Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Obama Can be Elected Again If He Champions the Middle Class, Like Ron Paul Does...

The only problem for Obama and Romney: Ron Paul already is that champion.

It is the middle class that casts the votes but it is the special interests that finance the increasingly expensive election process. Who has more influence, the voters or the narrow agenda driven special interests who finance elections?

In 1970, the average congressional campaign cost about $52,000. In 2010, it was more than 25 times that, $1.3 million. The approval rating of congress is at an all time low just as they are getting ready to spend more money than ever. Is this just going to go on this way or is something about to change?

Ron Paul is now ahead in the polls in Iowa. Ignored by the media and having little money, Paul is about to rewrite the story of the 2012 presidential election. What is that story?

I think it has everything to do with a rebellion against the pay for access politics that has been looting the middle class for years now.  Whether it is commercial or ideological, well financed interest groups come first when policy is being made and result of this is evident in the deeply entrenched problems facing America today. Paul's antagonism against the Federal Reserve is also relevant to the crisis we are in now. It was the Fed's policy of backing the financial leverage that created the capital to finance both the internet and housing bubbles which define the historic mistakes made over past 13 years.

At the core of our deficits are out of control basic costs. K-12 education costs a lot more in the US than any other developed country except for Switzerland. Top ranked in spending on education, America is bottom to middle ranked in achievement, American students rank 24th in literacy and below average in math and science. We have a very unproductive education system and a highly politicized one that has been taken over by special interests and is a product of our political system.

Our health care system is also a product of the politicians. It cost about twice as much per person to run as other developed countries and has below average health outcomes. Ballooning health care costs are at the center of our national, state and local budget crises and a big reason that unemployment is so high because employers, small businesses mostly, can't afford it.

Military spending, infrastructure and administration are not run on a shoe string. It costs much much more in America to get things done because interest groups bend every policy to their benefit.

So here we are. Just maybe the guy who is going to be elected in 2012 will be the guy who the middle class believes will put us right. Enabling the middle class means lowering the cost of government and health care. It means expecting a better educated student at a lower cost. It means an America that can be the best once again. It will also mean the end of outsourcing, a rollback in executive compensation at publicly held corporations and a more energy efficient America.

It also means middle class entrepreneurs can proper and employ people. Not many people know that the jobs problem we have this year has much to do with outsourcing. It is small and medium sized business who are creating jobs. Big companies have added very few jobs to the economy. They are still shipping jobs overseas.

At the end of the day, America is about a middle class that is succeeding. The rich will take care of themselves so we shouldn't worry about them. Rather than institutionalized poverty, the poor need a growing middle class they can aspire to become a part of. If the middle class is advantaged, the poor can rise up to it and the productive capacity and spirit of the nation will increase.

Really, what is good for America's middle class is what is good for America. Politicians who adopt that slogan will do well in the next election cycle.

One can hope that Obama and or Romney figure out this message, but in the meantime we have Ron Paul, the spoiler, to shake things up and he is going to do just that. Watch the media deny and discredit Paul until the votes in Iowa and then New Hampshire come in. Then the issues in this election will come closer to addressing what is really bugging Americans.

(This article's intent is to point out how the core issue of the election is enabling the middle class, remove structural impediments like unfair trade with China and cost overruns like health and education, and finally using America's productive capacity to turn things around. I agree with Paul that government needs to downsize if the country is to proper in the future. I am not endorsing any candidate, however.)