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Think Progress

July 10, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ryan Powers, and Nate Carlile

ECONOMY

Right-Wing Recovery Myths

The Obama administration has been making an aggressive push to explain the realities of the $787 billion stimulus package, in the face of aggressive Republican misinformation. Vice President Biden, for example, traveled to Ohio yesterday, forcefully backing the recovery bill and asking for patience from the American public. "Remember, we're only 140 days into this deal. It's supposed to take 18 months," he said. Only $60 billion of $175 billion allocated to federal agencies so far has been paid out. Earlier this week, President Obama took time out of his trip to Moscow to discuss the recovery. "There's nothing that we would have done differently," he told ABC News. "We needed a stimulus and we needed a substantial stimulus." Republicans, who overwhelmingly voted against the recovery act in Congress and have offered no new ideas, are now trying to sow public dissatisfaction. In fact, the "plans" that Republicans have been offering are largely the same ones that put the country into the current economic mess. To create confusion, the GOP has had to resort to sloppy attacks and inaccurate myths. A look at some of what the right wing is spinning:

MYTH #1 -- ELECTORAL CONSIDERATIONS ARE DRIVING THE DISBURSEMENT OF FUNDS: This myth popped up most prominently in a USA Today story yesterday, with the headline, "Billions in aid go to areas that backed Obama in '08." According to this USA Today analysis, "Counties that supported Obama last year have reaped twice as much money per person from the administration's $787 billion economic stimulus package as those that voted for his Republican rival, Sen. John McCain." Naturally, the right wing immediately picked up this report as evidence of malevolent political manipulation by the Obama administration. Fox News host Stuart Varney devoted an entire segment to it, and Sean Hannity blasted it out to his nearly 30,000 Twitter followers. If they had read the whole story, however, the likes of Varney and Hannity would have discovered that there was nothing there. In fact, in the second paragraph of the piece, reporter Brad Heath wrote, "Much of it [the stimulus funds] has followed a well-worn path to places that regularly collect a bigger share of federal grants and contracts, guided by formulas that have been in place for decades and leave little room for manipulation." These formulas are largely based on where the need is greatest. Adam Hughes of the non-profit OMB Watch said that "it would be almost inconceivable for [the spending imbalance] to be the result of political tinkering."

MYTH #2 -- NO NEW JOBS HAVE BEEN CREATED: "How can we sit here and claim success when people are hurting out there?" House Minority Whip Eric Cantor compassionately complained on MSNBC last month. "We already know, as of now, at the rate that we lost jobs last month, over eight people a minute in America are losing their jobs. That's eight families without a paycheck." Similarly, in a New York Daily News op-ed he wrote, "To put it generously, the $787 billion bill has not been the 'temporary, targeted and timely' job-creating machine the public was sold." House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) has called the recovery package nothing short of "generational theft," and declared, "When it comes to slow-moving government spending programs, it's clear that it doesn't create the jobs." These claims are false. In fact, the recovery act is creating jobs right in their districts. And it's important to remember that the purpose of the legislation was also to save American jobs. Even Boehner has had to admit these facts. In a little-noticed press release, the Minority Leader highlighted the Obama administration's recent order that the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) redirect $57 million to shovel-ready projects. He said that he was "pleased" that the funds would "create much-needed jobs." A few weeks later, when Boehner was back to lashing out at the stimulus, the ODOT actually came out and criticized him. ODOT's spokesman called Boehner's inaccurate statements "disappointing" and pointed out that the agency had just approved "six more stimulus road projects, which will cost about $43 million." Cantor's hypocrisy has also been highlighted by the media, who have noted that he is a backer of using stimulus funds to bring high-speed rail to Virginia because it would create...jobs.

MYTH #3 -- THE RECOVERY IS A TOTAL FAILURE:
The Republican National Committee released a new web ad yesterday, declaring the stimulus a "failure." But leading economists agree that it's too early to make any such determinations. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that "about a quarter of the money would be spent by year's end, and that about 75 percent would flow by the end of 2010." In other words, as Center for American Progress Senior Economist Heather Boushey has explained, "the largest job gains from [stimulus] spending were projected to occur in the late fall through 2010." So far, the spending appears to be on track. The health care and education sectors, both of which received stimulus money, have shown net job gains since the recession began. Furthermore, Obama noted that infrastructure projects were always going to take "six months to eight months to get that money actually into the ground because that's the nature of big infrastructure projects."

UNDER THE RADAR

RADICAL RIGHT -- REP. KING VOTES AGAINST ACKNOWLEDGING SLAVE LABOR THAT BUILT THE U.S. CAPITOL: On Tuesday, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) was the only House member to vote against a measure to erect a plaque in the Capitol Visitors Center that would acknowledge the role that slave labor had in constructing the building. After his opposition caused a flurry of criticism, King claimed that his vote was in defense of the nation's "Judeo-Christian heritage." He also said in a statement that he opposed the slave labor resolution because it was put up for a vote before a resolution for the depiction of "In God We Trust" in the VisitorCenter. Yesterday, however, King changed his justification in a radio interview in Iowa. He said that he voted against the bill because the slave labor resolution wasn't a "balanced depiction of history." He added, "[O]f the 645,000 Africans that were brought here to be forcibly put into slavery in the United States, there were over 600,000 people that gave their lives in the Civil War to put an end to slavery. And I don't see the monument to that in the Congressional Visitor Center, and I think it's important that we have a balanced depiction of history." In fact, there are multiple Civil War monuments around the Capitol. Right outside the Capitol is the Ulysses S. Grant memorial, a monument that commemorates the former general of the Union Army. That statue is flanked on either side by monuments to the Union's Artillery and Cavalry groups. Grant's statue faces west towards the Lincoln Memorial, which honors the President who led the effort to free the slaves. Additionally, in the Congressional Cemetery lies the Arsenal Monument, a memorial in honor of women who died while performing services for the Union Army. And there's also an African American Civil War Memorial that honors the contributions that African-American troops made to the war effort.


THINK FAST

American International Group (AIG), the insurance giant that has received tens of billions of dollars in government bailouts, "is preparing to pay millions of dollars more in bonuses to several dozen top corporate executives after an earlier round of payments four months ago set off a national furor." AIG "has been pressing the federal government to bless the payments in hopes of shielding itself from renewed public outrage."

Thousands of Iranian anti-government protesters commemorating an attack on students at Tehran University in 1999 "were attacked with batons and tear gas by security forces" yesterday as they tried to gather "for the first protests in about two weeks." Demonstrators are also gearing up to protest "the second-term inauguration of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, which is expected next month."

Confidential Pentagon test results reveal that the F-22 requires "more than 30 hours of maintenance for every hour in the skies, pushing its hourly cost of flying to more than $44,000." Despite such shortcomings and Defense Secretary Robert Gates' stated desire to end the F-22 program, committees in both houses of Congress voted to continue funding the program last month after being lobbied by the manufacturer.

CIA Director Leon Panetta "has ordered an internal inquiry into the agency's handling of a contentious and still highly classified intelligence program that has caused a heated dispute" between the CIA and Congress. The move "appears to be an implicit acknowledgment by the agency that it should have disclosed information about the post-9/11 secret program to Congress much earlier than it did."

A new General Motors emerged from bankruptcy this morning "as lawyers finished an all-night paperwork session transferring the automaker's good assets to a brand-new company controlled by the U.S. government."

The Senate has postponed action on clean energy legislation until later this fall. "There are a number of committees that need a little more time," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) said. "Environment and Public Works Committee Chairwoman Barbara Boxer [D-CA] said Reid's decision allowed her to push off a self-imposed deadline of passing climate legislation until mid-September."

The G8 summit pledged $20 billion over three years, $5 billion more than initially expected, to boost agricultural investment and fight hunger. "UN food agencies say more than 1bn people in the world are going hungry. A downward trend over last decades in the proportion of the world's population suffering from hunger has been reversed, in part because of soaring food prices."

Sen. Roland Burris (D-IL) will reportedly not seek election to the seat that he was appointed to by disgraced former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich. "Almost two months after his appointment, a Tribune poll found only 37 percent of voters wanted Burris to run. As of the spring, he raised $845 with more than $111,000 in debt, a campaign filing showed."

And finally: Politico profiles the culinary prowess of John Podesta. "I consult cookbooks for ideas," the Center for American Progress President and CEO explained. "Cooking is what I do to relax. ... It's much easier to see the fruits of your labor. It's fun." As for his specialties, Podesta said, "I make a pretty mean moussaka, pastitsio, baklava and spanakopita," reeling off a series of complicated Greek dishes.



BLOG WATCH

Republicans usually don't become scientists.

Sen. John Ensign's (R-NV) parents paid their son's staffer-turned-mistress and her family $96,000.

GOP congressman introduces bill to block U.S. funding for the U.N. International Panel on Climate Change.

Although "the best things in life are free," Congress should revisit the White House's original revenue proposal to limit tax deductions for the super-rich.

After unexpectedly quitting her job, Sarah Palin has inspired a new expression: "Pullin' a Palin."

The right wing concocts a false claim that Obama steered stimulus money to areas that voted for him.

House Republicans ask Palin to stay in Wasilla.

Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio refuses to cooperate with the Department of Justice.

Center for American Progress President and CEO John Podesta says that "we just can't settle" for excuses from Democratic leaders.

DAILY GRILL

"At the EPA, scientists are not allowed to disagree with the rabid dogma about climate change.  Recently, Alan Carlin, a 35-year veteran scientist at the EPA issued a report that challenged the theory of global warming."
-- Rep. Ted Poe (R-TX), 7/09/09

VERSUS

"[Carlin] is not a scientist."
-- EPA spokesperson Adora Andy, 6/24/09


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