Obama Aide: Voters Will Ignore the Stats, Follow Their Hearts
You
can relax now, America. The
Obama administration would like
you to know that unemployment
won’t be a factor in your 2012
presidential voting decision —
at least if you take the word of
top Obama adviser David Plouffe,
who’s making the big bucks
specifically because he’s
supposed to be considered
credible enough to speak on his
boss’s behalf as “senior
adviser.”
“The average American does not
view the economy through the
prism of GDP or unemployment
rates or even monthly jobs
numbers,” Plouffe told Bloomberg
news. “People won’t vote based
on the unemployment rate,
they’re going to vote based on:
‘How do I feel about my own
situation? Do I believe the
president makes decisions based
on me and my family?’”
In other words, Plouffe is
suggesting that despite consumer
confidence dropping and
unemployment rising back up to
9.2 percent after dropping below
9 percent in March, you’re not
going to pay attention to any of
it, because it won’t jibe with
what’s in your heart. And in
your heart will be Obama, who
cares about you and your loved
ones. Knowing that will make all
the difference in the world, and
have you smiling all the way to
the voting booth, where you will
be so overwhelmed with the love
coming all the way from
Washington that you will wipe
away tears and drool, and once
again mark the ballot for your
savior — the Second Coming of
Jimmy Carter — while your wallet
weeps softly.
I think Plouffe has
misunderstood political spin and
how it works, and by doing so
has inadvertently (or not) taken
us all for total idiots. When
Plouffe tells us that the
turbulence isn’t a big deal and
we shouldn’t care what the
instruments on the flight deck
indicate, we still have to be
able to look out the window of
the plane and not see individual
blades of grass on the ground
below rapidly coming into focus.
Every poll indicates that not
only are jobs and the economy
the most pressing concern for
Americans, but Americans feel
that other concerns pale in
importance by comparison. That’s
a really unfortunate reality for
Plouffe.
In a late-June CBS News/New York
Times poll, “The most important
problem facing the country
today” was considered
economy/jobs at 53 percent,
followed by the budget deficit
at 7 percent. In a Bloomberg
poll, unemployment/jobs came in
at 42 percent, with government
spending next at 17 percent. A
Fox News poll again found
economy/jobs to be Americans’
top concern at 50 percent,
followed by deficit/spending at
22 percent.
Now, I’m not being paid as an
elite adviser to the most
talented teleprompter reader
ever to grace the Oval Office,
but I suspect that these public
opinion figures could be
indicative of what we might call
a “trend.” Would Plouffe like us
to ignore those numbers too? If
we ignore numbers meant to
quantify our gut feeling in
order to go with the gut feeling
Plouffe wants us to have, where
does that leave us? In what
mental ward?
Let’s ignore Plouffe, put our
fingers in our ears for a minute
— lalalala! — and dig into those
new job stats. From May to June,
the number of people who have
been looking for work at some
point over the past year but
hadn’t done so in the previous
month grew from 2.2 million to
nearly 2.7 million. Of those,
160,000 more than last month
have given up permanently. None
of these people are counted in
the unemployment rate — so if
anything, the situation is even
worse than the numbers indicate
and more in line with our gut
feeling as suggested by the grim
results in opinion polls.
In acknowledging the overall
predicament, Obama said, “Our
economy as a whole just isn’t
producing enough jobs for
everyone who’s looking.”
Let me fix that: “I didn’t
manage to create more jobs with
all of your tax money I blew on
the promise of doing so.” That’s
what he should have said. The
economy is Obama. It was the one
thing he was elected to handle.
Plouffe thinks he’s riding a
stallion, when it’s really just
a one-trick pony that won’t
giddy-up.