Taking even a brief look at the map below makes you just shake your head in profound dismay and deep sorrow, doesn't it? (Or clever glee if you're one of the fomenters of this outcome?)
Anybody want to discuss "opportunity missed" yet?
In North Carolina, for one instance, we have got to elect real progressive representatives now (not those progressing in a downward direction).
Monday, Jun 10, 2013
Red, Blue States More Brightly Colored Than Ever
With Congress incapable of passing any kind of legislation, state governments are growing increasingly extreme
By Robert Reich
It seems pretty clear to me that the desires surrounding Obama's election in most of the red has been incredibly disappointing.
Conservative Republicans in our nation’s capital have managed to accomplish something they only dreamed of when Tea Partiers streamed into Congress at the start of 2011: They’ve basically shut Congress down. Their refusal to compromise is working just as they hoped: No jobs agenda. No budget. No grand bargain on the deficit. No background checks on guns. Nothing on climate change. No tax reform. No hike in the minimum wage. Nothing so far on immigration reform.
It’s as if an entire branch of the federal government — the branch that’s supposed to deal directly with the nation’s problems, not just execute the law or interpret the law but make the law — has gone out of business, leaving behind only a so-called “sequester” that’s cutting deeper and deeper into education, infrastructure, programs for the nation’s poor, and national defense.
The window of opportunity for the President to get anything done is closing rapidly. Even in less partisan times, new initiatives rarely occur after the first year of a second term, when a president inexorably slides toward lame duck status.
But the nation’s work doesn’t stop even if Washington does. By default, more and more of it is shifting to the states, which are far less gridlocked than Washington. Last November’s elections resulted in one-party control of both the legislatures and governor’s offices in all but 13 states — the most single-party dominance in decades.
This means many blue states are moving further left, while red states are heading rightward. In effect, America is splitting apart without going through all the trouble of a civil war.
Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, for example, now controls both legislative chambers and the governor’s office for the first time in more than two decades. The legislative session that ended a few weeks ago resulted in a hike in the top income tax rate to 9.85%, an increased cigarette tax, and the elimination of several corporate tax loopholes. The added revenues will be used to expand early-childhood education, freeze tuitions at state universities, fund jobs and economic development, and reduce the state budget deficit. Along the way, Minnesota also legalized same-sex marriage and expanded the power of trade unions to organize.
California and Maryland passed similar tax hikes on top earners last year. The governor of Colorado has just signed legislation boosting taxes by $925 million for early-childhood education and K-12 (the tax hike will go into effect only if residents agree, in a vote is likely in November).
(Robert Reich, one of the nation’s leading experts on work and the economy, is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. Time Magazine has named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written 13 books, including his latest best-seller, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future; The Work of Nations, which has been translated into 22 languages; and his newest, an e-book, Beyond Outrage. His syndicated columns, television appearances, and public radio commentaries reach millions of people each week. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, and Chairman of the citizen’s group Common Cause. His widely-read blog can be found at www.robertreich.org.)
More Robert Reich.
The Number: Five Years
The New Yorker
Posted by Michael Guerriero
The Labor Department issued its monthly jobs report today, and the news is that not much is new. Employers added a hundred and seventy-five thousand jobs in May, which is only about three thousand more than the average monthly growth over the past year. The unemployment rate is also essentially unchanged, registering at 7.6 per cent, a tenth of a per cent above where it was in April. And employees’ average hourly earnings increased by a single cent, to $23.89. It’s a mediocre waypoint on the plod toward recovery.
The general trend of job growth is still good — this is the thirty-ninth consecutive month in which the economy has added jobs — but the pace is a problem. At the current rate of growth, the New York Times estimates that it will take nearly five years for the economy to return to the level of employment in December, 2007, before the recession.
A few middling jobs reports back, in March, Planet Money estimated that if this had been a typical recession and recovery, the economy would have ten million more jobs than it did at its previous peak. Instead, it had three million fewer jobs. More than five years into the recovery, and with potentially another five to go, we may have an entire lost decade for millions of American workers.
Illustration by Larry Buchanan.
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