By Robert Reich, cross-posted from his website
President Obama’s electoral strategy can best be
summed up as: “We’re on the right track, my economic policies are
working, we still have a long way to go but stick with me and you’ll be
fine.”
That’s not good enough. This recovery is too
anemic, and the chance of an economic stall between now and Election Day
far too high.
Even now, Mitt Romney’s empty “I’ll to it better”
refrain is attracting as many voters as Obama’s “we’re on the right
track.” Each man is gathering 46 percent of voter support, according to
the latest New York Times/CBS poll.
Only 33 percent of the public thinks the economy is improving while 40
percent say they’re still falling behind financially — an 11 point
increase from 2008. Nearly two-thirds are concerned about paying for
housing, and one in five with mortgages say they’re underwater.
If the economy stalls, Romney’s empty promise will
look even better. And I’d put the odds of a stall at 50-50. That puts
the odds of a Romney presidency far too high for comfort. Need I remind
you that Romney enthusiastically supports Paul Ryan’s wildly regressive
budget, and as president would be able to make at least one or possibly
two Supreme Court appointments, and control the EPA and every other
federal agency and department?
The Obama White House should face it: “We’re on the
right track” isn’t sufficient. The President has to offer the nation a
clear, bold strategy for boosting the economy. It should be the economic
mandate for his second term.
It should consist of four points:
First, Obama should demand that the nation’s banks
modify mortgages of homeowners still struggling in the wake of Wall
Street’s housing bubble — threatening that if the banks fail to do so
he’ll fight to resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act and break up Wall
Street’s biggest banks (as the Dallas Fed recently recommended).
Second, he should condemn oil speculators for
keeping gas prices high — demanding that the oil companies allow the
Commodity Futures Trading Corporation to set limits on such speculation
and instructing the Justice Department to investigate and prosecute oil
price manipulation.
Third, he should stand ready to make further
job-creating investments in the nation’s crumbling infrastructure, and
renew his call for an infastructure bank. And while he understands the
need to reduce the nation’s long-term budget deficit, he won’t allow
austerity economics to take precedence over job creation. He’ll veto
budget cuts until unemployment is down to 5 percent.
Finally, he should make clear the underlying
problem is widening inequality. With so much of the nation’s disposable
income and wealth going to the top, the vast middle class doesn’t have
the purchasing power it needs to fire up the economy. That’s why the
Buffett rule, setting a minimum tax rate for millionaires, is just a
first step for ensuring that the gains from growth are widely shared.
The President can still say we’re on the right
track. But he should also say he’s not content with the pace of the
recovery and will do everything in his power to quicken it. And he
should ask the American people for a mandate in his second term to make
the economy work for everyone, not just those at the top.
Such a mandate can be put into effect only with a
Congress that’s committed to better jobs and wages for all Americans. He
should remind voters that congressional Republicans prevented him from
doing all that was needed in the first term, and they must not be
allowed to do so again.
Robert Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He writes a blog at www.robertreich.org. His most recent book is Beyond Outrage.
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