Congressional Republicans drove the effort to pass the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA) of 2005. But Biden who has enjoyed hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign donations from credit industry executives endorsed the measure early on and worked to gather Democratic support for it.

Biden's early and vocal support was "essential" to the bill's passage, said Travis Plunkett of the Washington D.C.-based advocacy group Consumer Federation, which opposed the measure. Biden "went out of his way to undermine criticism of the legislation," and his efforts helped convince other Democrats to support the bill."

more at: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20732.htm

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» RE: Deep and Substantive? Posted by: JSquercia