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USA Today: Democrats channeling Herbert Hoover

posted at 8:20 am on April 9, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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Democrats like to use the specter of Herbert Hoover when shrieking hysterically about the national economy, attempting to frighten voters into thinking that we have reached the precipice of a new Great Depression. USA Today throws the argument back at them in a much more substantial manner. If the economy truly has begun a major stall akin to Hoover’s 1929, then Democrats have decided on a replay of the Smoot-Hawley Act that will guarantee a major global crisis:

Obama was embarrassed after an aide told the Canadian government that Obama wasn’t really serious about renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement. And Clinton pushed aside her top strategist, Mark Penn, whose day job as public relations executive led him to promote a trade pact with Colombia that the candidate opposes.

These episodes have been dissected as gaffes, tactical errors or, in Penn’s case, conflicts of interest. What they really are is evidence of the candidates’ willingness to pander on free trade — and their party’s growing willingness to accept the labor movement’s defeatist anti-trade positions.

There is no compelling reason to reopen NAFTA, or to think that the United States could do any better on second effort. The addition of more than 30 million U.S. jobs since it went into effect in 1994 makes it hard to argue it has been bad for the nation. …

That the Colombia deal might be in trouble shows how Democrats have been worn down by years of facile anti-trade arguments. With free-trader John McCain atop the Republican ticket, the two parties arguably are further apart on trade now than at any moment since 1932.

The irony is that back then, their roles were reversed, with Republican Herbert Hoover pushing high tariffs and Democrat Franklin Roosevelt opposing them.

The good news might be that it’s all just an act. Democrats may just be, as USA Today puts it, pandering to the Rust Belt in order to gin up enough anger to fill campaign coffers. Their appeal to emotionalism has small donors giving in droves to the two Democratic presidential candidates, and protectionism has long since supplanted surrender in Iraq as the main plank in appeals from the stump.

Unfortunately, that makes it even more likely that it’s not just an act. The populist turn in Democratic politics has been too substantial and too reinforced by those donations for a Democratic president to reverse course after the election. The reversal of free-trade progress would be almost certain, and the collapse of NAFTA, CAFTA, and the Colombian free-trade pact would seriously impact economies here and abroad.

As the editors point out, the irony is that the Colombian pact would benefit the US more than Colombia, although it would boost both national economies. Colombia already imports here tariff-free as an incentive to suppress its drug trade. American goods, especially agricultural goods, face up to 80% tariffs in the Colombian market, making them non-competitive. If we slap tariffs on Colombian goods, we will lose the nation to the orbit of Hugo Chavez and the other socialists in the region, and we will lose their cooperation against narco-trafficking.

The Smoot-Hawley act made nations economic opponents instead of partners at the time they most needed cooperation. If the economy is as important and as unstable as Democrats claim, the answer would be freer trade and less barriers to American goods abroad. Instead, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama want to take their cues from Hoover and make matters exponentially worse.


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Jonah Goldberg covered this nicely in “Liberal Fascism”. Hoover was as “Progressive” as Wilson. Progressivism is as dangerous as Communism. It is a demented political philosophy that never got attention thrust on it the same way Communism did..Clinton and Obama are both progressive socialists….This country needs to head in a more Libertarian direction. The Republicans and Democrats have been playing “good cop,bad cop” for the last hundred years as they have created a superior “political class”. Bring back the Republic………..

adamsmith on April 9, 2008 at 8:29 AM

Democrats may just be, as USA Today puts it, pandering to the Rust Belt in order to gin up enough anger to fill campaign coffers.

…which, incidentally, is exactly the last thing people need to do with what little money they have in Rust Belt economies.

But Democrats care about them, remember?

James on April 9, 2008 at 8:30 AM

Democrats channeling Herbert Hoover:

Well it looks like Democrats are really getting
desperate.But,I didn’t think they would stoop to
political withcraft!Haha

canopfor on April 9, 2008 at 8:44 AM

Colombia already imports here tariff-free as an incentive to suppress its drug trade. American goods, especially agricultural goods, face up to 80% tariffs in the Colombian market, making them non-competitive.

Why can’t Bush talk about that? That’s very easy to understand, even for economically clueless Americans.

This is another example of where he is such an ineffective communicator.

Buy Danish on April 9, 2008 at 8:59 AM

I’m surprised that the media hasn’t picked up on the fact that ALAN GREENSPAN has endorsed John McCain. Everyone remember the left bringing Greenspan’s book with them everywhere they went as proof that the Bush tax cuts are bad? Not a peep about this revelation. If McCain was so bad on the economy, why then would Greenspan think he was better than the D’s.

McCain picks up Alan Greenspan’s endorsement, backs Colombian free trade treaty to offset Hugo Chavez

Crickets chirping from the mainstream media . . . unless of course it is to tell us that McCain said he needs to learn more about the economy. . . what’s that?! He said he needs to learn more?! You mean he didn’t say he didn’t know anything about the economy but that he wanted to learn more?! I think I would prefer a candidate at 72 who wants to learn more than a candidate in his 40’s who thinks he knows everything he needs to know about the economy.

ThackerAgency on April 9, 2008 at 9:00 AM

The irony is that back then, their roles were reversed, with Republican Herbert Hoover pushing high tariffs and Democrat Franklin Roosevelt opposing them.

The good news might be that it’s all just an act. Democrats may just be, as USA Today puts it, pandering to the Rust Belt in order to gin up enough anger to fill campaign coffers.

There is more irony. Roosevelt didn’t repeal Smoot-Hawley.

burt on April 9, 2008 at 9:23 AM

The WSJ also touched on this today (free link), specifically in regard to Caterpillar. The window of opportunity to trade freely with nations like Colombia is closing, as other countries (Canada) or groups (like the EU) are working on the same free-trade agreements.

GoHskrs on April 9, 2008 at 9:23 AM

“Why can’t Bush talk about that? That’s very easy to understand, even for economically clueless Americans.”

The White House staffers will not listen. You can talk to these people until you are blue in the face and they think their message is sufficient.

They will not acknowledge that the lies and distortions of the Democrats are killing the Administration. Completely oblivious.

If they haven’t gotten it by now, it’s just not going to happen. Too late in the game for them to change.

NoDonkey on April 9, 2008 at 10:12 AM

This is another example of where he is such an ineffective communicator.

Buy Danish on April 9, 2008 at 8:59 AM

Are we sure this is Bush and not the media not reporting the information? I wonder sometimes, given how easily we can find this information ourselves…

Just a thought.

Miss_Anthrope on April 9, 2008 at 10:13 AM

Don’t people know that Hoover wasn’t a do nothing President? He gave economic stimulus package that caused the Great Depression to get worse and become “Great”.

http://blog.mises.org/archives/007710.asp

Now, a President whose policy we should imitate is Silent Cal. Coolidge acted like a Republican/Conservative. He cut taxes and let the market sort the problems out. He is the reason for the roaring 20s. Here is a great article on him and his policies.

Tim Burton on April 9, 2008 at 10:23 AM

Here is the best book on the causes and policies of the Great Depression. Even better is mises.org has it online for free.

Tim Burton on April 9, 2008 at 10:25 AM

Are we sure this is Bush and not the media not reporting the information?
Miss_Anthrope

He could have more press conferences. That would help.

dedalus on April 9, 2008 at 10:34 AM

Not just Hoover. The Federal Reserve set up a “credit” bubble in the early 1920’s with a very loose monetary policy. The market soaked up all that liquidity. The bubble burst in October 1929 and the market recovered in about 18 months. Then the Smoot Hawley Act hit. Hoover was out, FDR in. And FDR made a small disaster into a major disaster.
Myths of the Great Depression is a great read about government interference and the evil it creates for citizens.

Amendment X on April 9, 2008 at 11:09 AM

Forget Herbert Hoover, the Dems almost seem to be channeling Pat Buchanan

Defector01 on April 9, 2008 at 11:43 AM

Now, a President whose policy we should imitate is Silent Cal. Coolidge acted like a Republican/Conservative. He cut taxes and let the market sort the problems out. He is the reason for the roaring 20s.

Didn’t he also insist that Britian repay its war debt on time and in gold? And didn’t that lead them to lean on Germany for timely payment of reparations, which forced the Weimar government into inflation, which got out of control and gave the Nazi’s the opening they needed to gather power and take control?

Punishing our allies and licking the boots of our enemies seems to be too common a theme in twentieth-century America.

“No better friend, no worse enemy” may lack nuance, but it has a refreshing honesty and adherence to principle.

njcommuter on April 9, 2008 at 1:10 PM

It’s not an act.

Pelosi is changing the rules to avoid voting on the trade deal within 90 days.

clghitis on April 9, 2008 at 2:42 PM

Who is this imbecile woman? How the H did she get to this position? THANK YOU, 2008 HAND-SITTERS.

leftnomore on April 9, 2008 at 5:05 PM

Pardon that– two thousand SIX.

leftnomore on April 9, 2008 at 5:06 PM

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