News Day 2/10/08: Professor President and the press / God wants Norm? / MN “People’s Bailout” / more …

Maybe smart is the new black? The first presidential press conference got good reviews, despite, or perhaps because of, President Obama’s detailed, professorial answers to questions. Maybe the country, and the news media, are ready for beyond-the-sound-bite answers. You can watch the whole hour, courtesy of the Washington Post. Among the highlights:

This is not your ordinary, run-of-the-mill recession.

The single most important part of this economic recovery and reinvestment plan is the fact that it will save or create up to four million jobs, because that’s what American needs most right now. … At this particular moment, with the private sector so weakened by the recession, the federal government is the only entity left with the resources to jolt our economy back into life.

Tax cuts alone can’t solve all of our economic problems, especially tax cuts that are targeted to the wealthiest few Americans.

We stand to lose about one trillion dollars of demand this year, and another trillion next year. That’s why you have this gaping hole in the economy.

The president said he still has hopes for bi-partisanship, but his “bottom line” is “send me a bill that creates or saves four million jobs.” He said he is willing to discuss “this tax cut versus that tax cut or this infrastructure project versus that infrastructure project,” but not willing to listen to claims about pork in the stimulus package.

It’s a little hard for me to take criticism from folks, about this recovery package, after they presided over a doubling of the national debt. I’m not sure they have a lot of credibility when it comes to fiscal responsibility.

Tell it to the city In meetings on budget cuts and priorities, Minneapolis resident and city employee suggestions ranged from cutting public works and housing inspection to unpaid days off and less-frequent trash collection, reports Steve Brandt in the Strib. Another citizen meeting is set for 7 p.m. Tuesday night at East Side Neighborhood Services, 1700 NE. 2nd St. and another employee meeting for Wednesday in Room 319 of City Hall at 12:30 p.m.

God wants Norm “God wants me to serve,” Norm Coleman told conservative radio host Mike Gallagher, reports MnIndy. But he’s still waiting for the final word on whether MN voters want him to serve.

MN People’s Bailout DFLers introduced the Minnesota People’s Bailout at a press conference yesterday, proposing expanded eligibility for unemployment benefits, a new public works/jobs program, a moratorium on the five-year lifetime limit for public assistance, a moratorium on housing foreclosures and additional protections for renters and public sector workers. More to come …

Let’s make voting harder Even as the RNC’s MN voter fraud web page acknowledged that “there are no recent documented reports of vote fraud in this state,” GOP lawmakers introduced legislation to make voting more difficult, justifying it as an anti-vote-fraud measure. Minnesota Independent reports on the Emmer-Kiffmeyer proposal to require voters to produce photo IDs. David Schultz’s op/ed in MinnPost further debunks voter fraud hysteria.

Milk prices: falling off a cliff The brief good times are over for dairy farmers, reports Matt McKiinney in the Strib. Milk futures fell to $9.30 per hundredweight on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange yesterday, from a high of more than $20 last summer. And in the grocery store? “Government reports show that the price of a gallon of whole milk fell about 7 percent from July’s high of $3.96 a gallon to $3.68 in December.” the price of production for MN dairy farmers is “between $12.77 and $15.74 per hundredweight, according to FINBIN, a University of Minnesota agriculture economics database.”

Home prices low and getting lower Nationally, housing prices will bottom out in the fourth quarter, according to Moody’s Economy.com, reports Christopher Snowbeck in the PiPress, but MN housing prices probably won’t hit bottom until the first quarter of 2010. Moody’s predicts that Twin Cities housing prices will drop 24 percent from the 2006 peak.

Step forward, stumble back on stimulus plan That’s the analysis from the Center for American American Progress, which warns that the Senate compromise on the economic stimulus package, due to be passed today, would create between 430,000 and 538,000 fewer jobs than the House bill. Overall, “the Senate compromise would provide a great boost to the economy—but legislation closer to the House-passed version (or the version originally introduced in the Senate) would do more.”


Discover more from News Day

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Leave a comment