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TH*NK*NG
(Baggage)
by Fred
Cederholm
Economic Analysis
Column
Columnist, Baltimore
Chronicle & Sentinel
June 25, 2007
I’ve
been thinking about baggage. Actually I’ve been thinking about the
2008 elections, dissatisfaction, recent polls, partisanship, Michael
Bloomberg, and perceptions. While the traditional kick off for the
earliest (presidential) campaigns is the Labor Day before the primaries
– well over a year before the actual election; in this 2008 go around,
the circus brouhaha began ten months earlier than even that. US/us is
now a society quagmired in BOTH warfare AND campaigning.
You
see the public is anything but happy about where we are as a nation and
where we are headed. Despite the promises made to the electorate in
2006, the hot-button issues are being side stepped or ignored
altogether. Opinion favorability polls for government performance are in
the tank and continue to head south. The President’s “plus”
ratings are in the high 20’s, the Veep’s “plus” ratings are in
the high teens, and Congressional “plus” ratings are now in the low
teens. Candidates are running from their parties and from their
incumbencies. Last week, the Vice President attempted to solidify
“his” position(s) by seceding his office from the executive branch.
Huh…what gives?
The
field of candidates is already at an all time high with still more
prospective candidates lurking in the wings. Fred Thompson announced
last week that he will announce his candidacy from Nashville this week.
Al Gore, who still hasn’t overcome his “twilight zone” (du-du
du-du, du-du du-du) persona from 2000, appears to be transforming his
current global warming celebrity into another oval office run. Despite
the spin, hype, and manufactured brouhaha, nobody seems to be catching
on. Even lame attempts to undercut the other guy’s (excuse me, other
person’s) position by dredging/ “Drudge”ing up negative baggage
from the past hasn’t caught on to any great extent either. While
chorus of the candidates grows in members and volume, the public is
rightly tuning them out.
Negative
campaigning is a fact of life and despite the hollow promises to run
this time on the issues, that’s not apparently going to happen –
again! We’ve seem that the partisan finger pointing – blaming the
other major party for our travails, problems and situations may make a
great sound bite, but where is the follow-up/ follow-thru with a remedy/
solution? The 2006 election was first and foremost a referendum on Iraq.
What has been changed by the new Congress? We’ve seen “passage” of
a continued funding resolution that was so amended by “earmarks” for
pork projects/ self-serving errata that one questions whether this
appropriation bill was for the benefit of the troops, lobbyists, or
special interests. When you throw in the lame attempt to “fix” Uncle
$ugar’s illegal immigrant problem by refusing to enforce existing laws
or to secure our borders first, but rather to grant blanket amnesty and
goose up an already inept bureaucracy – none of which the voting
public wants; is there any wonder why Congressional approval is hovering
at 14% - the worst showing in US history?
Last
week self-made billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg (and present
Mayor of New York City) formally became an Independent and thereby
severed his ties to the Republican Party. He has had it with both major
parties - being an EX-Democrat and now an EX-Republican, too. He
financed his first campaign (and re-election) with his own money. He has
been highly successful in both business and government. He turned New
York’s huge deficit into a surplus. He surrounds himself highly
competent people who challenge him. He believes government must listen
and satisfy because “voters are customers.” He is characterized by
“common sense, professionalism, and accountability.” He has brought
Democrats, Republicans, and splinter groups together for the good and
betterment of the city. The only thing “shady” in his past appears
to be his ongoing plan to plant a million trees in a ten year period.
Does all this posture him to run for the White House as an independent
candidate in 2008? He currently says no, but time will tell. The plot
thickens… Bloomberg appears to have no baggage, but boy, does he have
the “luggage” working FOR him!
Both
major parties have major image, perception, and baggage problems -
rightly so, given their track records of reneging on promises and
sidestepping the hot-button problems. Is it surprising that “DEM”
appears to be “Deny Election Mandates” and “GOP” now appears to
be “Grab Overseas Petroleum? I’m Fred Cederholm and I’ve been
thinking. You should be thinking, too.

© 2007 Fred Cederholm
Editorial Archive
Contact
Information
Fred
Cederholm
Creston,
IL USA
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