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Thursday, June 12, 2008
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Economy Looms as McCain's Toughest Foe
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- Sen. John McCain faces not one but two opponents in this election: freshman Sen. Barack Obama and the U.S. economy.

Polls show McCain in a virtual dead heat against the Illinois lawmaker who is a youthful and eloquent-speaking candidate with zero experience in statecraft, legislative deal making and free-market economics. But the glib Chicago Democrat has the ability to persuade and inspire, and the political and economic climate this year favors the Democrats.

The economy, though, may be McCain's tougher opponent. He is in a race with its recovery, hoping the economy turns upward in the next five months, and praying that it will arrive in time to rob the Democrats of their strongest issue long before Election Day.

Right now, the economic landscape is mixed, showing some signs of faint recovery in places but weaknesses in others. We are not in a real recession -- the economy is still growing and showing some signs of strength.

Nationally, the economy is expanding at 0.9 percent, and it is expected to grow by perhaps 2 percent or more in the second half. Unemployment, a lagging indicator, jumped to 5.5 percent from 5.1 percent in May, rattling the stock market and giving Democrats more ammo to fire at McCain's candidacy.

A gallon of regular gasoline is more than $4 in many parts of the country, squeezing consumers' pocketbooks, the financial sector is still struggling with the credit crunch, while a still ailing housing market looms over the economy with unsold inventory and falling home values.

A CNN/Opinion Research poll reported Friday that when they asked 1,035 Americans what was their most important issue in the presidential election, 42 percent said the economy. The war in Iraq, which seems to be improving every week, has fallen to second place at 24 percent.

Americans are gloomier than ever about the economy, with 87 percent saying it is getting worse. But the question is, worse than what? Worse than the 1981 to 1983 recession when the unemployment rate was more than 10 percent?

By historical standards, 5.5 percent unemployment is relatively low and by many economic standards is considered full employment.

When President Reagan was running for re-election in 1984 on an optimistic "morning in America" campaign heralding the economy's comeback, the jobless rate was a bleak 7.4 percent. But he won in a landslide, carrying 49 states.

"Right now, I think the economy is in neutral. Half of the indicators are looking positive, and half are looking negative. There's a heck of a lot of economic stimulus kicking around, so it's possible the economy might rebound by the fall," said Kevin Hassett, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute and a senior adviser to the McCain campaign.

"If we are in a recession, it will be one of the shallowest ever," he told me last week.

Looking for silver linings in this economy is not something that either the Obama campaign or the nightly news shows spend their time doing. But it is worth doing, if only to show that there is still a lot of life left in the ever-resilient U.S. economy that never ceases to surprise the doom-and-gloomers. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Subject: FLUFF AND LIES
WILL MCCAIN OR OBAMA DO ANYHTING ABOUT WHAT IS SO OBVIOUS, (AND YOU HAVENT HEARD NOTHING YET, WAIT UNTIL CHAPETER 2) obviusly robbery and in some cases financial rape , stay tuned. than again they probably wont

econ 101 corporate taxation. if you ,t
1. the maximun tax rate for corporations , by the federal gvnt is 35 per cent , however the GAO reported that 61 percent of corporations paid no taxes between 1966 and 2000.
2. in 2207 corporate share of total taxes paid ib the United States was 14,4 per cent compared to 50 per cent in 1950.
tax burdr for indivudual will climb from 1.16 trillion in 2007 to 1.21 trillion in 2008 and the CBO) corporate tax receipts will drop from 370 billion to 364 billion in same time period CDC Congressional Budget Office
4. estimated annulloss of taxes because corporations establish shell compamies in other countries 100 billion. CBC
an exapmple KBR wich was once a subsidiary of Haliburtion is the largest private contractor now working in IRAQ. they have succeedde in "reducing their tax obligation '(Read cheated the gonvernment) out of 100s of millions of dollare im Medicare payments by establishing shell coimpanies in the Caymen Islands 2004 study by CBO 5. overall the corporate tax rate in the united states is the third LOWEST in the world among developed nations (Citizen for Tax Justie) and CBC 2006 because of loopholes when measured against GDP> thats lowest not highest. more to come
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