McCain campaign on economic downturn: It’s all in our heads

Given economic conditions, the housing crisis, the energy market, dispiriting employment numbers, and the value of the dollar, you’d think the McCain campaign would be going to extraordinary lengths to show that John McCain a) recognizes the seriousness of the problem; and b) has a plan to help turn things around.

But that’s not quite the path the McCain campaign has chosen. Instead, the Republican presidential campaign has decided that the economy is really great, but Americans just aren’t smart enough to realize it.

Take former Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas), described by some as McCain’s “brain” on economic matters, and the man whose financial deregulation efforts make the market meltdown possible, who thinks we’re the problem.

“You’ve heard of mental depression; this is a mental recession,” he said, noting that growth has held up at about 1 percent despite all the publicity over losing jobs to India, China, illegal immigration, housing and credit problems and record oil prices. “We may have a recession; we haven’t had one yet.”

“We have sort of become a nation of whiners,” he said. “You just hear this constant whining, complaining about a loss of competitiveness, America in decline” despite a major export boom that is the primary reason that growth continues in the economy, he said.

“We’ve never been more dominant; we’ve never had more natural advantages than we have today,” he said. “We have benefited greatly” from the globalization of the economy in the last 30 years.

Sometimes, the McCain campaign seems anxious to make the Dems’ campaign efforts easier. I wonder what the reaction will be when Dems go to, say, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, and tell them, “John McCain’s top economic advisor thinks people who are concerned about the economy are ‘whiners,’ and that the economic downturn is all in our heads.”

For that matter, let’s not forget that it’s not just Phil Gramm. McCain himself has made similar comments.

In January, McCain said the problems with the economy are in our heads.

“A lot of this is psychological. A lot of it’s psychological. Because I agree the fundamentals of our economy is still strong.”

And in April, McCain said most of the nation’s economic problems are “psychological.”

“I think psychologically, a lot of our problems today are psychological — confidence, trust, uncertainty about our economic future, ability to keep our own home,” McCain said. “[A gas-tax holiday] might give ’em a little psychological boost. Let’s have some straight talk: it’s not a huge amount of money…. A little psychological boost. That’s what I think [a gas-tax holiday] would help.”

And in June, McCain said he’s still focused on the “psychological impact” of various policies.

…McCain admitted that his offshore drilling proposal would probably have mostly “psychological” benefits, NBC/NJ’s Adam Aigner-Treworgy reports. At a town hall in Fresno that primarily focused on energy issues, McCain was asked a question about the price of gas and the viability of various short-term solutions. […]

“In the short term I’d like to give you a little relief for the summer on the gas tax,” McCain began, referring to his controversial proposal to temporarily suspend the federal tax on gasoline. But then he made a surprisingly candid admission: “I don’t see an immediate relief, but I do see that exploitation of existing reserves that may exist — and in view of many experts that do exist off our coasts — is also a way that we need to provide relief. Even though it may take some years, the fact that we are exploiting those reserves would have psychological impact that I think is beneficial.”

I suppose it’s possible for a candidate for national office to be more out of touch, but I don’t see how.

In 1992, when voters were deeply unsatisfied with the economy, Bill Clinton said, “I feel your pain.” Sixteen years later, after another Bush presidency has left the nation with a sense of malaise, John McCain’s campaign says, “Enough with the constant whining.”

It’s like putting the ball on a tee and handing Dems a bat: DNC spokesperson Karen Finney told ABC, “What John McCain, George Bush Phil Gramm just don’t understand is that the American people aren’t whining about the state of the economy, they are suffering under the weight of it — the weight of eight years of Bush-enomics that John McCain and Phil Gramm have vowed to continue. How dare John McCain and his advisers so callously dismiss the challenges the American people face. No wonder voters feel John McCain is out of touch, he and his campaign don’t even understand the everyday issues Americans are dealing with.”

Remember when Barack Obama’s “bitter” remarks were characterized as elitist and condescending? And how the story dominated the political landscape for weeks? McCain’s comments are arguably much worse.

If you’ll notice, the richest in this country maintain a positive attitude, and their finances are just fine.

  • Of course, if I had 7 houses, 12 pets, an heiress trophy wife, scores of reporters fauning over me and a private jet, I might look at the current economic landscape and conclude everything’s just peachy, too.

  • Whenever John McCain talks he sounds like a kid in school who gets called on and doesn’t know the answer, but tries to talk his way out of it.

    Did you see the Viet Nam veteran who asked him about his lousy voting record on veteran’s affairs? It wasn’t pretty.

  • Of course wealthy media pundits won’t pick up on this — they don’t worry about the economic plight of their chauffeurs.

    Karen Finney’s remark was perfect, and should be repeated by the Obama camp every time McCain mentions his economic policy (or lack thereof).

  • I’d have more confidence if a large portion of the population didn’t have a tendency to get to the polls and vote against their own economic interests. Maybe eight years of stagnant wages and lost jobs will change things this time around. Maybe declining income may finally be scarier then “the gay agenda” or any of the other phantoms they use to scare their base. Republican policies have brought our country to the brink of another depression. I think we ought to harp on the economy constantly, so people have lots of opportunity to hear McCain and cronies tell us to stop whining.

  • Ah, this looks to be yet another fantastic campaign scheme by the awesome McCain Campaign Machine! Behold the Power of the Straight Talk!

    “You people are just a bunch of spoiled whiners, vote for me!”

    “If you’ve lost your job, it’s all in your head! Vote for me!”

    This guy is nonstop campaign genius, more please!

  • “It’s like putting the ball on a tee and handing Dems a bat.” Make that “club,” please. After Bush, tee-ball’s a Republican sport, and it really always was, a gimme for little ones who can’t hit the ball in the air. Which brings us back to McCain and his advisors. And a club because we can use it… oh well, you get the idea.

    On the actual subject, doesn’t this remind you a little of Jimmy Carter’s “national malaise?” He didn’t get it either, that the economy was being rigged to force him out of office. The difference is that it wasn’t out of control then, just made to appear so. Now, except for oil prices, which are a case of “get all you can while you can,” it is.

  • That’s the problem with looking at aggregate figures like GNP. My combined net worth with Bill Gates is billions of dollars. That doesn’t make me a billionaire.

  • Anybody want to take any bets on how long it will be before Wolf Blitzer is doing stories talking about how good the economy is doing?

    We know how they will go.

    “The Economy is continuing to grow. Yet American’s insist we are in a recession. What’s wrong with them?”

    “McCain gives more upbeat news about the economy. The numbers show he is right, unemployment remains low, the economy is still growing.”

    “Despite the evidence, American’s continue to believe the economy is in bad shape.”

    All in that stupid little condescending voice of his.

    McCain speaks, the MSM will follow.

  • From my morning newspaper The Seattle Times (motto: promoting the interests of the wealthy elite who run this town since 1891)

    “Washington state foreclosure filings were up 69 percent last month compared with the previous June and up almost 10 percent from May, as the mortgage meltdown continues despite government and private efforts to help struggling homeowners.

    The year-over-year jump statewide was worse than the national increase of 50 percent.”

  • I note that the people of Peru seem to not see the benefits of free trade that Hon. Sen. McCain has been claiming.

  • I belong to a union. It is possible for employees who started 30 years ago (under a now changed and not so generous pension plan) to retire at 55. It is quite common to see someone retire with a pretty good pension of around $40k + a year only to return to work part-time a few months later to get company paid health insurance.

    Mc Cain is so out of it that as Elizabeth Edwards has said he and she with their health histories couldn’t even get insurance. On NPR this morning a couple new mothers in Paris were interviewed. They were both Americans married to French husbands. Both returned to America when they learned they were pregnant but found they couldn’t get health insurance with their pre-existing conditions and had to return to Paris to have the babies.

    I get so tired of hearing what a great country this is.

  • The only way McCain is ever going to make any sense is if we slap it into his skull. Therefore————————-

    We, the People of the United States, are now taking reservations for the John McCain Slap-O-Thon, scheduled for November 4, 2008.

    The rules are quite simple. You cannot shoot John McCain, or stab John McCain, or throw a hand grenade at John McCain. You can only slap him, either back-handed or open-palm.

    The duct-taping of “accessories” (various farm implements, brass knuckles, bricks, beer bottles, etc.) is permitted, but you must (1) document that you own the device-in-question; (2) sign a waiver releasing the organizers of this event from any legal liability in the event you injure yourself during your slap; (3) provide your accessory to the judges for a cursory pre-slap inspection (just to make sure that you’re not trying to “fake-slap” the slappee with donuts and coffee); and (4) you must be wearing your “I voted today” sticker as a prerequisite to admission.

    Each participant will be limited to one slap, with the exception of individuals who have been victimized by the Bush administration, for whom there is no limit other than rules (1)-(4) listed above.

  • C’mon guys; if we feed the horse enough oats some will get to the sparrows.
    Now quit your damned whining and marry someone who inherited a fortune.

  • Oh for a reality show-“The Simple LIfe” where both candidiates and their families had to make do on what regular folks have to.Rememver a show with Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie a few years back.OOOWEE! Now THAT’s what I’d call MUST SEE T.V.!

  • McCain is telling us how we can get psychologically prepared for more of the outstanding economic benefits of the last 7yrs…”just stop whining and trust us”.

    If only the press would cover his bull with as much enthusiasm as they covered Clark’s remarks. One of the most embarrassing candidates ever and the MSM brings him donuts with sprinkles.

  • Face it…a few thousand greedy people are destroying the economy for the rest of us. FDR called them “economic royalists” and they brought us the first great depression…the second one is just around the corner and McCain with his 8 mansions thinks he’s got it made so the economy is just fine. The result of trickle down, tax cuts for the wealthy economics. “I got mine so stop whining ’cause you’re just jealous”–the McCain bubble.

  • SaintZak –
    Did you see the Viet Nam veteran who asked him about his lousy voting record on veteran’s affairs? It wasn’t pretty.

    Link? Especially a YouTube link? I’d like to see that – and maybe have it to forward to my military-minded family members.

    Anyway – I’d like to know who this “we” that Gramm is talking about is. “We’ve never been more dominant; we’ve never had more natural advantages than we have today,” Who the hell is he talking about? Because looking around at the empty houses, layoffs, and under-employment in my little suburban central-Ohio neighborhood, I’m not sure he knows who get to cast votes in November. No matter how much money a multi-national corporation may have, the corporation itself isn’t allowed to have a vote and the execs only get one vote each – and only if they’re citizens.

  • The economy is doing so well that the Supreme Court is now permitting people to have firearms in cities to protect themselves and their belongings. Every Republican talking head out there must insist the economy is fine so that everyone listening who has financial problems thinks they are the exception and everyone else is doing fine. Otherwise there will be armed uprisings across the country.

  • Remember in Michael Moore’s film where Bush says “Some people call you the elite, I call you my base”? McCain is not talking to the general electorate, he is talking to his base. They are the people who are well off and believe they are successful because of their own achievements and intelligence, not because of luck, birth, or impersonal acts of the economy. His base wants permission to enjoy their comfort and McCain is giving it to them by reassuring them that they don’t have to feel bad about all the people caught in an economic downturn.

    These statements of his seem foolish from the perspective of a Democrat, but he isn’t speaking to Democrats. If you are going to beat a Republican candidate, you have to engage in some perspective-taking. Instead of assuming that McCain and his entire team of handlers are all stupid, old, or out of touch, trying asking yourselves why an intelligent person with plenty of campaign experience would say such a thing. Yes, it is more fun to call McCain a bunch of names, but underestimating him as a candidate is part of how Democrats manage to throw away elections.

    Given the failures of the Bush administration and the realities of our economy, the public desire to end the war, etc., you’ve got to be asking why Obama doesn’t have a much bigger lead. How on earth is McCain managing to keep this race close? Partly, it is by recognizing that not everyone is doing poorly and that those who are will respond positively to someone giving them permission to enjoy their lives without feeling guilty.

    If Obama is misunderstanding McCain as badly as CB is, he may yet snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. He needs to effectively counter this kind of stuff, but to do that he has to understand it first.

  • correction — “not everyone is doing poorly” should say “those who are not,” instead of “those who are,” referring to people who are holding their own even in this economy, the people who are comfortable, who are still a statistical majority of the voters.

  • RE 20-21

    A couple of clarifications –

    First off, I would say that the race isn’t very close in a lot of states, nor nationally (despite what many corporate media outlets claim). I would say a majority of polls have Obama clearly ahead of McCain, as well as the Dems ahead of the GOP along Congressional races.

    That being said, I would agree with the notion that the Dems – in general – should actually far more ahead.

    Despite how the corporate media filters his statements on, and regardless of whether McCain thinks he is just speaking to his ‘base’ – the key for the Dems are the take his message directly to all voters and show him for what he really is. I agree calling McCain names, and insulting the GOP is largely a waste of time.

    But I think it’s a large mistake on the part of Dems to simply start speaking the same language. This I think more than anything, is what trips them up. They need to stop pandering and speaking like DLC-Dems (i.e. GOP-like) and start speaking as true Dems.

    I think it’s a given that a large % of affluent people in this country aren’t going to vote for Obama because they believe it’s not in their interests. Any pandering on the part of Dems isn’t going to make much difference there.

    Because in reality, there are a large group of people out there who aren’t doing well, but may be on the fence politically for a number of reasons (religious beliefs, indifference to politics, or just simply tuned out due to frustration). It’s these folks the Dems need to reach because these are the people that need the most help.

    These are the people who need to see McCain’s base messages for what the really are – something that won’t help them at all.

    What’s far more effective is for Dems to take this message directly to voters and point out these statements. Indeed, a good model to look at is Bush I in 1992 and the cash register incident. Much of that was taken out of context, but Clinton and co. were able to parlay that image to voters that Bush I was so far out of touch with the voters. Taking that message directly to voters – and bypassing the corporate media – I think was a big part in Bush I losing.

    The Internet can be very useful here. Another good example is the Virginia Senate race from 2006. George Allen’s macaca moment was captured for what it really was – someone using racist language against a resident of the state – no amount of media-spinning helped him.

    Obama and the Dems need to realize that they cannot and should not trust the corporate media or any of its surrogates to take the message to voters. They need to do it themselves. And they need to do it long before any debates are scheduled.

  • I don’t have the link anymore, but there was a story a month or two ago about the super yacht market, and that it was going like gangbusters, no sign of a slowdown there. And there were many jobs available for super yacht crews, you know, swabbing the decks and whatnot. True, I kid you not.

    So enough with the whining, folks. Get those jobs. Those super yachts can’t get out of the docks lately because you lazy scum are sitting around complaining.

  • Former Senator Phil Gramm, Senator John McCain and President Bush have conspired to create the completely unregulated electronic oil futures trading market, which has driven up the price of oil to absurd levels… These three economic traitors should be in jail for fraud and associated crimes against the American people.

    We’re being ENRONed again: this time by oil futures contracts speculators who are unnecessarily and very profitably driving up the price of crude oil and hence retail gasoline prices. Curious as to why you are suddenly paying over four dollars a gallon for gasoline? No, it’s not due to “supply-and-demand,” no, it’s not due to “OPEC,” nor is it due to “peak oil.” It’s due to totally unregulated electronic oil futures trading in world markets. Check out the very lucid article that explains the unseen financial machinations in oil futures markets written by F. W. Engdahl on May 2, 2008, entitled, “Perhaps 60% of Today’s Oil Price is Pure Speculation.” It may be viewed at .
    http://www.financialsense.com/ editorials/ engdahl/ 2008/ 0502.html

    In a nutshell, he suggests that the Bush Administration dropped the ball in January 2006, when they allowed totally unregulated electronic trading of oil futures contracts in New York. Previously these electronic trades had been made at the London Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) Futures Market. With that decision by the Bush Administration, all of the world’s oil prices were then opened to upward pressure from speculative futures contracts. In essence, oil futures contracts made by speculators, banks, hedge funds and pension funds all competed with real demand on the spot markets and had the effect of driving up both wholesale oil prices and retail gasoline prices. Speculators have made billions of dollars on their trading of oil futures contracts. All of their profits come right out of our pockets.

    Even with a stable oil supply, there is a slow worldwide increase in demand for oil, which creates a long-term upward pressure on oil prices. However, with the relentless saber-rattling and war-mongering by Bush and Cheney in the last several years, and the more recent war talks by McCain and the Israelis, the oil futures markets are rife with speculation and paranoia. This war talk keeps ratcheting up the prices on the oil futures contracts and hence the wholesale spot market prices. It is an endless spiral of greed and paranoia.

    As long as there is no tough and effective oversight of the electronic oil futures markets by the Bush Administration, the oil prices will climb endlessly. These oil prices will be quickly followed by hikes in the retail gasoline prices at the pump. The 60% speculation share of the $4.25/gallon gasoline price, is about $2.55/gallon, which is what we consumers are paying to these oil speculators as a “service fee.” Not a bad “fee,” since the speculators produce no usable goods or services…Just a few large greedy oil futures traders helping themselves to your gas money.
    Without this added-on oil futures “service fee,” you would be paying about $1.75/gallon for gasoline. Write, call or smoke-signal your Representatives and Senators today and suggest that they read the June 2006 report by The U. S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations entitled, “The Role of Market Speculation in Rising Oil and Gas Prices.” Then demand that they investigate and then force the Bush Administration to firmly regulate the computerized oil futures contracts trading in New York, London and Dubai.

    This electronic oil price futures scandal is costing US drivers about $969,000,000.00 per day! That number is based on 60% speculation fee of a gasoline price of $4.25/gallon and on US 2004 consumption of 380,000,000 gallons/day. Tell you Senators and Congresspersons to simply shut down this unregulated electronic oil futures contract trading market. Then the price of gasoline will slowly drop to about $1.75/gallon…The only way that oil price futures contracts make money is if the price of oil goes up in the future, say, 30, 60 or 90 days later. This futures market serves no social need. It is just for corporate greed. The corporate speculators are probably also gaming/ENRONing the wheat and corn futures markets the same way.

  • Mathew, yes, but I think it is more effective to address the needs and concerns of such voters directly, than to be reactive and attack McCain’s statements to a different audience.

    I see too much reactivity, both here and in the campaign. When Obama criticizes McCain, he is going after McCain’s voters. When Obama addresses his own audience with strong programs and sets the agenda, makes the news himself, he will be perceived as a stronger candidate.

    However, perhaps he believes that doing that would make him scarier to voters who fear his message of change will go too far. His caution is confusing his base and making him appear impotent to others, as indicated by the decrease in some of his internal poll numbers on questions about leadership.

  • I just returned from the grocery store, a young couple were doing their shopping close by, they had about 8 or 9 items in their basket, they stood and counted the cost of each thing, then they took some out, this went on the whole time I was there. Senator McCain should tell them not to worry, this is all in their head!

  • Re 25:

    This whole tit-for-tat about who said what is a waste of time, and really plays into the hands of the GOP (while at the same time tuning out those who see it as just politics as usual). I agree that it’s disturbing to see the race degenerate to that. However if that’s something that can be directed to Obama allies/surrogates to respond to, then it can work out in his favor. Indeed some of that is happening, I would like to see more of this though.

    The key for Obama is to effectively communcate to those “voteres who fear his message of change will go too far.”: emphasize the points without dilluting the message. The more consistent his message is, the better off I think he’ll be. Because I think most of those voters will discover that message of change works for everyone, not just some.

    Also – I tend to think that “fear” you described comes largely from many of those voters’ perceptions of him being created by the GOP. By addressing them directly (bypassing the media as well) Obama can effective drive the communcation, rather than his opponents.

  • C’mon guys; if we feed the horse enough oats some will get to the sparrows. — Dennis, @14

    That’s so, but…

    While waiting for the the lights to change, and old carthorse began to relieve himself. On seeing this, a young sparrow dove in and started pecking at the undigested bits. But the horse hadn’t finished and the next pile of “apples” landed directly on the sparrow, burying him. The incensed sparrow chirped loudly in protest. A passing cat, alerted to his presence, stepped into the street and dug him out of the pile. But, before the sparrow even had the chance to say “thank you, brother cat”, the cat ate him up. Three morals can be derived from the story:
    1) Not everyone who shits on you is your enemy.
    2) Not everyone who pulls you out of shit is your friend.
    3) When you’re deep in shit, do not complain; things could be far worse.

    It is quite obvious that Senator McCain, a connoisseur of a good joke, is familiar with this one, especially its “moral #3”. He’s just too polite to use crude language, so, instead of saying “shit”, he says “mental recession”.

    Alternatively, of course, Mary might be right and McCain is talking only to his “base”– the rich people — in full knowledge that that’s where the majority of votes is to be garnered from.

  • Laughable how he lies and tries to claim “that’s not what I meant!”.

    Now he thinks we’re stupid, because that’s clearly what he meant. He was calling the NATION a nation of whiners. He didn’t say “Washington is full of whiners”. He said “a NATION of whiners”.

    Look at the whole story to keep it in context. Look what he was comparing it to. A recession — which is something that the whole country is in. A “mental recession”? That’s talking about the whole nation. Since when are just the “leaders” in a recession, financial, mental, or otherwise.

    The guy said something stupid, based on his stupid ideology, (dare I say, “unpatriotic?), and now he lies to cover his tracks.

    The apple never falls far from the GOP tree.

  • The fact is that the only plan that will work for the economy is for the government to get out of the way. Government planning and spending cannot save an economy. Compare the Soviet Union (planned, government spending and rules #1 priority) and its decline with China (eased regulations in “Special Economic Zones” have almost made Red China more capitalist than the US!) and the economic resurgence there! Any reasonable person can only come to the obvious conclusion that government can only interfere and never solve an economy.

  • We have it so easy in America… I agree with the whining statement…. Too many people have over spent for too long based on their incomes and now our economy is starting to feel the falsified state that we have lived in.

    I think this is downturn is a reorganization of the people who have lived the elevated lifestyle that can’t support it.

  • At the current rate Obama is poised to lose…Before the GOP propaganda machine makes this a war between the races Obama needs to rally the middleclass riled up by decreasing income(4% raise vs 24% inflation is a definate decrease in income).
    Obama has truth as the main ally. Expose the bush administrations war on middleclass.
    1. Relentless exporting of good paying jobs
    2. Signing laws preveing the paying of overtime to employees
    3. Tax benefits for companies exporting jobs.
    4. protecting corporations at taxpayer expense.
    It is a golden oppurtunity for democrats but if democrats apply stupidity like John Kerry. I serioulsy doubt anyone can help them. Forst they need to expose the Bushco crime administration and then exose McCain for his complicity in the GOP’s was on middleclass America.

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