INFLATION LOOMS:
O'S
DEFICIT DILEMMA
By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
June 11, 2009
IT'S
increasingly looking like President Obama may be sunk by his own deficit.
Yes, the
recession started under George W. Bush -- and voters will still blame him for
unemployment and related woes. But rising interest rates and inflation are the
coming fears -- and Americans will increasingly see Obama's big-spending ways
as the cause.
Deficit
spending has always been Americans' bete
noir; the gospel of balanced budgets is deeply ingrained in our
political and economic psyche. Through all the Keynesian experiments of the
'60s and '70s, voters remained committed to a balanced budget. They worried as
deficits rose in the Reagan years -- then calmed as the economy turned up.
But when
the news turned bad under the first President George Bush, they blamed the
deficit -- the issue was a major source of Ross Perot's appeal in the 1992
election. And when President Bill Clinton (and a Republican Congress) finally
balanced the budget, the economy bloomed -- reinforcing public beliefs about
the dangers of deficits.
Still in
shock over the financial collapse, voters tolerated the massive government
stimulus package in January. But now they're starting to turn on the
deficit-makers.
In the
latest Gallup Poll, Obama's favorability remains high (67 percent), as does his
job-approval rating (61 percent). But only 55 percent approve of his handling
of the economy, just 45 percent approve of his handling of federal spending and
only 46 percent approve of his treatment of the budget deficit.
Meanwhile,
the Rasmussen poll finds that the public now trusts Republicans over Democrats
in managing the economy (for the first time in two years) by 42 percent to 36
percent.
There
lies the president's vulnerability. As the consensus among economists and
journalists grows that the deficit is pushing up interest rates and weakening
the dollar, Obama's weakest link will come under strain. If, say, the falling
dollar pushes up gasoline prices and rising interest rates kill off any revival
in the construction industry, the deficit will cause a perfect economic storm
for the president.
The
Alternately,
he could raise taxes to try to fund his programs (particularly his health-care
proposals). But even tax hikes confined to the upper brackets will undermine
his popularity -- and slow the economy.
Plus,
voters will fear that the added government spending will just grow the deficit
further. They won't believe Obama's claims that he can save by spending,
worrying instead that he's just on another big spending spree.
Indeed,
deficit fears -- rather than concerns about whether the program will work, or
even opposition to the needed tax hikes -- may prove to be the telling argument
against Obama's health-care plans.
The one
thing Obama should do is the one thing he won't do: cut spending.
The
public has begun to realize that the stimulus package is doing little to help
the economy. Obama's answer is to ramp up spending -- but voters in the
Rasmussen poll believe, 45-36, that he should cancel the rest of the stimulus outlays.
Stoked
by ongoing bad economic news, the firm public conviction that new deficit
spending will do more harm than good will increasingly wear on Obama's
popularity -- and may bring him down.