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    Drop the Middle Class Talk

    Mona Charen's column is released once a week.

    In 1992, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton built his campaign for the White House on doing more for the "forgotten middle class." Calling it the "new covenant" (Democrats since Roosevelt have tried to work the words "new" or "deal" into their campaign slogans), Clinton promised to focus on the people he called "the backbone of the country, the ones who do the work and pay the taxes and send their children off to war."

    Sound familiar? Here is Mitt Romney, the morning after the Florida primary: "I'm in this race because I care about Americans. I'm not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich; they're doing just fine. I'm concerned about the very heart of ... America, the 90 percent, 95 percent of Americans who right now are struggling."

    The usual firestorm erupted — with liberals and conservatives alike pouncing on evidence of Romney's "tin ear." NPR anticipated (eagerly?) that Romney's words would show up in Democratic attack ads. And an exasperated Jonah Goldberg wondered in National Review Online whether Romney actually knows how to play this game: " . . . The concern is, after nearly a decade of running for president, if he can't get this stuff down now he never will."

    It wasn't just the reference to not being "concerned" about the "very poor" that was misguided on Romney's part. It was the whole thrust of picking groups to favor or disfavor, help or ignore. When Bill Clinton promised to focus on the middle class (with, for example, a middle class tax cut that never materialized), he was well within a Democratic tradition of claiming to speak for this or that constituency. His departure from Democratic tradition was sly — whereas previous Democrats had overdone their claims on behalf of the poor — Clinton shoved the poor aside and focused on bringing goodies to the vast middle class, the people who vote.

    This contretemps is an unforced error. Romney has elsewhere declined to engage in this kind of pandering. In his victory speech in Florida, for example, he said, "The path I lay out is not one paved with ever increasing government checks and cradle-to-grave assurances that government will always be the solution. If this election is a bidding war for who can promise more benefits, then I'm not your president. You have that president today." In the second Florida debate, he chastised Gingrich for promising a new federal program at every campaign stop, reminding voters that that's how we got into this mess.

    That's the spirit that will energize the Republican Party and independent voters.

    Romney has sometimes hit the right notes, but he needs to more consistently convey a sense of urgency at the fiscal crisis the nation faces. It's fine to reference his private sector experience, but he should then quickly pivot to the national debt, the extraordinary growth of government and the unsustainability of the fiscal path we're on.

    This week, the Congressional Budget Office released its Budget and Economic Outlook. It projects a fourth straight year of trillion dollar deficits — the chief accomplishment of the Obama years. But then, because the CBO must make predictions based on current law, the projections take a turn into fantasyland. The very smart analysts at CBO, advanced degrees in economics notwithstanding, are thus forced to spin fairy tales. This year's goes like this: deficits will plummet as a share of GDP after 2013, dropping to under $200 billion between 2013 and 2022.

    This cheerful outlook is bilge. It assumes that the Bush tax cuts (all of them, not just those for the rich) will be permitted to expire, that the cuts in Medicare reimbursement to doctors will not be reversed by Congress (which has never happened before), that the alternative minimum tax will not be indexed to inflation, and that the automatic spending cuts mandated in last fall's budget agreement will indeed happen.

    Everyone knows this isn't so. In fact, the CBO, perhaps embarrassed by the numbers in the official forecast, issued an alternative prediction, based not on current law but on what is likely to happen, and that projection is beyond grim.

    Just like the social democracies of Europe, the U.S. has made more promises to its citizens (mostly middle class citizens, by the way) than it can possibly pay for. This is the glaring emergency that demands leadership. This, not the middle class, is what Romney ought to be talking about.

    To find out more about Mona Charen and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

    COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

     

    25 comments

    • Topkick  •  3 mths ago
      What is the definition of "middle class?" Romney thinks it includes retirees living on their Social Security checks. The current Administration appears to think its those making $50,000 to $125,000 a year. I think, if you fall in between the VERY poor and Very rich, YOU'RE IT!
      • Michael F 3 mths ago
        There's no fixed definition and you'll find people making $15k a year thinking they're middle class and people making $400k a year thinking the same. That's why it's so effective for politicians to pander to the middle class, because nearly everyone in the country thinks they're part of it, even if they clearly aren't.
      • old marc 3 mths ago
        working class not middle class needs representation
    • old marc  •  Prescott, Arizona  •  3 mths ago
      again people confuse middle class and working class, at it's most technical definition classes are divided by status and general living conditions not income. working people are generally considered lower middle class, doctors, laywers, politicians, and many white collar workers are middle class. even though this might be nit picking, politicians use these class distinctions to further their own ends which are generally not in the best interests of the working class which seems to be the class most overlooked by power brokers.
      • Tim 3 mths ago
        we should push the politicians to define the working class & middle class.
    • James O  •  Athens, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      What is middle class is it the working person making 25-45 thousand a year trying to make it.This is the people who have lost so much in the past 10-15 years
    • TallDudeRetired  •  3 mths ago
      Interesting article with some interesting perspectives,
    • missy d  •  3 mths ago
      With prices rising and wages stagnant when wages can be had, more and more of the middleclass is slipping into being low income or poor. If someone does not address this there will be no middle class.
      Where are we without the middleclasses being the majority ? Similar to third world countries? Or like the conditions that prevailed in France before their revolution ?
    • Larry Dickson  •  San Diego, California  •  3 mths ago
      Yes, Mona, but if the middle class crashes and burns, this country will not have a future. Romney has merely signaled his realization that THE YOUNGER GENERATION IS FACING RUIN. It's good that he has noticed.
      • Big Jones 3 mths ago
        I'm sure his "notice" is like you would notice a pesky, annoying cloud of gnats. It just barely registers on his radar. He would love to swat us; but he needs the votes. Now, if he could just cut out the middlemen (the PACs, lobbyists, super PACs, etc). and just "buy" those votes, he could help a lot of people in dire financial straits. With the money he has to spend, he'd be a shoe-in....
    • George  •  Little Rock, Arkansas  •  3 mths ago
      The term "middle class" has lost its relevance a long time ago. If you define middle class by money earned during the year, then current talk does become a class struggle. Let's face it, the top 1% are making the laws that favor themselves, for the rest of us. And it's not only Mr. Romney who has lost touch with the people, but almost everyone in Washington, Democrats and Republicans alike. Promises...promises...promises are all U.S. citizens get.
    • Rasser  •  3 mths ago
      Mona needs to get out more. Being middle class, unless the political party pays attention to my/our needs, I have no interest in them. After 8 years years of the GOP and Bush wrecking the economy and starting wars we can't win and that weren't paid for, the GOP has nothing for me except more misery, I don't need that. Unlike the average republican working-middle class voter, I don't vote for a party that looks at me as piggy bank to be raided when the rich want more money.
      • Donald 3 mths ago
        You've demonstrated you have no clue what's in the best interests of the middle class. TAKE CARE OF YOUR OWN NEEDS.
      • RICHARD B 3 mths ago
        All of the Bush wars have been off buget, but they still must be paid for. Where was the GOP then and now?
    • Dangerous Truths  •  3 mths ago
      Mitt really believes that the middle class makes up 95% of the country. Talk about being out of the loop. The poor and very poor makes up the greatest number of Americans thanks to Republican class warfare against the middle class and below.
      • Sarah 3 mths ago
        Not by the true definition of poor. Poor means you have little enough to qualify for benefits and a Mc Donald's salary is enough to disqualify you.
      • Dangerous Truths 3 mths ago
        NO it means you can't afford the minimum standard of living.
      • Starstreamtracker 3 mths ago
        The democarps invented the working poor by their explicit control of the minimum rage, keeping it high enough to NOT qualify for free gooberment cheese and low enough to ensure the working poor become the beggars of the community.
    • AK COYOTE  •  3 mths ago
      We're doomed.
    • J Mon  •  Clovis, California  •  3 mths ago
      If we taxed the rich, we'd be able to keep the promises made to the middle class and poor. If the rich don't like that, they are welcome to leave. They can't take their factories, stores, equipment, vehicle fleets, etc. Entrepreneurial cooperatives could acquire those items at a discount and put Americans back to work and distribute the profits to their employees/stockholders, raising their standard of living and pumping money into our economy instead of China or India.
    • bil  •  3 mths ago
      Democrats always talk big about taxing the 1%, but in the end it's the middle class that pays. Why? That's where the real money is. And the progressives are all about the money when it comes to paying government employees. Our supervisors. Those we could not live without. Yeah, right.
    • Oglaigh n h'Eirran  •  3 mths ago
      The only way out of the debt crisis is for more money to find its way into the hands of consumers. You know, the middle class! More money for Mitt and his buddies that they then deposit in the Cayman Islands simply makes the recession longer and deeper. Mitt and Mona know this, but it's impossible to speak truth the base. Idealogy trumps logic yet again. Pun intended!
    • Lisa  •  Mountain View, California  •  3 mths ago
      America is about protecting the individual and giving him or her the opportunity to make their own life and to life as they chose, and build a better future for their children and fellow citizens....who can stand and say it now means we only help groups of people, political donors only, or groups that yell and protest....we are INDIVIDUALS....each one precious and of worth.
    • JR-Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Let's see. Romney's making several million a year (keeping lots of it offshore) and paying minimal taxes. The real middle class is making less than $100,000 a year and paying a much higher percentage in taxes. So, I guess Romney sees the bottom half of the 1-percent elite as the middle class that he and his administration will support. Everyone else is the poor "that he doesn't worry about."
    • Harumph  •  3 mths ago
      I love how Romney stays in lock step with the party line - he can't even bring himself to say the words "middle class" - like if you don't say the phrase, the middle class doesn't exist.
    • Independence76  •  3 mths ago
      Here we go again. Democrats all bad; Republicans all good. Simple for simple-minded people.
    • Tone  •  3 mths ago
      I would like to thank Romney for giving his opponents ammunition to use against him. It helps ensure the election of my preferred candidate. But even I know what he meant, as I suspect everyone else does, too. He just phrased it poorly for a sound bite driven world.
    • James  •  3 mths ago
      Obama is the absolute master of the blame game. He ran with "it's Bush's fault" as long as he could before being roundly ridiculed, and now it is the evil 1% that is responsible for all the economic problems. He carefully avoids talking about the 47% who do not pay a dime in income taxes, the TAKERS, living off the peolple who work hard, the MAKERS. I am FAR from the 1% but I resent this anti American class warfare, the middle class vs. the takers, that Obama promotes for the sole purpose of winning reelection. America was predominantly a merit based country and culture. Thanks to Obama, we are now a country of mandates, handouts, nanny statism, and jealous hatred of ANYONE who has done better than us financially.

      For all presidents from Teddy Roosevelt up to Obama, an average of 48% of the cabinet members had private business experience before being named to the cabinet. Obama's cabinet? 8%! Yet THE ONE presents himself as the master of solving our economic problems. Obama could not run a hot dog stand.
    • Jean  •  3 mths ago
      Job numbers up! Unemployment down! Obama 2012
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