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Obama Wars Title: Why time has run out for 2010 Democrats Why time has run out for 2010 Democrats Jul 6, 2010 22:27 EDT 2010 election More and more, the political cake looks fully and thoroughly baked. Oh sure, perhaps congressional Democrats can sidestep the coming Republican wave through clever campaign tactics. Perhaps they can de-nationalize the November midterm elections by successfully waging dozens of bloody, up-close-and-personal knife fights coast to coast. Make every Republican a controversial Sharon Angle or Ron Paul with a radiation vibe. Yet for that fight them on the beaches approach to really work, Democrats probably need a bit of breeze at their backs. They need some some help from the economy, the dominant issue with American voters. As last weeks miserable jobs report made clear, however, help does not appear to be arriving anytime soon. Just 83,000 private sector jobs were created in June, after a mere 33,000 in May. Sure, the unemployment rate fell to 9.5 percent from 9.7 percent. But thats because the workforce shrunk by 650,000, hardly sign of a burgeoning boom. Had it only stayed stable, the jobless rate would have climbed back up to 9.9 percent. The unemployment rate has now been been 9.4 percent or higher for 14 months. Thats twice the level Americans have becomes used to during the past two decades. If history is any guide, pushing the unemployment rate below 9 percent by Election Day would take a sudden and dramatic surge in GDP growth to a six or seven percent annual rate. But something between one and three percent seems more likely given recent economic data. Also likely is an unemployment rate back above 10 percent. Even Mark Zandi, Nancy Pelosis favorite economist thinks that. Republicans will surely remind voters that Obamanomics was supposed to keep unemployment below eight percent. So expect more erosion in President Barack Obamas approval ratings, historically a key driver of his partys performance in midterm elections. Now for a month of so last spring, it looked as if Obamas audacious political and economic gamble from 2009 might pay off. Back then, the economy seemed to be growing at a steady clip of three to four percent. And it was adding private-sector jobs in modest bunches, 158,000 in March and 241,000 in April. More importantly for the November midterms, the slow bleed in the presidents polls had stopped. Obamas approval ratings seemed to stabilize right around 50 percent, disapproval in the mid-to-low 40s. Thanks to a bit of an economic bounce, Team Obama could not only plausibly suggest its $800 billion economic stimulus package had brought America back from the brink, but also that it had put America firmly on the road to recovery. The Spring Thaw would surely turn into Recovery Summer both for the economy and Democrats long fearful of an Autumn Annihilation. Summer Swoon looks like the better description, both economically and politically. The decline in Obamas approval ratings has resumed. Hes now down to 44 percent approval, 46 percent disapproval, according to Gallup. Unemployment and oil seem to be topping legislative achievements likes healthcare and financial reform during this brutally hot summer. Perhaps the economy will kick into gear in 2011. But for the Obama agenda beyond 2010, its all about preventing a historic political reversal in November. And with just three employment reports left until Election Day, the economic cake may already be baked, too.
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#1. To: All (#0)
The true unemployment rate is approximately 17%. And according to the Labor and Statistic's report, those under age 25 are 54% unemployed right now.
Obama's first all-by-his-lonesome budget, btw, calls for a $1.17 trillion deficit.
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