Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, and Stimulus for a Return to the Era of Big Government
By Robert Schlesinger, Thomas Jefferson Street blog
The "era of big government" is back on, apparently, thanks to Barack Obama and his soon-to-be-passed stimulus package.
You recall, of course, Bill Clinton declaring an end to the era of big government in the 1996 State of the Union address. There are two interesting back-stories to that you may not know (unless you've read my book White House Ghosts).
First, that was not the first time Clinton had talked about the end of the era of big government. Clinton had bandied about the phrase in three little-noticed speeches in October and November 1995. "The era of big government is over, but the era of good government and strong government cannot be over."
Incredibly, the Clinton aides drafting the State of the Union address—Communications Director Don Baer, Chief Speechwriter Michael Waldman, political guru Dick Morris—all say that they had no idea Clinton had used the phrase.
They all recall it having first appeared as a Morris edit of a longer passage that Waldman had written.
"The era of big government is over," Morris had put into a draft of the speech. "But the era of every man for himself must never begin."
Coming from a Democratic president at a time when the debate about the size and scope of the federal government had been brought into sharp relief by recent government shutdowns, it would be a startling pronouncement. The aides thought that the line would stir a debate within the administration, but thought that it worked because while the first clause was an attention-grabber, the second balanced it rhetorically and substantively.
It stirred a different kind of debate. The "era of every man for himself," Clinton campaign spokeswoman Ann Lewis complained, was sexist.
Seriously.
It was, Waldman commented to George Stephanopoulos at the time, the "death of liberalism at its own hands."
Clinton was a strict grammarian and would not accept "the era of every person for himself."
"The era of big government is over," Clinton told a surprised (and for Republicans, delighted) Congress on Jan. 23, 1996. "But we cannot go back to the time when our citizens were left to fend for themselves."
The wordier, more rhetorically cumbersome second sentence got lost in the reaction and was forgotten.
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Tags: economy | Barack Obama | Bill Clinton | economic stimulus | government intervention
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Reader Comments
the era of big government
So the era of big government has returned with President Obama, are you sure about that? Our government got pretty big with Bush and his republican congress. In fact he spent more than all the previous presidents combined. He left the country in an economic collaspe and two wars, as a result of Bush's performance Obama is in a position where it is spend money or bust. None of the republican defecit hawks were concerned with the defecit when they were in power. In fact Cheney ( a republican hero) said that defecits dont matter. Where was Boehner,Cantor, and Gregg then? This constant chatter about the large defecit is an attempt to scare and confuse people in the hopes of not getting anything done. The past 8 years under Bush and the first 5 months under Obama has proven beyond doubt that the republicans put their party ahead of this country. The good thing is that people are beginning to see this and that is one of the reasons they keep losing more and more seats.
stimulus bill
The government need to do something and the stimulus bill alone is not going to cut. Another way of bring back money is to stop spending on war, which is costing us tax payers billions of dollars a year. President Obama is not going to change toe economy in his first 100 days of predency. He is trying his best to get us out of this reccession.
era of big government
Is the era of big government ever truly going to be over? It is the responsibility of the government to respond to the needs of the American people. The government hangs back when times are peaceful and good, but when anger is aroused in the people it pops right back up. It mostly depends on how active the government is in it's response to the problem(s).
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