It was inevitable and not really even worth rebutting that Republicans are somehow taking credit for today’s decent February jobs report. Before I introduce you to their argument, let’s go over the three (3) bills that have passed since Republicans came into control of the House:
1) renaming a courthouse in Arizona after John Roll, who was murdered in the Tuscon shooting;
2) extending the Patriot Act for 90 days;
3) extending government funding for two weeks, with $4 billion in cuts added.
Now, the third one happened this week, so it wouldn’t have any impact on February jobs numbers. So unless an army of 100,000 people are changing the nameplates on that Arizona courthouse, and the other 100,000 are busily employed getting wiretaps on US citizens, Republican “credit” is totally bogus.
But you see, their argument isn’t based on any legislation passed, but just a feeling. This is from Jeb Hensarling, chairman of the House Republican conference:
The improvement in our nation’s jobs report is welcome news and demonstrates the resilience of the free enterprise economy in spite of the onslaught of the Democrats’ big government agenda. But the real question is why is it taking so long and why is the recovery so weak? The modest improvement can be attributed to two factors – the free-market economy is slowly moving toward a recovery from this deep recession, and with Republicans controlling one lever of the lawmaking powers, job creators know the upper limits of the Democrats’ legislative pain is behind them.
Nothing can be more uncertain than what Republicans have put the economy through over the past month. They waited until the final days to extend the government’s funding, and then did so only for two weeks. Nobody knows how things will turn out after March 18. They haven’t given too much certainty about raising the debt limit, which could cause a financial catastrophe. They want to block implementation of the health care law, which has a massive impact on businesses and creates significant uncertainty about what their costs as employers will end up being. Same with the effort to block EPA regulation of greenhouse gas emissions. It wasn’t so long ago – like months – when uncertainty was seen as a the biggest obstacle for job creation. Republicans ushered in a whole mess of it.
But, House Speaker John Boehner says, it was the tax cut deal that really stopped the bleeding here, and brought certainty to job creators. Those would be the tax cuts which expire again in less than two years (some of them in less than a year, actually).
But Boehner actually gives the credit to “the American voters” for forcing the tax cut deal forward. OK, it’s at least a little more modest. But let me then ask another question. The American voters have no interest in massive near-term budget cuts, not when you ask them about specifics. This has been polled time and time again with the same result. Yet the House GOP plan would cut those budget items in the near term, risking hundreds of thousands of jobs in the process.
So when those cuts kick in, will Boehner take credit on behalf of the American voters, who told him and his colleagues in no uncertain terms that they didn’t want them, or the economic fallout that resulted from them?
Somehow, I think not.




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The GOP is responsible for everything good and the DP is responsible for everything bad.
That’s so sensible and clear that even Dubya could understand it!
The GOP can take credit for the following along with OBAMA
Let us not look at the BOGUS JOB Report, let view the USA food stamp program
Fact:
Quote from Economy in crisis
” According to newly released numbers, over 44 million Americans are now on food stamps. That is a new all-time record and that number is 13.1% higher than it was just one year ago. So how many Americans have to go on food stamps before we can all finally agree that the U.S. economy is dying? 50 million? 60 million? All of us? The food stamp program is the modern equivalent of the old bread lines. ”
Who is going to take responsibility for this fact.
what about the USA housing market?
Fact#1 The housing industry is still a complete and total disaster. In fact, new home sales in the U.S. in January were 11.2% lower than they were in December. Not only that, the number of new home sales in January was 18.6% lower than the number of new home sales in January 2010. That is not a sign of improvement.
Fact#2 There wouldn’t even be much of a housing industry at all at this point if it was not for the U.S. government. Right now the U.S. government is either writing or guaranteeing well over 90 percent of all mortgages in the United States. So what would the housing market look like in 2011 if the government was not in the picture?
Fact#3 In 2010, more than a million U.S. families lost their homes to foreclosure for the first time ever, and that number is expected to go even higher in 2011.
Maybe the GOP wants to take credit for this also?
Just IN: “Obama just told Boehner to move those chairs to front of the USA TITANTIC”
We all under estimated how great FDR was
The insanity is that the White House has “cooked the books” on the unemployment figures. If you count the workers who have given up looking for work the unemployment rate is over 12% Leave it to the corrupt Obama Adnmin. to lie to the American people. Incompetency at it height!
FWIW, every admin since Reagan has been “cooking the books” on unemployment in the same fashion.