Republican Waterloo

Well, I’d say it’s about over for Rick Perry.  Who on earth is preparing this man for these debates?  Guess who his concluding comment came from?  The funny thing is that he actually ripped the phrase off from Rick Santorum who ran away from it once he figured out its source; Langston Hughes.

Rick Perry turned in another underwhelming performance at tonight’s GOP presidential debate in Dartmouth on Tuesday night and signed off by quoting the title of a pro-union, pro-racial justice, and pro-immigrant poem written by Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes, titled “Let America Be America Again.”

The debate format was meant to be a ’round table’ but all I could see were square pegs.  A lot of the focus was on Mitt Romney who just earned the endorsement of Chris Christie.  Christie also defended Mitt’s faith against earlier value voters hatred.  Cain offered up a plan that is bound to put the economy into a tail spin and make the deficit worse.  Republican and Reagan adviser Bruce Bartlett criticized it today.  Most economists are appalled.

Herman Cain, the former chief executive of the Godfather’s Pizza chain, has been enjoying a surge in polls, buoyed by his victory in a Florida straw poll and by wary conservatives who are seeking an alternative to Mr. Romney and Mr. Perry. He calls his signature economic proposal his “9-9-9 Plan”; as described on his website, it would eliminate the capital gains tax, the payroll tax and the inheritance tax and put in place a flat 9 percent tax on businesses, a 9 percent tax on personal income, and a new 9 percent federal sales tax on top of existing state and local sales taxes.

Mr. Cain’s frequent invocations of his “9-9-9 Plan” often get applause, but some economists warn that it would likely increase the deficit without providing many benefits. Bruce Bartlett, who held senior policy roles in the administrations of President Ronald Reagan and President George H.W. Bush and who has become a critic of much recent Republican economic thinking, examined the Cain plan in a post on The New York Times’s Economix blog. He concluded that “the poor would pay more while the rich would have their taxes cut, with no guarantee that economic growth will increase and good reason to believe that the budget deficit will increase.”

Rumors about Bachmann’s campaign and its lack of funds led to speculation that this might be her last debate appearance.  She offered up some even nuttier economics plans.  I have no idea why these folks haven’t figured out that sustained tax cuts do nothing but make the deficit worse. Evidently they only took courses in voodoo and faith-based economic policy because not one of them has anything that’s based in empirical evidence.

Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who catapulted herself into contention in the race with a well-received debate performance over the summer but who has struggled to capture attention as her standing in the polls has ebbed, released her own economic plan Tuesday, before the debate. Its first provision calls for letting American companies repatriate the cash they have parked abroad without paying taxes. Her Web site maintains that such a tax holiday, which many companies are lobbying hard for, would “provide valuable capital for the job creators in this country and pump tremendous amounts of money into our economy.”

But when Congress and the Bush administration offered companies a similar tax incentive to repatriate money in 2005, studies found, it did not spur employment. The vast majority of the money that was brought back to the United States was returned to shareholders in the form of dividends and stock buybacks, according to a study by the nonpartisan National Bureau of Economic Research. So far, all of the Republican presidential candidates have taken a hard line against any tax increases, putting them at odds with what many voters have been telling pollsters this year. But the people most likely to vote in Republican primaries are also most likely to oppose tax increases.

Santorum’s economic plan is to go “to war with China”.

At Tuesday’s The Washington Post/Bloomberg Republican presidential debate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum declared that he actually wanted “to go to war with China.”

Fellow candidate Mitt Romney promised that if elected, he would immediately label China as a currency manipulator, but added, “I don’t want a trade war with anybody.”

“You know, Mitt, I don’t want to go to a trade war,” Santorum remarked. “I want to beat China. I want to go to war with China and make America the most attractive place in the world to do business.”

I’ll say one thing for this group of nitwits.  They sure are making Mitt Romney look sane. Just one more question.  Does any one really know why Newt Gingrich is still there?


10 Comments on “Republican Waterloo”

  1. Pat Johnson says:

    The GOP “debate”, or whatever the hell they are calling that gathering of empty headed fools, was not televised here in MA which is ironic owing to the fact that it was held only one state over. Having said that, I did get snippets offered up by Ed Schultz and concluded that I had missed well, nothing to be honest. The same old, same old with Cain dragging out the 9=9=9= plan.

    Michele is over. The public woke up to her lack of substance on every issue and turned off. But you have got to love Newt “pontificating” all over the place as he looks down his nose at the competition, the moderators, and the audience at large.

    If this is the best of the GOP then we are sunk liket so many deadweights drifting to the bottom. And if Mittens is the best of the lot let’s just concede now that whatever is left of this nation after Obama and the GOP rats get finished there isn’t much out there to fight over.

    Mitt is boring, boring, boring but even he seems “majestic” next to that tablefull of morons and he should thank his lucky stars that this is as good as it is ever going to get.

    • ralphb says:

      Mitt looks like Lincoln in that crowd and I say that not seeing a moment of the “debate”. I hope this means Perry is toast. He’s the governor from hell but at least has no army at his disposal now.

      Newt is probably there because the GOP can’t find a deep enough hole that he doesn’t climb out of it after they drop him in.

    • dakinikat says:

      I think Mitt’s just looking for his VP at this point. The rest of them are just melting away under the bright lights of media.

      • Minkoff Minx says:

        Which is why I think Cantor has become Mormon friendly and walked back the “mob” comment.

      • B Kilpatrick says:

        Don’t count on Romney just yet. Remember how in 2008, everyone had some weird fixation on Mr 911 winning, and then McCain came back from death’s door as a compromise candidate?

  2. Peggy Sue says:

    I couldn’t find the debate televised down here, unless I missed it. To be honest, I needed a rest from all the crazy talk. But I can’t shake the sense that there’s been a meeting of the minds and a lot of drum banging to the GOP electorate: Mitt Romney is your candidate, folks. Get use to it. Every flavor of the week has been shot down and Romney’s sudden surge in the polls seems artificial to me. It’s his turn and the GOP gods have spoken: Mitt is our savior.

    But I did hear that Bachmann gave a parting crazy comment, turning Cain’s 999 plan to the sign of the Beast. A quip, some of the Republican sites are saying. A little over the top, wouldn’t most reasonable people say?

    How long is this going to go on anyway? It seems we’ve been listening to these people forever.

  3. dm says:

    One of the best statements I heard was from Santorum talking to a small business owner who said no way no how is he hiring anyone until he knows exactly what impact Obamacare will have…

    • dakinikat says:

      Small businesses are not the source of jobs. They aren’t the ones to worry about. I have some research on that if you would like. Small businesses generally go broke or stay small. It is mid size to large ones that we need to be listening to on that front. Small businesses ate usually exempted from things anyway and the affordable health care act is an example. That is ideology talking and not business.

      • dm says:

        Unless you happen to be the employee of a small business…my interpretation of that comment was merely that businesses are collectively holding their breath (and money) to see what’s next…Obamacare is just one more thing that many people are concerned about.

        • dakinikat says:

          That is the confidence fairy meme. Businesses aren’t hiring because there is low demand or no customers. The health care act has nothing to do with it and really doesn’t impact most businesses let alone small ones.