Barack Obama's Entrepreneurial Campaign Contradicts His Bureaucratic Policies

November 10, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Good pieces by Bret Swanson in the Wall Street Journal and Jonathan Klinger on thenextright.com on the contradictions between the entrepreneurial mode of Barack Obama's campaign and the bureaucratic mode of his public policies. I remember making a similar point about 20 years ago, that the Democrats tend to produce better political entrepreneurs while Republican politicians tend to be stodgily bureaucratic. In the 1990s, the Republicans started pulling even with the Democrats in generating bright entrepreneurial candidates. Now the Republicans are far behind in that regard, as they were in the 1970s and 1980s.

The Democrats' near-monopoly on talented candidates is one reason that affluent professionals and entrepreneurs in our biggest metro areas—New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Chicago—are so attracted to them. Another is that these people don't appreciate the downside risks of their policies. The private sector in these cities is so bountiful that it can support the hundreds of thousands of unionized public-sector jobs created by those policies. Manhattan, L.A., Silicon Valley, and Chicago's Loop, like the City of London, can bear such a burden. But it's a lot more disabling in the British Midlands or the American Midwest outside Chicagoland, because their private sectors are not so bountiful—and are being squeezed out of existence by high taxes and high government spending. You can see that happening in upstate New York, which once had a vibrant private sector but is now dependent on Chuck Schumer showering down Fannie Mae money on Watertown. Hospitals and universities have replaced firms like General Electric, IBM, and Kodak as major employers. This is economically harmful but politically self-sustaining. More public sector (and hospital) jobs means more public employee (and hospital) union members, and much of their union dues, paid by private-sector taxpayers, goes into electing Democrats. This is the contemporary version of Harry Hopkins's "tax and tax, spend and spend, elect and elect" politics. It doesn't trouble affluent metropolitan professionals, but it should.

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campaigns,
Barack Obama,
democratic party

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My parents were born and raised in Wilkes-Barre, and I grew up near Scranton. Jack's comment is spot on. Congressmen lard up the area (Dan Flood and Joe McDade come to mind) and the area becomes a Federal dependency.

My standard reply to people who query my humble beginnings is that I am from NE PA and it's a good place to be from.

Don H of WA 8:05AM November 13, 2008

"...that the Democrats tend to produce better political entrepreneurs while Republican politicians tend to be stodgily bureaucratic..."

In my opinion, that observation is ubsiqeqown and packwarqs. The Republicans are well noted for the entrepreneurial, no government involvement, self made man of politics status quo for many years. It was the Reagan years that provided the prosperity of anti-stodgy, but dignified, freedom from the bureaucratic meddling weight the Democrats are known for.

Now, when it comes to party time without personal responsibility, the Dems are past masters and I think that is where the idea of stodgy Republicans originates.

For The Assuming Traitor of XX: 'treacherous assumption' is sort of like 'diabolical coincidence' 'cept different.

mart of KS 2:32AM November 13, 2008

Did you really say, in a public forum, that journalists beat up on Palin because they "wanted" her to abort her child? Did you say that? If so, can you please name names? Or is that just a trashy piece of demagoguery?

Keith Kennedy of VT 2:10PM November 12, 2008

Michael Barone

Michael Barone

U.S. News Weekly

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Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S.News & World Report and principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics. He has written for many publications—including the Economist and the New York Times.

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