May 19, 2012

Voting Against a Sacred Cow

The killing of the terrorist leader Osama bin Laden overshadowed much of the other news in politics that occurred the same week. Some of these events could have an important impact in the elections of 2012. In April of 2011, almost all of the Republicans in the United States House of Representatives voted for a budget plan that would eliminate the guarantee of Medicare coverage for the elderly. This vote turned out to be extremely unpopular among voters. House Republicans faced angry constituents in town meetings in which they attempted to defend their votes. Public opinion polls also revealed the unpopularity of removing the guarantee of Medicare for those aged 65 and older.

Eric Cantor, the House majority leader, announced that the proposal would not be part of the debt-limit talks that began a few days after President Barack Obama’s announcement of the killing of Osama bin Laden. House Republicans may have learned about sacred cows. Many members of Congress view the national debt as a crisis that requires drastic action. They look for anything and everything that can be cut without causing severe harm to the nation. They look for ways to cut things that are not absolutely necessary. It made sense to them to introduce means testing to Medicare. They believed they could help reduce the national debt by providing Medicare only to those who could demonstrate that they absolutely need it, and not provide it to those who have assets or private insurance coverage. The Republican members of Congress who voted for the proposal to eliminate the Medicare guarantee for the elderly believed that their constituents shared their zeal in reducing the national debt, but did not count on their unwillingness to make the deepest and most difficult cuts. The vote to eliminate the guarantee for Medicare for the elderly angered those who are most likely to vote, the elderly.

This fiasco could bode ill for Republican congressional representatives running for re-election in 2012. Their votes are on record, and their Democratic opponents are likely to use these voting records in campaign ads during the election season of 2012. Democrats seeking to unseat Republican congressional incumbents are likely to play on the perception of Republicans as cold and heartless, serving the interests of the extremely wealthy at the expense of the aged and vulnerable.

The National Debt

President Barack Obama recently met with Republican congressional leaders to discuss solutions to the national debt crisis. The leaders of our government must decide whether to increase the maximum amount of debt that the United States government can accrue. Many Republican members of Congress believe that the national debt ceiling should not be increased under any circumstances. Raising the amount of debt that the government can owe will fail to instill discipline in federal spending and increase the amount of interest that must eventually be paid. Politics and money are rarely that simple. Many business owners and managers have written to members of Congress, asking them to raise the debt ceiling immediately. They fear that if the government defaults on Treasury notes, interest rates will rise significantly. If less money is available for borrowing, the cost of loans will increase. Perhaps that is why other Republican members of Congress may agree to raising the debt ceiling only if they can agree with the president and Democratic members of Congress on reductions in spending. They have emphasized that they mean actual reductions in spending, not just a reduction in the increase in spending.

However they vote on budget issues, current members of the United States Congress will probably make things more difficult for themselves when they run for re-election in 2012. If they vote against raising the limit on the national debt, their opponents will likely run ad campaigns that claim that the Senator or Representative voted against the interests of small business. They will claim that they voted to make it more expensive to raise money for expansion, killing jobs. If a Senator or Representative votes for raising the limit on the national debt, he or she will be accused of being unconcerned about the national debt. Such campaigns may feature images of babies being presented with huge tax bills, or foreigners being given the keys to the White House or the United States Capital.

Those who represent Americans in government face difficult choices. Raising the limit on the national debt will mean borrowing more money and paying more interest on that money. Current American politics is a matter of coming to an agreement what programs and services must be reduced to accomplish reducing the national debt. The president’s meeting with congressional leaders was an attempt to do so.

Voting Records on Abortion

Abortion is likely to be an important issue in many elections in the United States in 2012. The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed the No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act. The name of this bill may have been designed to help members of Congress with their re-election campaigns, as current federal law already bans federal funding for abortions. What the bill does is deny tax credits for small businesses if their health insurance policies cover abortion procedures. The current politics of abortion is such that the procedure cannot be banned because of the Roe v. Wade ruling of the United States Supreme Court in 1972. However, members of Congress running for re-election in 2012 will be able to say that they voted for the No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act. Members of Congress who voted against the act will be accused of favoring federal funding for abortion even when the nation faces a debt crisis.

Members of several state legislatures may also have to defend their voting records on abortion issues. The governor of South Dakota signed a bill last month that requires women who want an abortion to wait 72 hours and undergo counseling first. Legislation is pending in Ohio that would outlaw abortion when a heartbeat can be detected in the fetus. South Dakota is now involved in a lawsuit over the recently passed law. Texas also faces litigation over a law that the governor is expected to sign soon. The law in Texas would require a woman seeking an abortion to first view a sonogram of the unborn child, or read or hear a description of the fetus written by a doctor. Legislators in Iowa want to ban abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy on the idea that a fetus more than 20 weeks old can feel pain. Oklahoma already has a law that bans abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy. The governor there just signed a law this week that restricts how doctors can prescribe RU-486, otherwise known as the abortion pill.

Politicians would have to pass an amendment to the United States Constitution or bring a case to the Supreme Court and have the court reverse Roe v. Wade in order to ban abortion outright. Failing that, they seem to be working at dissuading women from the procedure, or making it as difficult as possible.

Gas Politics

The price of gasoline will likely be an important issue in the elections of 2012. No one looks forward to paying five dollars or more for a gallon of gas, but dividing lines are already being drawn over tax issues related to oil. Democrats in the United States Senate recently announced a proposal to eliminate some tax deductions that oil companies can take. The plan is written in such a way as to restrict the elimination of tax breaks to the five largest oil companies. The plan contains a definition so that companies below a certain level of revenue would not be affected by the plan. The Democratic Senators put forth the plan as a way to reduce the federal deficit. Projections indicate that the elimination of the tax breaks would increase federal revenue by 21 billion dollars.

The language used to discuss the plan by Democratic senators reveals differences in thinking. Those who support the plan talk about having the big oil companies pay their fair share of taxes. Those who oppose the plan call the plan an increase in energy taxes. A recent television ad campaign portrays ordinary-looking people saying that the Senate plan to increase energy taxes will further increase the price of gasoline. Some of the ads claim that increased energy taxes will also further our dependence on foreign oil. Perhaps to address this issue, the Obama administration has proposed using some of the increased tax revenue to fund clean energy projects that would provide energy without the use of crude oil.

The politics associated with the price of oil and gasoline will likely be a topic of discussion in campaigns of those seeking election or re-election to the United States Senate and House of Representatives. Republican candidates will likely claim that Democrats refuse to consider any other method than increasing taxes to reduce the federal debt. They will not consider reducing spending. Democratic candidates will likely portray their Republican opponents as being in the pocket of big oil companies. They may exploit the perception among many Americans that high gas prices are caused by the greed of big oil companies. They may point to the amounts that oil companies paid in taxes, or even talk about how Americans are paying record prices for gasoline while big oil companies get tax refunds.

President. Obama Improves His Chances

Approval ratings for President Barack Obama increased after he went on television late on a Sunday night to announce that Osama bin Laden had been killed, and that the United States had possession of the body. The mastermind of the attacks on the U.S.S. Cole, the World Trade Center and the Pentagon was quickly buried at sea after he was killed. Pundits put forth the opinion that Mr. Obama overcame the perception that he was a weak and indecisive leader. Even his Republican opponents and Rush Limbaugh praised him. Mr. Obama was given credit for succeeding where former President George W. Bush had failed. The president lost some popularity by refusing to release photographs of the slain terrorist leader. He was given credit for good follow through after his announcement of the death of Osama bin Laden. The president visited the site of the 9-11 attacks, and visited with police officers and firefighters at stations near Ground Zero. He also visited families of victims of the 9-11 attacks engineered by Osama bin Laden. Mr. Obama did this without giving speeches, and was not seen as gloating.

Though Mr. Obama was able to take advantage of the death of bin Laden without seeming to take advantage of it for the sake of politics, he still has a tough campaign ahead in his quest for re-election. Even though the number of new jobs has increased, the unemployment rate is not decreasing appreciably. Gas prices continue to climb. Mr. Obama did something to address this issue by announcing that the U.S. Justice Department will investigate whether high gas prices were influenced by unethical speculation among commodity traders. This may help him win re-election only if the investigation results in lower gas prices by November of 2012. The president may be given credit for finally bringing Osama bin Laden to justice, but Republicans will still talk about his inability to balance the federal budget because of unwillingness to make tough and necessary decisions to cut spending. Developments in Libya, Syria and other parts of the Middle East may add more complications to Mr. Obama's attempt to get re-elected. He may have to score another coup closer to Election Day, as voters may forget about bin Laden when they have to pay more than five dollars a gallon to drive to the polls.

The Only Bad Publicity is No Publicity

Donald Trump is the personification of the old adage, "The only bad publicity is no publicity." The Donald failed as a commercial real estate developer, but he failed spectacularly in the Trump Plaza deal in New York City. He became so well-known from this failure that he was able to become the star of a successful television program, The Apprentice. His regular appearances on television made Mr. Trump even more recognizable, to the point that he is now exploring the possibility of running for President of the United States.

Donald Trump began his possible presidential campaign by reviving an issue that most people thought was dead; the issue of where President Barack Obama was born and his eligibility to be President of the United States. The United States Constitution stipulates that a person must have been born in the United States in order to be eligible to hold the office of President. The birther issue first arose in American politics while President Obama was running for president in 2008. It ceased to be an issue by 2011, when no one could prove conclusively that Mr. Obama was not born in the United States. Mr. Trump revived the issue during a television interview by stating that the question of where the president had been born had not been settled and that he would not be satisfied until the president made a birth certificate available to the public.

Within days of Mr. Trump's television interview, President Obama announced that he would make a certificate of live birth from the State of Hawaii available for public view. Although many criticized Donald Trump for his lack of respect for the President of the United States and for possible racist motives, Mr. Trump showed that he can get things done. Many people had called for the president to make his birth certificate available before Mr. Trump did, but Mr. Obama ignored them all. The president referred to Mr. Trump as a carnival barker, but the carnival barker succeeded where others failed.

The Donald received more publicity, and perhaps improved his chances of winning the election of 2012, shortly after the birth certificate incident by repeatedly using a profane word in a speech. He was criticized for doing so, but it got him more publicity. The only bad publicity is no publicity.