While world-wide elite opinion
breathes a sigh of relief at the euro-affirming results of this past weekend’s
parliamentary election in Greece, yet another difficult summit meeting is underway now in
Mexico. Meanwhile the mess European elites have created continues, while on
this side of the Atlantic we contemplate with increasing unease how Europe’s
economic deterioration may further undermine our own economic recovery and
irrationally impact our presidential campaign.
While Europe’s impact on our economy
may be significant (and severe), its impact on the campaign can only be
classified as irrational. As Stephen D. Biddle, a scholar at the Council on Foreign Relations, remarked in yesterday’s New York Times, “Both candidates have to
pretend that the U.S. presidency is far more influential over events than it
really is.” In our obsessive media and sound-bite driven political culture, to
admit the obvious – that Presidents have limited ability to control the economy
– is unacceptable. Thus “to admit this is to look weak or to seem to evade
responsibility,” Biddle said. “So both candidates tacitly agree to pretend that
their policies are capable of righting the American economy while their
opponent’s would sink it, when the reality is that both are in thrall to
foreigners’ choices to a degree that neither would acknowledge.”
Indeed, the ironic premise of the opposition
campaign seems to be that, while the challenger and his party maintain that
government really is not the engine for fixing the economy and would best get
out the market’s way, the contradictory claim is constantly made that the
incumbent President is to blame for failing to fix the economy and that, if
elected, new President would somehow be able to do so!
My guess is that there are certainly
some things government could do, but very little government can do right now
given the ideological partisan divide and consequent gridlock. After all,
everyone remembers how hard it was for President Bush to get Congress to
cooperate when the economy was clearly careening off a cliff back in 2008! And, if anything, I think the divide is even
deeper now.
And I doubt there is too much any
President can do on his own to fix Europe’s self-inflicted euro-mess!
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