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WORD COUNT
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JULY 1, 2009
TIME FOR
CONGRESS TO INVESTIGATE THE RECESSION – by Mark Weisbrot
Plans are
already being made for the 2010 elections for the U.S. Congress, and the
Democrats would appear to have some advantages. They have a popular
president, a 6-percentage-point lead in party identification and 9
points for a generic Congressional ballot. Majorities of the electorate
see both Obama and the Democratic Party as pushing for a change from the
failed policies of the past. The Republicans seem divided and confused
over a recovery strategy, plagued by high-level defections (such as
Senator Arlen Specter) and spokespeople (such as Rush Limbaugh and Dick
Cheney) that seem too extreme to win over the necessary swing voters.
But the president's party almost always loses Congressional seats in
non-presidential-year elections. And if next year's elections reduce the
Democrats' margin, it would be even more difficult to make progress on
important reform legislation, such as health care. At the end of the
day, the ability to deliver reforms that actually improve the lives of
the majority of Americans will most likely determine their long-term
success as a political party.
The 2010 elections will very likely be about who gets blamed for the
current economic disaster. Even if the economy is recovering in the
latter half of next year - and that is a big "if" - it will not feel
much like an economic recovery for most Americans. The labor market will
still be very weak, with unemployment projected to pass ten percent and
rising in the second half of next year. Millions will have lost their
homes and their jobs, and many millions more will have lost most of the
equity that they had accumulated in their homes - the main source of
retirement savings for most households. The party that gets blamed for
the mess will be most likely to lose seats in Congress.
The Democrats have a chance to defy electoral history and increase their
Congressional lead next year, and perhaps even push the GOP toward the
status of a permanent minority party. Celinda Lake, one of the
Democratic Party's leading pollsters and strategists, has recently found
that 71 percent of voters want Congress to hold investigations into the
"events leading up to the Wall Street financial crisis." More
importantly, the proportion is just as high among swing voters.
A Congressional investigation, if done right, would probe the errors,
excesses, fraud, corruption and other abuses that led to the country's
worst recession since the Great Depression. There is plenty of blame to
go around, but much of it would probably land on Wall Street and the
country's bloated financial sector. The vastly overpaid executives, who
made ever-increasing bets on the proposition that obviously over-valued
house prices would continue to rise indefinitely, would come under fire.
Some of them were rewarded for their failures with high positions in
government: for example, President Bush's Treasury Secretary Hank
Paulson, who made $164 million in 2006 at Goldman Sachs during the peak
of the housing bubble, helped steer the economy into an iceberg, and
then came to Congress to ask for a blank check of $700 billion to bail
out his Wall Street friends.
The most important policy makers, such as Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan -
who has to some degree fallen from grace - but also current Chairman Ben
Bernanke, might also be asked to explain how they failed to notice the
biggest asset bubble in the history of the world as it swelled over a
period of several years to obviously threatening proportions.
The obvious analogy to such an investigation would be the famed Pecora
commission during the 1930's, as some have pointed out. It was named for
its intrepid chief counsel Ferdinand Pecora, who went after the Wall
Street titans of that era and helped pave the way for the nation's most
important financial regulatory reforms, such as the Glass-Steagall Act
of 1933.
The Democratic Congressional leadership thus has a chance do something
that could promote badly needed reforms, is desired by an overwhelming
majority of voters, and could give them a big political boost. But do
they have the guts to do it? We will soon find out.
--
Mark
Weisbrot
is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in
Washington, D.C. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security:
The Phony Crisis, and has written numerous research papers on economic
policy. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy. A photo of Mark
Weisbrot is available CLICK HERE
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