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US Election: 2016

Kilo-

I don't agree with much of what you post, but in this case, I think you are reasonably close to the mark.

The only point I would differ on is how much "danger" to the "system" that Trump would actually represent, if he won.  While I doubt he could be bought (who could buy a guy worth 5 billion?), how much change (good change or bad) can one man in the White House reasonably effect? Did Obama actually "change" anything of consequence?  :dunno:
 
That's the billion dollar question.

I agree that Obama didn't change anything of consequence, and it's hard to tell if he even wanted to. In my opinion, it's corporate power in politics that is the central problem and the main threat to democracy and Obama is just as susceptible to it as Bush was.

Judging by the fierce resistance from Republicans against anything from Obama that resembled regulation of the corporate sector, no Republican candidate is interested in changing the system either, except in the opposite direction. So greater deregulation, and a rapid decrease in government footprint (except for the military and the security/intelligence apparatus of course). Trump has said he would do all of these things too. This of course benefits the corporate sector, and as the Democrats are either lame or bought off too there wouldn't really be any obstacles to this.

The danger with Trump lies in how he would justify this to Americans, and how he would use fear and xenophobia to draw attention away from the real problems. He's already ran a campaign based on these ideas, and it's getting ugly. Conservative Americans are justifiably angry about how things are going, but it's no secret that they're largely angry at the wrong thing. Where are these "liberals" they're mad at? The "socialists?" Socialists (outside of Sanders, though he is a democratic socialist, a different beast altogether) have exactly zero power in the US.

If you look at past crises in capitalism (1929 for example), the left was in a much stronger position. Organized labour was prevalent and in many places quite militant. There were radical political movements, both socialist and communist. These were of course balanced out by fascist movements on the far right.  This is why Roosevelt "saved" capitalism by swinging balance from capital back towards labour. That lasted until roughly the 70s, and since then capital has been clawing back the gains the poor and the middle class made.

So now, the Democrats (and the Liberals in Canada) have been pursuing the same fiscal policies as the right for quite some time with the predictable result that there isn't really a credible left in either country. Sure that's all that social window dressing, but none of that really addresses the structural economic issues that are really the cause of social unrest in the US. In short, with the current political situation and the power that corporate money has in politics, Trump (or ANY of the other Republican candidates) could do quite a bit of damage indeed. If Bernie won, we could see a drastic slow down of the slide into fascism or perhaps even a reversal, but making it stick would require real reforms. I can't imagine any Republican Senators or Congresspeople allowing that. The nonsense over Obama and accusations of treason, and suggestions of impeachment, the incredibly racist comments from some legislators and the appeal to far elements of the Tea Party all suggest to me that Sanders would be impeached or even assassinated before he could achieve anything meaningful.
 
Maybe you should try reading [color=black"The Forgotten Man"[/color] before you assign blame for a "crisis in Capitalism". After all, the first post war depression was swiftly overcome by simply doing nothing and the Roaring 20's commenced, brought to an end by repeated fiddling by the Federal Reserve triggering the 1929 crash, followed by the "New Deal" extending and deepening the Depression to such an extent that the worst year was 1938, almost a decade after the Crash.

It was a "crisis of Regulation" that caused these problems, much like the 2008 meltdown can be traced back to the Community Reinvestment Act and various shenanigans involving "Fannie May" and "Freddy Mac". And of course ham handed government intervention has kept the real unemployment rate (not the manipulated BLS released rates) at 10% since 2008, with much of the burden falling on the young and minorities, despite the massive "stimulus" and QE that has been going for almost 8 years now.

People like Trump don't have the answers, but then again neither do professional politicians. The voting public supports Trump because they are angry at being fed platitudes and obvious untruths. How or even if he is going to do what he says is almost beside the point now, people are hearing what they want to hear from a public figure and responding accordingly.
 
Thucydides said:
Maybe you should try reading [color=black"The Forgotten Man"[/color] before you assign blame for a "crisis in Capitalism". After all, the first post war depression was swiftly overcome by simply doing nothing and the Roaring 20's commenced, brought to an end by repeated fiddling by the Federal Reserve triggering the 1929 crash, followed by the "New Deal" extending and deepening the Depression to such an extent that the worst year was 1938, almost a decade after the Crash.

It was a "crisis of Regulation" that caused these problems, much like the 2008 meltdown can be traced back to the Community Reinvestment Act and various shenanigans involving "Fannie May" and "Freddy Mac". And of course ham handed government intervention has kept the real unemployment rate (not the manipulated BLS released rates) at 10% since 2008, with much of the burden falling on the young and minorities, despite the massive "stimulus" and QE that has been going for almost 8 years now.

People like Trump don't have the answers, but then again neither do professional politicians. The voting public supports Trump because they are angry at being fed platitudes and obvious untruths. How or even if he is going to do what he says is almost beside the point now, people are hearing what they want to hear from a public figure and responding accordingly.

None of  your points are borne out by reality unfortunately. A "crisis in regulation?" Is this what you think caused the 1929 crash? Or the 2008 crash? This is not a serious argument. The 2008 crash can directly be attributed to the repeal of Glass-Steagall Act just as the 1929 Crash is attributed to instability and over exposure stemming from over-speculating. The book you're referencing is by a libertarian author who also happens to chair the "Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation." It follows that she wouldn't accept the role of the New Deal measures in the recovery, as well as diffusing dissent from the Left.

You blaming Fannie May and Freddie Mac just underlines the simple truth that government was indeed legislating on behalf of Wall Street. Wall Street then used its considerable influence to secure the bail out packages. These represent the largest upward transfer of wealth in history. In effect, instead of "New Deal" type legislation focused on the poor and middle class, the government practiced corporate welfare on a massive scale in hopes of encouraging a return to growth. Well, since then Americans have seen little of the wealth being put back in the economy, and growth is still slow or non-existent as far as they're concerned. Hence the unrest. So we can agree that government intervention since 2008 has not been a good thing, but that's only because the intervention has been to bail out the banks. The CAUSE of the 2008 recession is undeniably a lack of regulation. This has been well-documented.

More broadly, deregulation has been taking place across many sectors in the US for decades now. The role of government is shrinking rapidly, just as conservatives would like to see. To suggest that our current problems are due to the presence of regulations is to reveal a crucial lack of understanding of what has been occurring since the 1970s. Conservative economic policy has won, the NDP and Liberals in Canada now agree that only business can drive growth, just as the Democrats and the Republicans agree. We've been heading toward that libertarian paradise for sometime now.

 
I have to disagree on several points with what you have said Kilo. First, Thuc is correct in stating that the 2008 economic collapse was due to a crisis of regulation. This has been analyzed 17 ways from Sunday and all of the economic and financial experts agree on that point. As to how it was dealt with during and after the collapse and how that gets prevented in the future is where the differences fall.

In my opinion you have two distinct issues that are currently playing out right now that allow the populist messages from both Trump and Sanders to resonate with the unwashed electorate.

First is the complete contempt for the lack of effort by Congress to do anything other score points for one side or the other. Focusing on defeating the opposition, rather than working together to get the things done that need attention. People are tired of a do nothing congress. Both Dems and GOP share the blame in this, and the people seem to be willing to finally do a wholesale cleansing, rather than just sit and bitch about it.

Second is the extreme amounts of money that are dumped into the election cycle since the floodgates were opened up. When it takes over $2 Billion (and rising each cycle) to run a campaign on each side, it is getting obscene. Sitting Congressional members now spend more than half their time raising money. Your job starting on day 1 after your election is not making legislation, doing committee work or addressing the issues of your constituency. Your job on day 1 is to get reelected. And you can't get reelected without raising money. The people know this, and they are tired of seeing obscene sums going to pols for reelection. And this is why the perception that the system and the people in it are corrupt, and beholden to the big money interests.

As for your comment about parties running to the extremes of the spectrum as being "capitalism in crisis", I have to disagree strongly. As things have gotten more and more polarized with each cycle since Clinton's second term, both sides now have to run primary campaigns towards the opposite ends of the spectrum which appeal to their respective "bases", and then campaign in the general election pivoting back towards the center to appeal to the rest of the electorate. This has become more pronounced each cycle, but has been more visible with the GOP in the last couple of presidential cycles than it has with the Dems. You need to win the primary in order to get to the general, and you aren't going to win a primary by playing to the middle (especially in the GOP). I've watched it from the sidelines before moving south in 2001, and having been in the thick of it since, it's only getting worse.

People want a change. They are tired of the BS. That is why the so called political outsiders are making an impact this time around. And I use the term so called since some of those outsiders aren't as outside as they may be perceived (Saunders and Fiorina are two examples). But they aren't part of the party establishment or DC insiders, so they appeal to the people who are fed up with the status quo.
 
And Trump keeps going and going and going.

Reuters

The Trump insurgency lands in Washington: DC rally illustrates anger within GOP
The Canadian PressBy Alexander Panetta, The Canadian Press | The Canadian Press – Wed, 9 Sep, 2015

WASHINGTON - From his spot in a camping chair on the lawn of Capitol Hill, Blair Owens stares at the famous domed building that produces so much of his frustration.
"I'm not angry," the retired mechanic and Vietnam veteran said Wednesday, seated near the U.S. Congress.
"I'm mad as hell."
He's mad at the liberals he accuses of bloating government and weakening national security, and he's mad at what he sees as their Republican enablers.
Up on a stage nearby, two politicians channel his rage. They're both presidential candidates, and darlings of the mighty anti-establishment movement now upending the Republican primary race.

(...SNIPPED)
 
More on the long term changes which are driving the current "insurgencies" by Trump and Sanders. While this may be appropriate for the "Grand Strategy for a Divided America" thread, the uncontrolled increases in spending and the political and social changes which are driven by the "entitlement" culture have reached a point where any net benefits have been totally swamped by fiscal bankruptcy (literal in the case of many US cities), regulatory burdens and political deadlock.

WRM and the American Thinker have also commented extensively about the collapse of the "Blue model" of governance; what this election cycle is really about is casting for a change which reflects the new demographic, economic and social realities, since many of the old political structures and institutions no longer do:

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2015/09/from-madisonian-constitutionalism-to-wilsonian-statism.php

FROM MADISONIAN CONSTITUTIONALISM TO WILSONIAN STATISM?

That is how Dan Mitchell describes America’s fiscal evolution, as chronicled in a new report by the Joint Economic Committee. I will have to delve into the report before long, but for now let’s stay with Mitchell’s analysis:

Given my affinity for budget data, I was excited to learn that the Joint Economic Committee (JEC) just released “An Economic History of Federal Spending and Debt.”

This new publication is filled with fiscal information starting in the late 1700s.

To give you an indication, check out this chart which, in one fell swoop, provides more than 200 years of data on spending, revenue, and debt, along with information on major wars and economic dislocations.

Click to enlarge:

Screen Shot 2015-09-12 at 2.05.06 PM

You could study that one for a while. Dan offers this simpler chart, which shows federal spending as a percentage of GDP:

Federal-Spending-GDP-1790-2014

It is obvious that federal spending since WWII represents a sharp break with our prior history. Mitchell comments:

it symbolizes a very unfortunate change in the attitude about the proper role of the federal government.

A progressive philosophical shift in federal spending began under President Woodrow Wilson. …George Will—writing on Wilson’s underlying philosophy—succinctly contrasted Wilson with James Madison by noting, “Wilsonian government, meaning (in Wilson’s words) government with ‘unstinted power,’ is hostile to Madison’s Constitution, which, Madison said, obliges government ‘to control itself.’”

In other words, the left decided that government was a force for progress rather than a threat to liberty, so they wanted to undermine the Constitution’s limits on the federal government.

And once the Supreme Court acquiesced to this perversion of the Constitution’s clear intent, any limits of federal power were swept away (evinced most recently by John Roberts’ tortured Obamacare decision).

I can’t argue with that. But I would note a couple of additional points. First, the growth of federal spending has consisted mostly of expansion in entitlements, which now represent around half of the federal budget. Does taxing the young to support the old–not a traditional federal government function, to say the least–give the government the same control over the economy, or threaten our freedoms, to the same extent as other forms of government spending (e.g., funding the EPA and the IRS)? Unconstrained entitlement spending may essentially bankrupt the federal government one day, so I don’t mean to underestimate its importance. But are all forms of government spending equally “Wilsonian”?

Second, the explosion in federal spending has taken place alongside a similar expansion of state and local spending. I happened to obtain data last week on historic spending by my home state of Minnesota. The numbers are actual totals, not inflation-adjusted and not stated as a percentage of GDP. Still, the raw numbers are astonishing.

In 1960, the State of Minnesota spent $509 million. At the time, it probably sounded like a lot of money. By 2015, the state’s spending had exploded to $35.9 billion–more than 70 times the 1960 level. Just since 2000, the state’s spending has doubled. And this is without Social Security and Medicare driving the numbers.

Together, these trends have largely turned the United States into a nation of check-cashers. Small wonder that is seems harder, these days, to get people upset about big government. But government spending always carries a price tag, as the Joint Economic Committee’s report notes:

While more spending and a bigger federal government can mean more federal jobs, these jobs come at the expense of private sector resources, meaning fewer private sector jobs and lost economic opportunities. …there is an inverse relationship between federal spending and private payroll employment.

Whether concern about foregone growth can compete with the tangible reality of a government check–at least until the money runs out–remains to be seen.
 
cupper said:
I have to disagree on several points with what you have said Kilo. First, Thuc is correct in stating that the 2008 economic collapse was due to a crisis of regulation. This has been analyzed 17 ways from Sunday and all of the economic and financial experts agree on that point. As to how it was dealt with during and after the collapse and how that gets prevented in the future is where the differences fall.

In my opinion you have two distinct issues that are currently playing out right now that allow the populist messages from both Trump and Sanders to resonate with the unwashed electorate.

First is the complete contempt for the lack of effort by Congress to do anything other score points for one side or the other. Focusing on defeating the opposition, rather than working together to get the things done that need attention. People are tired of a do nothing congress. Both Dems and GOP share the blame in this, and the people seem to be willing to finally do a wholesale cleansing, rather than just sit and ***** about it.

Second is the extreme amounts of money that are dumped into the election cycle since the floodgates were opened up. When it takes over $2 Billion (and rising each cycle) to run a campaign on each side, it is getting obscene. Sitting Congressional members now spend more than half their time raising money. Your job starting on day 1 after your election is not making legislation, doing committee work or addressing the issues of your constituency. Your job on day 1 is to get reelected. And you can't get reelected without raising money. The people know this, and they are tired of seeing obscene sums going to pols for reelection. And this is why the perception that the system and the people in it are corrupt, and beholden to the big money interests.

As for your comment about parties running to the extremes of the spectrum as being "capitalism in crisis", I have to disagree strongly. As things have gotten more and more polarized with each cycle since Clinton's second term, both sides now have to run primary campaigns towards the opposite ends of the spectrum which appeal to their respective "bases", and then campaign in the general election pivoting back towards the center to appeal to the rest of the electorate. This has become more pronounced each cycle, but has been more visible with the GOP in the last couple of presidential cycles than it has with the Dems. You need to win the primary in order to get to the general, and you aren't going to win a primary by playing to the middle (especially in the GOP). I've watched it from the sidelines before moving south in 2001, and having been in the thick of it since, it's only getting worse.

People want a change. They are tired of the BS. That is why the so called political outsiders are making an impact this time around. And I use the term so called since some of those outsiders aren't as outside as they may be perceived (Saunders and Fiorina are two examples). But they aren't part of the party establishment or DC insiders, so they appeal to the people who are fed up with the status quo.

So you're saying the 2008 crash was due to TOO MUCH regulation?
 
Kilo_302 said:
So you're saying the 2008 crash was due to TOO MUCH regulation?

No.  ::)

If you have been paying attention to any of the discussions during and since the 2008 collapse, you would know that it was a failure of the regulatory bodies to address the underlying issues. It was the blurring of the relationship between the regulatory bodies and the financial institutions that allowed the financial instruments that brought down the economy to be created. Financial deregulation  combined with misguided Fed policies created an environment ripe for a lending free for all with little or no oversight.

As I said, what is in dispute is the way it was handled during and after the crisis, and how effective the measure taken really were.
 
cupper said:
No.  ::)

If you have been paying attention to any of the discussions during and since the 2008 collapse, you would know that it was a failure of the regulatory bodies to address the underlying issues. It was the blurring of the relationship between the regulatory bodies and the financial institutions that allowed the financial instruments that brought down the economy to be created. Financial deregulation  combined with misguided Fed policies created an environment ripe for a lending free for all with little or no oversight.

As I said, what is in dispute is the way it was handled during and after the crisis, and how effective the measure taken really were.

....that's exactly what I have been saying. I mentioned the repeal of Glass-Steagall, the fact that legislative bodies are acting on behalf of Wall Street.  Read my posts again, we are in agreement. The crisis of capitalism that I am referring to stems from these developments. The system is no longer working for the majority, the balance of power has swung sharply towards capital.

I think you're getting confused by the language Thucydides used, specifically "crisis of regulation."  He is suggesting that regulation IS the problem and that's what led to the 2008 crash.
 
Yes, but what you aren't  picking up (and perhaps I'm not expressing it well) is that the bigger problem was not so much deregulation in and of itself, but rather a failure on the part of the regulating bodies to enforce the regulations that remained in place or were brought in to replace those that were repealed.

Regardless, the rise of the populist movements we are currently seeing on both sides of the ballot are more so due to an overall dissatisfaction with the current political environment of obstructionism and internal disruption within the 2 party system.

On the part of the GOP, it is a problem of having too many choices, with the Dems too few. As we mover closer to the start of the primaries and caucuses in 2016, we will see a winnowing of the GOP clown show to more realistic candidates with support coalescing around a more realistic group of candidates. I don't believe Trump will be able to sustain his position as frontrunner once this starts to happen.

Now on the Dem's side it is a different story. Clinton has baggage that even a full contingent of Sherpas couldn't deal with. Sanders appeals to the further left base elements. The remainder of the field (O'Mally, Chaffee and Webb) just don't have the national name recognition to get past the starting gate (which is too bad for Webb, as I think he would be a candidate that would be more appealing for the middle who get left out of the equation by both sides). If Biden does decide to get into the race, it may be more a result of Clinton's liability and her failure to move beyond that than anything else. And if that does happen, you may well see support of the more centrist elements move away from Sanders to Biden. Will it be enough to knock Clinton off the ballot? That's harder to call. 
 
Seems there could be rumblings going on behind the scenes to entice Romney to come in as a late entry candidate to counter the Trump populism. However I don't think that it would work. The same problems he had last time would still be there, execpt maybe having a better prepared campaign staff.

Can Romney Save Us From Trump?
Why GOP poohbahs are seriously thinking about asking Mitt back into the race.


http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/09/mitt-romney-enter-race-save-gop-from-trump-213145

In a tastefully furnished conference room somewhere in the nation’s capital, leaders of the GOP establishment are popping antacids and shaking their heads. Donald Trump is the face of their party now — and there’s no stopping him.

In the latest CNN poll, his lead has grown, due to increased support among two groups they assumed would grow to hate him: Republican women and college graduates. Every candidate challenging The Donald has seen his numbers drop. Ben Carson may be next over his rather dubious decision to attack Trump on illegal immigration — the issue that propelled Trump to first place in the first place.

If only there were someone out there who could appeal to establishment voters, but also engender support from the rank and file. An outsider who has never worked in Washington. Someone with some “high energy,” without the need for caffeine.
Bet they all wish they’d been a little nicer to Mitt Romney now.

When the former Republican nominee first mused about entering the 2016 race, way back in January, he received a harsher welcome than the Apple Pencil. Nasty editorials. Anonymous quotes. Condemnation from pundits who used to champion him. Dismissive comments from donors.

Now these same Romney bashers would be the first to climb to the top of the tallest building on K Street and light up the Bat Signal for him. Or to use another analogy, Obi-Wan Ke-Romney, you’re their only hope.

Fortunately for them, there are vague stirrings in the Force that the former GOP nominee may again be toying with the idea of a late entry, even though a former aide (not Romney himself) recently denied it.

Romney’s certainly done just enough to keep himself in the headlines. Opposing the Iran deal, releasing adorable photos with his grandkids, tut-tutting over Republican candidates when they’ve crossed the line in their attacks, even filming a promo for Stephen Colbert’s new late night talk show.

Does any of this mean he’s running? Nope. But it does mean he is keeping a sliver of an option open. And might entertain entreaties from the GOP establishment — if it asks him really nicely.

And why shouldn’t he consider it? Right now, he’s the political equivalent of J.K. Rowling — a very rich person with nothing better to do but offer random musings as his days in the sun pass further and further behind him. (Rowling’s latest she-must-be-bored-out-of-her-mind observation — we’ve been mispronouncing Voldemort all along).

Could Mitt shake up the race? And, more importantly in their eyes, could he be the one to stop Donald Trump? The answers are yes, and maybe — if only he did the following:

1 Make them want you. Romney needs to pose as the reluctant candidate who only reluctantly would consider jumping into the race for king and country (and party). He needs people to come to him, to write op-eds asking him to run. In other words, to do what George W. Bush did successfully in 2000 and his brother tried — and failed — to do this year.

2 Avoid his advisers. We know what happens when Romney runs for president — he pulls together about two dozen “experts,” listens to dull PowerPoint presentations, and paralysis ensues. These guys cost him a fortune, while making a fortune, and guided him to a loss he could have avoided. They’re the types of guys (and gals) who first put the notorious 47 percent notion — the percentage of voters who’d never give him their support and therefore he could ignore — into his head in the first place. Romney won’t win with them. He doesn’t need them. More importantly, he doesn’t want to look like he needs them.

3 Laugh off his past. Romney spent much time in his past two presidential runs explaining his various policy reversals. Forget about them. You think Trump cares if he changes his position on something from one day to the next? He just moves on. Grownups can change their minds about things — if some journalists don’t like it, tough. Stick to one mantra: This election is about the future.

4 Trumpet (no pun intended) his own business record. Romney is a successful businessman and multimillionaire who, unlike Trump, seemed to spend much of his campaign trying to apologize for it. Romney should be proud of his record as a job creator and winner. He could even find a way to mimic my favorite Trumpism to date: “I’ll win so much, you’ll get bored with winning.” I, for one, would like to see that.

5 Be the guy in the documentary. 2016 is shaping up as the imperfection election — where guys with wild eyes, unorthodox hairstyles and impolitic remarks propel to the top of the heap simply because they do not look or act like the politicians who’ve disappointed everyone for so long. Romney is finished the minute he seems like Mitt Rombot — the type of spun candidate like Hillary Clinton who recently had aides declare to The New York Times that she will henceforth be funny and likable. Peasants, you may be amused by her now.

Not since the days of “Small Wonder” has anyone appeared as robotic and scripted on TV as Clinton — with the exception of Romney in 2012. The irony is that’s really not who he is at all. The Netflix documentary, “Mitt,” released after his loss to President Barack Obama revealed a witty, winning, self-deprecating man. A guy not afraid to make fun of himself and make mistakes. Which shouldn’t be too hard. Because that’s who he is in essence — a decent guy.

6 For goodness sake, pick a fight. Here’s the fundamental disconnect between Republicans and the voters: The GOP leadership is not fighting Obamacare. It is not stopping the Iran deal. It does not appear to be fighting at all. Trump is a fighter. That’s what people in the party want. Romney needs to show he’s a fighter too. Romney should take something he believes in — ideally something controversial and unorthodox — and fight like the dickens for that position. Without apology or retreat.

Just not with Trump. Anything but that.
 
This is the one thing that would ensure a huge GOP loss in 2016, regardless of the Dem's pick. And it looks like they are having a tough time avoiding it.

Government shutdown: How close are we?
A leading budget wonk explains just how bad it looks.


http://www.politico.com/agenda/story/2015/09/are-we-on-the-verge-of-another-government-shutdown-000228

Congress has just 15 days left in September to reach a budget agreement and the stakes are high: Without a deal, the government will shut down for the second time in three years. The flashpoint this time could be Planned Parenthood: Republicans want to use the budget negotiations to defund the group after videos released this summer allegedly showed the organization illegally profiting from the sale of fetal tissue. Democrats have said they will not accept any budget that defunds Planned Parenthood.

Last week, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) called the Planned Parenthood funding protest an “exercise in futility” in an interview with POLITICO, a sign he will not let the issue cause a shutdown. Whether House GOP leaders will take the same position as McConnell is unclear. The Senate and House have just 11 and 6 work days respectively before the end of September—little time to reach a budget deal and barely enough time to hash out a continuing resolution that lets the government limp along for another few weeks or months.

How do these last-minute negotiations affect government agencies? And is there a better way for lawmakers to reach a budget deal? To answer these questions, The Agenda’s Danny Vinik sat down with renowned budget expert Stan Collender, who formerly worked for both the House and Senate Budget Committees, writes frequently on budget issues for Forbes and is on Twitter as @TheBudgetGuy. He’s currently executive vice president and national director for financial communications at Qorvis MSLGROUP.

Collender isn’t optimistic: he’s not sure how Congress avoids yet another shutdown, and says it’s hard for agencies to function effectively when facing a potential shutdown: “It's just not a good way to run a railroad, let alone a country.” And he pointed out a pretty big irony: The minute Congress shuts the government down, it actually hands vast power to President Obama, who gets to decide what keeps working and what doesn’t.

Danny Vinik: What’s the current state of the budget showdown?

Stan Collender: Technically, it's a big mess. Congress and the president are supposed to agree on 12 appropriations bills for every year. The new fiscal year starts in October 1, and none have been agreed to. In fact, none are even close to being agreed to. What Congress has got to do in the next three weeks or so is come up with an agreement on total federal spending—that's defense and domestic—that they haven't been able to do for the last nine months.

DV: What about a three-month extension via continuing resolution?

SC: The extra three months doesn't help at all. Everyone's hoping that something will happen in the meantime, a foreign policy issue, an economic situation, something that will change the calculus so that it becomes easier for people to move from their established positions. But in an election year, especially when you've got 17 Republican candidates running around the country trying very hard to appeal to the same group of very conservative voters, it's hard to see how the situation is going to get anything better. It's more likely to get much, much worse as time goes along.

DV: What are you looking for as signals for how this plays out?

SC: What I'm looking for is something that would indicate somebody is moving from an established position, someone who is influential. If John Boehner, for example, did what he's done once in the past where he basically said, "Look, I don't care what you guys want, we're going forward with this particular activity, extending Social Security, doing a variety of things like that." That would be significant.

DV: Take us behind the scenes. How do these negotiations play out in a more granular sense?

SC: This is a very political as opposed to a substantive debate. The staff won't get involved until the members of Congress they represent, and senators, actually sit down and figure out what they want to do from a political standpoint. Once that's decided, the other decisions are relatively easy. There will be a couple of final negotiations on really in-the-weeds numbers and those types of things, but this is really a question where the Republican leadership in both houses has to figure out what its members want to do, and before that nothing else matters… in an institution like Congress that is so staff-driven, this is a process that's not staff-driven at all. This is member-to-member, this is high-level politics, this is as closes to arm wrestling as you can possibly get.

DV: How much do these last-minute negotiations hurt the actual agencies?

SC: The operations of the agencies are the least important consideration for most members of Congress. They're looking at the overall politics of the big decision because the average person at home doesn't know about how an agency runs or what it does or how it affects them, and for some members, an agency that isn't running well is an excuse to cut it next time, so they don't really care. But yeah, it's this indecision that we force on agencies makes it very difficult for them to do good jobs.

I heard today—I'm not going to tell you who from—but I heard today from a budget officer of a major agency who said they've already been preparing for a shutdown for three weeks, all right, going through what the motions are, which functions would stay, which ones wouldn't stay, which employees would have to go home.     

DV: Let’s talk about a potential shutdown. So, each person has to go home and do whatever that’s not work related.

SC: Let me stop you for a second. The president has enormous discretion in a shutdown to determine who is, quote, essential and not essential. Now, someone essential may be a security guard. That you can see. But think about this: For the National Zoo, you need somebody there to receive the feed—the food, the meat, for the lions. And then, you need someone to feed the lions. So, they get to find this essential. In the last shutdown, the president took enormous liberties and defined the Department of Defense as almost as whole as essential, but the president could, if he wanted, go in the opposite direction. The air traffic control system gets funded by an appropriation. So, the president could say, "Sorry, no appropriation, no air traffic control system. Shut down the air traffic control. Shut down all flight." Which would probably put the economy into a tailspin within seconds. It would mean no one could go to honeymoons. Packages wouldn’t get delivered on Federal Express or UPS or anything else like that. It would be really bad. Now, that would be an extreme example. But the shutdown, there is no manual to how to do it. It's really up to the president to decide who works and who doesn't.

DV: That gives the president a lot of power.

SC: It does, and what happened with the shutdown during Clinton's years is that the definition of who is essential kept changing over days as, one, for technical reasons, they found out that zookeepers were needed, but other reasons because, for political reasons, some programs they wanted to start back up again, like veterans' benefits.

DV: Does giving the president such power worry Republicans?

SC: I don't think it actually worries Republicans…From what I can tell, for a lot of Republicans, particularly Tea Party Republicans, a government shutdown is the equivalent of a campaign event. It helps them get reelected.

DV: What are ways we can change the system so that we don't get into this repetitive process of last-minute deadline deals?

SC: There are thousands of ways we could fix this, all right? The truth is they don't want to. There's always talk, for example, about making a continuing resolution automatic. That is, if Congress and the president don't agree to a new continuing resolution or existing appropriations, then it's last year's level plus or minus something, 5 percent, 2 percent, minus 3. It sounds like a great idea. The problem is you can't agree on whether it's always last year or last year plus inflation or last year minus inflation. In other words, whatever rule you come up with favors somebody.

The real solution here is to get members of Congress, Republicans and Democrats, House and Senate, Congress and White House, to get everybody together and just agree that they're going to compromise. When I first got to Washington, which is now almost 40 years ago, that's what you did. You came to Washington to do something. Now, you come to Washington to get reelected.

So, again, I can come up with 30, 50, 100 ways of fixing the budget process, but none of them are ever going to get adopted. There's got to be a change in culture, here. It's become so poisonous, and [since] compromise is now considered collaborating with the enemy, most members of Congress won't do it for fear that they will be called a collaborator.

DV: That sounds pretty depressing.

SC: Oh, yeah. There's nothing positive about this. It's why you see so many retirements from Congress these days.             

DV: Who are the key players you're watching?

SC: John Boehner, Mitch McConnell, and Barack Obama, just three. … And ultimately, it's not going to be congressional Democrats. It's going to be the White House, Barack Obama, who decides whether to compromise with Republicans.

DV: I you were to bet on what's going to happen, where would you put your money?

SC: The answer is I don't know. I mean, I really don't know. For one of the few times in my career, I can see a shutdown. I just don't see how they can avoid it, and I don't see how they stop it once it starts. Once it starts, I suspect that the political pressure will get intense after about two weeks, that members of Congress who thought it was a good idea will say, "Okay, we've won what we're going to win and now we better stop the shutdown." But given that compromise is a four-letter word in Washington these days, I'm not even sure how long it's going to take before that pain starts to be felt.

This Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.
 
Not sure a shutdown would be all bad news, many people took this in stride and many more people were angered at the blatant "Washington monument" ploy the Administration resorted to in order to inconveinence the taxpaying public (and directed the blame correctly). As an election level "event", it would certainly provide focus on the out of control spending and provide an outlet for alternative ideas and candidates (Trump and Sanders are essentially one issue candidates right now; although there is no reason to suppose they could not pivot to new themes that would be disrupive to their "core" message and constituency).

And a twofer; a look at the causes of the 2008 crash. Regulatory failure (in the form of the CRA, which essentially provided penalties for bankers who used traditional and well tested metrics to determine eligibility for mortgages, and the use of "Fanny and Freddie" to incentivise bankers into going against traditional mortgage metrics) is the primary cause, markets adjusted to the distorted signals and incventives that were created by malregulation and of course the end was inevitable (there were articles predicting the crash as far back as 2006, so this is no surprise):

http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-09-14/turns-out-the-housing-crisis-wasn-t-all-about-subprime

Turns Out the Housing Crisis Wasn't All About Subprime
Sept 14, 2015 4:53 PM EDT
By Megan McArdle

When we talk about the past decade's housing crisis, it's natural to talk about subprime loans. Subprime loans give us a convenient, conventional story: predatory lenders charging people unconscionable interest rates, forcing innocent people into foreclosure and the rest of us into the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

There is only one small problem with this story, which is that lots of prime borrowers defaulted too. In fact, according to a new paper by Fernando Ferreira and Joseph Gyourko, subprime loans accounted for only a bare majority of defaults at the beginning of the housing crisis. Between the third quarter of 2006 and the third quarter of 2012, twice as many prime borrowers lost their homes as subprime borrowers.

This is not a phenomenon that can be simply explained by liar loans, predatory lenders, or any other narrative that neatly loads all the blame onto a few greedy and heedless lenders, or a somewhat larger number of hubristic and speculative borrowers. Subprime loans certainly caused a lot of problems, but they did not cause all the problems by any means. They could not have driven us into crisis if the rest of us had not so eagerly gone along.

So what role did they play? I think we can tell a very plausible story that still assigns subprime loans a central role:

Once upon a time, there was a country with a housing market that started to rise. As the market started to rise, housing defaults started to fall. They fell not because people had gotten wiser about borrowing, or better at managing their money, but because borrowers in a rising housing market virtually never need to default; they can always simply sell the house, walking away with whatever equity is left over after paying off the mortgage.

Lenders loved this. "Splendid! If default has become less likely," the lenders said, "we do not need to worry so much about things like down payments or credit histories. Who cares if they can't pay the mortgage each month; if they get into trouble, they'll just sell the house and pay us."

Now, a housing market is sort of like a room with two doors. On the one side people are entering; on the other side of the room, people are exiting. The more people there are in the room, the more valuable your little patch of ground to stand on becomes. The effect of expanding subprime loans was to make the entrance door wider, allowing a lot of people in who had not previously been able to secure a spot inside. This made spots inside even more valuable, and drove defaults even lower, encouraging the bankers to make even riskier loans.

Unfortunately, there were only so many people in the waiting room who wanted to get in. Once they'd all passed through, two things happened: The number of people bidding for spots fell, and people started to notice that it was getting kind of crowded in there. Prices stopped rising inside. (the problem of malregulatory incentives)

Once that happened, the risk of those subprime loans became apparent. They'd always been bad credit risks, but that risk had been masked by the rising prices. Defaults started going up. The folks in the waiting room decided maybe they'd wait a little while to see how it settled out. Lenders didn't have money to make new risky loans. The subprime borrowers were the first to go, and the hardest hit. But without those subprime borrowers to fuel the bidding, prime borrowers suddenly found they'd overbid on their own slots. They had, in the dread banker's parlance, "negative equity."

In other words, had we not been making risky loans to so many new borrowers, the bubble would probably not have expanded as rapidly as it did. But the subprime borrowers were not the only people, or even the majority of people, bidding on homes. Most of the bidding was done by better credit risks, with perfectly conventional loans. The buyers and the banks simply underestimated the risk that the prices of these homes would fall. And when prices fell, prime borrowers caught in bad situations -- deteriorating neighborhoods or deteriorating finances -- had little alternative but to default. Which is why your risk of default is best predicted, not by the type of loan you got or how much you put down, but by whether you had negative equity.

So while initial down payments may not have done much to predict default in individual cases, we could argue that requiring 20 percent down would still have done a lot to prevent so many people in the market from going into default. The down payment is the biggest obstacle most people face to getting into a house. Closing the door to anyone who couldn't get that much cash together would have kept houses much more closely tied to incomes, meaning that the bubble simply could not have inflated as large as it did -- and therefore, would not have had the same catastrophic effects coming down. (The waiving of the down payment requirment and penalizing bankers who refused to go along was the effect of the CRA)

That doesn't mean that tightening up lending standards would have prevented the bubble. But it could have kept the bubble smaller, and the fallout less vicious.

Of course, it's easy to say this in hindsight. It was a lot harder to develop insight at the time. When prices had been in a long, gentle rise for decades, high down payments looked like expensive and unnecessary insurance against something that rarely happened. They looked like a barrier keeping historically disadvantaged groups, like minorities and immigrants, from accumulating wealth the way that prosperous native white families had. They looked like something that regulators and bankers had needed to require before they got so darn smart about managing credit risks, and credit markets.

Everyone, from buyers to regulators, had reams of data telling them this. Who are you going to believe: years and years of statistics, or some crabby dude muttering about the Great Depression? The Great Depression was so long ago that men wore hats and the Beatles were not even gleams in their fathers' eyes.

Bubbles are not fundamentally about evil people doing evil things. They are not even about stupid people doing stupid things. No, the problem with bubbles is worse: It's quite ordinary people, doing stupid things that a trick of the light has made appear very smart.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Megan McArdle at mmcardle3@bloomberg.net
 
I disagree Thuc. I think it would be a bigger deal than you think, especially for the reason that they want to use to trigger the shutdown. Defunding Planned Parenthood is not the hill that they want to die on. Even McConnell knows it would not be a benefit to the party's chances next year. Especially when you take into consideration that the money allocated to Planned Parenthood would still go through regardless of a government shutdown.
 
Not entirely sure I buy this explanation of the premise that it wasn't all about the subprimes either. Reading through the article, she essentially refutes her own premise, if I am reading it right she is arguing that if the regulations that were in place were adhered to (i.e. use of a downpayment to provide some for amount of positive equity right from the get go), the subprimes would not have been in the market, and thus the collapse would not likely have happened. Which means that it was all about the subprimes.

I do agree with the original premise though, that it wasn't all strictly subprimes that caused the collapse. The fundamental problem was a lax regulatory environment on the institutional side of the house that allowed mortgage industry to become a substitute for the high risk / high reward investment markets for global wealth (The Giant Pool of Money as NPR's Planet Money has aptly named it).

When you have regulatory bodies being walked over by the institutions they were supposed to regulate, it doesn't make for effective oversight. When you have advisors of hedge funds advising on which assets to put into derivatives, who then turn around and advise their own clients to put money into credit default swaps to bet against the derivatives they were advising on, and no one gets hauled  up on conspiracy or fraud charges says a lot about what really happened.
 
Two assessments of last night's GOP debate: Trump still ahead, but relative newcomer Fiorina has gained momentum?

CNN

CNN's Republican debate: Winners and losers

By Jeremy Diamond, CNN
Updated 8:18 AM ET, Thu September 17, 2015

Washington (CNN)Three hours and 11 candidates later, here's our quick take on the winners and losers of CNN's Republican debate Wednesday night at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.

Winners:
Carly Fiorina

Fiorina insisted in the lead-up to the GOP debate that she belonged on the debate stage with the top-tier White House hopefuls.

She proved as much Wednesday night.

For the second debate in a row, Fiorina was once again the breakout star of the night, taking on Republican front-runner Donald Trump with finesse and capturing the crowd with polished, zinging answers and an impassioned charge against abortion.

Fiorina earned perhaps the biggest applause of the night as she skewered Planned Parenthood.

(...SNIPPED)

CBC

Donald Trump vs. the Republican establishment. Not a fair fight
CBCCBC – Tue, 15 Sep, 2015

(...SNIPPED)

Parade of insults
Trump is a "cancer on conservatism," croaked Perry, who made a second run at the nomination before collapsing in surrender last week.
"We can make America great again," complained another hopeful, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal. "But we will not do that by putting an unserious and unstable narcissist in the White House."
"Someone has to bring him down," gasped Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, himself a Tea Party hero until not too long ago, but now utterly eclipsed. "I'm not going to sit quietly by and let the disaster that is Donald Trump become the nominee."
But there seems to be nothing that Paul, or anyone else, can do. Trump feeds on name-calling like Dr. Doom in Marvel comics feeds on electricity. It makes him stronger.

(...SNIPPED)

Also, according to the article below, US foreign policy towards China and the rest of Asia were noticeably absent from last night's GOP debate:

Diplomat

Republican Debate #2: Game On, Gloves Off
Behind the symbolism and showmanship, where was Asia?


By Mercy A. Kuo and Angelica O. Tang
September 17, 2015

By Mercy A. Kuo and Angelica O. Tang
September 17, 2015


(...SNIPPED)
China Specter. China poses a strategic challenge that nearly all candidates recognized in differing degrees. Scott Walker’s calling into question the White House’s rationale for Chinese President Xi Jinping’s upcoming state visit in light of China’s cyberattacks came across as political posturing rather than displaying a comprehensive understanding of U.S.-China relations. Rand Paul emphasized the importance of engaging directly and not being rash with China and Russia, and keeping lines of communication open. Jeb Bush affirmed the need to employ “offensive tactics” on issues as cybersecurity, but to use many tools in taking a strong stance toward China. Marco Rubio’s hawkish position on China accentuates his preference for a stronger U.S. global role.

Absence of Asia and U.S. Rebalance. Much-needed rigorous discussion on the future of U.S. policy in Asia, namely the U.S. rebalance, was eclipsed by immigration, the Islamic State, and radical Islamic terrorism. Whether the rebalance is to be renamed or repackaged, Republican candidates have yet to outline their respective approaches toward Asia – home to two-thirds of the world’s population and the world’s largest market of high net worth individuals (HNWIs). As an emerging area of market magnetism, innovation and growth, presidential candidates should define their framework for U.S. engagement with Asia.

(...END EXCERPT)
 
Americans are generally fed up with the political establishment, and especially being told what they know to be untrue becasue it contradicts their own, ground level, observations. Immigration is obviously a key trigger among the American electorate, but Bernie Sanders is also tapping into the economic frustrations of the electorate as well. Republicans looking for an issue to displace Donald Trump might do well to think of this issue:

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2015/09/17/upshot/why-americans-still-think-the-economy-is-terrible.html?referrer=&_r=1

Why Americans Still Think the Economy Is Terrible
By NEIL IRWIN
September 16, 2015

If your entire understanding of the economy comes from headlines about the latest economic data, you would be forgiven for thinking these are the best of times. The unemployment rate is down to 5.1 percent, after all! (BLS adjusted figures anyway. Once you add back the people left off the unemployed figures and adjust for the labour participation rate the real munber is much closer to 10%)

If your entire understanding of the economy comes from what is going on in financial markets, you would be forgiven for thinking the same. The stock market, its recent dip notwithstanding, is still not far from all-time highs!

That’s what makes the latest annual data on incomes, released by the Census Bureau on Wednesday morning, an important corrective.

The median American household in 2014 had a lower income, in inflation-adjusted terms, than it did in 2013. The $53,657 the household in the middle of the income distribution earned last year was down 1.5 percent from the year before, though the census said that shift was not statistically significant.

But even if that drop is a statistical blip and you assume that middle-class incomes were really flat, flat isn’t anything to celebrate in the current environment. The 2014 real median income number is 6.5 percent below its 2007, pre-crisis level. It is 7.2 percent below the number in 1999.

A middle-income American family, in other words, makes substantially less money in inflation-adjusted terms than it did 15 years ago. And there is no evidence that is reversing. Those families lost ground in 2014. And as we’ve reported previously, the data on wages in 2015 so far does not suggest there is a meaningful acceleration on the way.

A drop in the price of oil, though, has created a short-term drop in inflation numbers that may create a temporary bump in inflation-adjusted incomes for 2015 anyway.

The depressing data on middle-class wages is true across almost all groups based on race and age. (One exception is a 5.3 percent gain in median wages among Hispanics in 2014, though that is within the statistical margin of error and so may not be meaningful).

If you were to sum up the latest census numbers on incomes in the United States in 2014, it would be with these three words: “not statistically different.” The announcement includes the phrase six times in its discussion of incomes, and that fact sums up a lot.

Stagnant incomes were a problem in 2013. They remained so in 2014. The evidence we have so far suggests nothing about that is changing in 2015. That is the reality shaping the backdrop to the 2016 presidential campaign, the Federal Reserve’s interest rate debates and the dinnertime table conversations about the state of the economies in families across the United States.

The latest census numbers may not be surprising, in the sense that they affirm a trend that has been underway for 15 years and counting. But they are a timely reminder of what really ails the economy.

and

http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2015/09/heritage-the-redistributive-state-the-allocation-of-government-benefits-services-and-taxes-in-the-un.html

Heritage: The Redistributive State — The Allocation Of Government Benefits, Services, And Taxes In The United States
By Paul Caron

Each year, families and individuals pay taxes to the government and receive back a wide variety of services and benefits. A fiscal deficit occurs when the benefits and services received by one household or a group of households exceed the taxes paid. When such a deficit occurs, other households must pay, through taxes, for the services and benefits of the group in deficit. Thus, government functions as a redistributive mechanism for transferring resources between groups in society.

This paper examines fiscal balance in the United States by income class. It estimates the distribution of the full array of government benefits and services including cash and near cash benefits, means-tested aid, education services, and general social services. It also estimates the distribution of all direct and indirect taxes used to finance government expenditure.

The distribution of benefits, services, and taxes is examined among conventional Census income quintiles of households for the year 2004. Of particular concern is the fiscal balance within each quintile. A quintile is in fiscal deficit if the sum of benefits and services received by households within the quintile exceeds the sum of taxes paid. A quintile is in fiscal surplus if the taxes paid exceed the cost of benefits and services received.

The analysis finds that the lowest three income quintiles are in fiscal deficit, while the two highest income quintiles are in surplus. Overall, there was a transfer of roughly $1 trillion in economic resources from the top 40 percent of households to the bottom 60 percent. This sum represents about 9.5 percent of total national income in 2004.

Notice top 40%; not top 1%. The 40% is, of course, the middle class; the same group who have seen a 6% drop in income since 2007 (and which Administration and party has been in power since 2008 to "fix" the problem?).

Fertile ground for those who choose to cultivate it.
 
Wow, a big change, but notice another non professional politician has jumped ahead:

http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2015/09/17/post-debate-poll-fiorina-surges-to-1st-place-tied-with-trump/

A post-debate poll conducted by Gravis Marketing for One America News Network (OAN) shows Carly Fiorina jumping to first place at 22%, tied with Donald Trump. In their previous poll, Fiorina ranked 7th with 2.7% of the vote.

The poll, taken immediately after Wednesday night’s GOP debate at the Ronald Reagan Library, has Marco Rubio rising to third place with 15 percent:

Rounding out the top five are Dr. Ben Carson at 12 percent followed by Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush tied at 6 percent. Bush drops nearly half his early September support of 11.4 percent to a post-debate 6 percent.

Fiorina also had the highest showing with GOP national voters having a 78 percent more favorable opinion of the candidate post-debate. The less favorable percent came in at 13 percent with 10 percent unchanged. Thirty-three percent of GOP voters polled believed that Fiorina won the debate, the highest of any GOP Candidate. Trump came in second with 21 percent.

According to Robert Herring, Sr., CEO of One America News Network, “One America News’ national post-debate poll shows it’s all Fiorina coming out of the second debate. It shows that some of the lesser known candidates have tremendous upside as voters across the nation become more familiar with them. Senator Rubio also had a strong showing on Wednesday picking up 3 points since our previous national poll in early September.

Last night’s biggest loser appears to be Senator Rand Paul, with 32% of respondents saying he lost the debate. Trump came in second on that question, with 17% saying he was the loser:
 
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