BY CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
There are
two ways to run against Barack Obama: stewardship or ideology. You can run
against his record, or you can run against his ideas.
The stewardship case is pretty straightforward: the worst recovery in U.S.
history, 42 consecutive months of 8-plus percent unemployment, declining
economic growth — all achieved at a price of another $5 trillion of accumulated
debt.
The ideological case is also simple. Just play in toto (and therefore in
context) Obama’s Roanoke riff telling small business owners: “You didn’t build
that.” Real credit for your success belongs not to you — you think you did well
because of your smarts and sweat? he asked mockingly — but to government that
built the infrastructure without which you would have nothing.
Play it. Then ask: Is that the governing philosophy you want for this
nation?
Mitt Romney’s preferred argument, however, is stewardship. Are you better
off today than you were $5 trillion ago? Look at the wreckage around you. This
presidency is a failure. I’m a successful businessman. I know how to fix things.
Elect me, etc., etc.
Easy peasy, but highly risky. If you run against Obama’s performance in
contrast to your own competence, you stake your case on persona. Is that how you
want to compete against an opponent who is not only more likable and
immeasurably cooler, but who also is spending millions to paint you as an
unfeeling, out-of-touch, job-killing, private-equity plutocrat?
The ideological case, on the other hand, is not just appealing to a
center-right country with twice as many conservatives as liberals; it is also
explanatory. It underpins the stewardship argument. Obama’s ideology — and the
program that followed — explains the failure of these four years.
What program? Obama laid it out boldly early in his presidency. The roots
of the nation’s crisis, he declared, were systemic. Fundamental change was
required. He had come to deliver it. Hence his signature legislation:
First, the $831 billion stimulus that was going to “reinvest” in America
and bring unemployment below 6 percent. We know about the unemployment. And the
investment? Obama loves to cite great federal projects such as the Hoover Dam
and the interstate highway system. Fine. Name one thing of any note created by
Obama’s Niagara of borrowed money. A modernized electric grid? Ports dredged to
receive the larger ships soon to traverse a widened Panama Canal? Nothing of the
sort. Solyndra, anyone?
Second, radical reform of health care that would reduce its ruinously
accelerating cost. “Put simply,” he said, “our health care problem is
our deficit problem” — a financial hemorrhage drowning us in debt.
Except that the CBO reports that Obamacare will cost $1.68 trillion of new
spending in its first decade. To say nothing of the price of the uncertainty
introduced by an impossibly complex remaking of one-sixth of the economy —
discouraging hiring and expansion as trillions of investable private-sector
dollars remain sidelined.
The third part of Obama’s promised transformation was energy. His
cap-and-trade federal takeover was rejected by his own Democratic Senate. So the
war on fossil fuels has been conducted unilaterally by bureaucratic fiat:
regulations that will kill coal; a no-brainer pipeline (Keystone) rejected lest
Canadian oil sands be burned (China will burn them instead); a drilling
moratorium in the Gulf that a federal judge severely criticized as
illegal.
That was the program — now so unpopular that Obama barely mentions it.
Obamacare got exactly two lines in this year’s State of the Union address. Seen
any ads touting the stimulus? The drilling moratorium? Keystone?
Ideas matter. The 2010 election, the most ideological since 1980, saw the
voters resoundingly reject a Democratic party that was relentlessly expanding
the power, spending, scope, and reach of government.
It’s worse now. Those who have struggled to create a family business, a
corner restaurant, a medical practice won’t take kindly to being told that their
success is a result of government-built roads and bridges.
In 1988, Michael Dukakis famously said, “This election is not about
ideology; it’s about competence.” He lost. If Republicans want to win, Obama’s
deeply revealing, teleprompter-free you-didn’t-build-that confession of faith
needs to be hung around his neck until Election Day. The third consecutive
summer-of-recovery-that-never-came is attributable not just to Obama being in
over his head but to what’s in his head: a government-centered vision
of the economy and society, and the policies that flow from it.
Four years of that and this is what you get.
Make the case and you win the White House.
— Charles Krauthammer is
a nationally syndicated columnist. © 2012 the Washington Post
Writers
Group.
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