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iconoclastNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 06:05 AM
Original message
DLC 2.0 : Meet the Hamiltonian Democrats
Edited on Fri Jun-09-06 06:07 AM by iconoclastNYC
Hamiltonian Democrats: "whistling by the globalization graveyard"

Harold Meyerson, Washington Post:

It's come to this: The chief project to restate Democratic economics for our time was unveiled a couple of weeks ago, and it's named after the father of American conservatism, Alexander Hamilton.

Necessarily, the authors of the Hamilton Project preface their declaration with an attempt, not altogether successful, to reclaim Hamilton from the right. The nation's first secretary of the Treasury, they note, "stood for sound fiscal policy, believed that broad-based opportunity for advancement would drive American economic growth, and recognized that 'prudent aids and encouragements on the part of government' are necessary to enhance and guide market forces."

"Much of what Rubin and his co-authors have to say in their statement is on the money. Since the mid-'70s, they note, "prosperity has neither trickled down nor rippled outward." They acknowledge that recapturing broadly shared prosperity in an age of globalization is a daunting conundrum. Still, they have some recommendations: Balance the budget (a principle they elevate to a fetish). Have the government invest more in "education, health care, energy independence, scientific research, and infrastructure," since market forces "will not generate adequate investments" in such social essentials. Provide compensatory wage insurance for the many workers forced to take lower-paying jobs as middle-income jobs grow scarcer.

Unfortunately, some of Hamilton's disdain for democracy seeps into their statement as well. The problem of "entitlement imbalances is so large," they fret, "that the regular political process seems unlikely to produce a solution," so they recommend a bipartisan "special process" insulated from popular pressures. They also place such traditional Republican boogeymen as teachers unions on the list of problems that need to be solved. On the other hand, their list of national problems includes nothing about a corporate and financial culture that richly and reflexively rewards executives who offshore work to cheaper climes and deny their American employees the right to join unions.

Indeed, much of their statement amounts to whistling by the globalization graveyard. The authors place great stress on improving American education -- a commendable and unexceptionable goal, but one that may do little to retard the export of our jobs since, as they acknowledge, it's increasingly the knowledge jobs that are going to India and even China. But then, Rubin was the guy who promoted both NAFTA and unfettered trade with China. In a sense, the Hamilton Project can be seen as Rubin's sincere but inadequate attempt to grapple with the consequences of the policies he championed. Like the side agreements to NAFTA, which were advertised as protecting worker rights and environmental standards but which in fact did neither, the Hamilton Project comes up short on genuine solutions. There's nothing in the statement about raising the minimum wage or mandating a living wage; the word "unions" is nowhere to be found, though unionizing our non-offshorable service sector jobs is the surest way to restore the broader prosperity for which Rubin and his co-authors pine.

What the Democrats need is a project that takes as hard a look at corporate boardrooms as the Hamiltonians do at teachers unions. For, so long as our problem is at least partly American capitalism's indifference to American workers, the Democrats won't find a solution in the example of Alexander Hamilton or the muffled cadences of Robert Rubin."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/18/AR2006041801176.html
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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 06:16 AM
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1. k & r
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JNelson6563 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 06:34 AM
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2. Great article, raises a question in my mind
How can the people who said:

"Much of what Rubin and his co-authors have to say in their statement is on the money. Since the mid-'70s, they note, "prosperity has neither trickled down nor rippled outward." They acknowledge that recapturing broadly shared prosperity in an age of globalization is a daunting conundrum. Still, they have some recommendations: Balance the budget (a principle they elevate to a fetish). Have the government invest more in "education, health care, energy independence, scientific research, and infrastructure," since market forces "will not generate adequate investments" in such social essentials. Provide compensatory wage insurance for the many workers forced to take lower-paying jobs as middle-income jobs grow scarcer.

possibly not see the issues re: the corporate world?

Truly a fine example of selective vision.

Julie
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acmejack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 07:01 AM
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3. The "Democratic" Free Traders (LOL) are still short on real solutions
"Like the side agreements to NAFTA, which were advertised as protecting worker rights and environmental standards but which in fact did neither, the Hamilton Project comes up short on genuine solutions. There's nothing in the statement about raising the minimum wage or mandating a living wage; the word "unions" is nowhere to be found, though unionizing our non-offshorable service sector jobs is the surest way to restore the broader prosperity for which Rubin and his co-authors pine."
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 11:01 AM
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4. Rubin harrassed Dean about NAFTA, said he could not get donations...
if he did not hush about fixing NAFTA. This was in 2003. This is interesting from 2003, when Dean was already changing his views about NAFTA in its present form. Rubin was on his back to toe the line.

http://www.slate.com/id/2086258/

"But one thing bothers me about Dean, and I raise it with him. He wants to renegotiate NAFTA to include labor and environmental standards—his lone departure from Clinton-style Rubinomics. Dean even says: "I actually had this argument with Bob Rubin, who totally disagrees with me, of course. But I think it's because Bob is fighting the last war. He said they use those arguments to try to undo NAFTA. I said, I know they use them to undo NAFTA, but now you've got NAFTA, and you're going to have NAFTA, now think about what this problem is. He said, you're right about the problem. Your analysis is right. I just don't have the solution. I'll get back to you when I do. I haven't heard back yet." (Dean's theory in a nutshell: The structure of wealth in the United States before labor unions resembled that in Third World countries today, so in order to create middle classes in the developing world, we need to bring labor unions to them.)

Won't Dean's plan make the price of goods go up? "Yeah," he says quietly. "But so what?" My 25 minutes are up. We've arrived in Osceola, the site of Dean's next talk, and I'm being ushered out of McFun by Dean's staff. But I think Dean realizes he's ended the interview on the wrong note because he quickly adds: "Because in return for making the price of goods go up, you've fixed the illegal immigration problem, you've fixed the drain of jobs problem, you've created a middle class that can buy American exports. There's a lot you get for that." Now it really is time for me to go. "I've got to make a phone call," Dean says as I step outside."


More on the subject of how the Hamiltonians were upset with Dean.
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20031215/greider

"The governor has shown flashes of the same bluntness in his prime-time campaigning. Last summer, he told a revealing story on himself--a conversation with Robert Rubin, the former Treasury Secretary and Wall Street's main money guy for Democrats. Rubin had warned that unless Dean stopped attacking NAFTA and the multinationals for the migration of US jobs, he couldn't raise contributions for him from the financial sector. As Dean told it, "I said, 'Bob, tell me what your solution is.' He said, 'I'll have to get back to you.' I haven't heard from him." What I like so much about the story is that powerful, influential Bob Rubin pokes Dean in the chest, and he pokes him back. Then Dean discloses the exchange to the Washington Post."





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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 11:02 AM
Response to Original message
5. BTW, recommended this. Vital issue.
:hi:
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sadiesworld Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jun-09-06 12:02 PM
Response to Original message
6. The destruction of organized labor...
and the elimination and/or privatization of social services are part and parcel of corporate globalization. Pretending otherwise is a bit like trying to construct Reaganomics without using supply-side economics.

Hell, these elitist pricks didn't even TRY to come up with a good line of BS.
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Douglas Carpenter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-10-06 03:57 AM
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7. excellent article - a must read -- recommended
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Zorra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-10-06 04:59 AM
Response to Original message
8. Hamiltonian Democrat. *snarf*...must be related to the jackalope..
The Federalist Society, AEI, and Heritage Foundation are always looking for new and improved ways to turn the Democratic Party into the republican junior varsity cheerleading squad.
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