By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 11.26.08 @ 11:59PM
In his economic appointees, President-elect Obama has perhaps
faced up to a government-created mess.
WASHINGTON -- There is a condign symmetry about this financial
crisis. A government-induced crisis is getting a
government-insured resolution. The excesses of Freddie Mac and
Fannie Mae are being mopped up by huge federal spending made all
the more massive by all the reckless endeavors of the
politicians, the regulators, and the financiers who frivoled with
the intemperance of Freddie and Fannie. Now President-elect
Barack Obama has perhaps faced up to the mess. He has not shied
away from bringing former Secretary of the Treasury Larry Summers
onto his economic team as head of his National Economic Council.
Mr. Summers was a proper critic of Freddie and Fannie, having
noted this past summer that "The illusions that the companies
were doing virtuous work made it impossible to build a political
case for serious regulation." This virtuous work was extending
mortgages to those who could not afford those mortgages. The
toxic mortgages were then bundled in with healthy mortgages and
sold around the world by Wall Street geniuses like some enormous
chain letter whose day of reckoning came some months ago.
The endeavor was a fantasy that had to end badly and so it has.
Yet at a certain level the constituent elements of the Democratic
Party are given to fantasy and excess. Consider the most vocal
critics of Mr. Summers. They are not bankers or economists. They
are feminists, often feminist scientists, who forced him out of
the presidency of Harvard for his recognition that women of
genius are not as plentiful as men of genius in the sciences and
math. Now what he cited was a fact. Mr. Summers drew no invidious
conclusions and offered no program that would limit the number of
lady scientists. He just noted the data in a forum supposedly
open to free discourse. Kaboom -- the women of the fevered brow
drove him from office. Remind me not to read a book aloud in
Harvard Yard.
Now, in this time of economic crisis, the women of the fevered
brow attempted to keep Mr. Summers out of the Obama government
despite his demonstrated economic acumen -- and remember these
feminists claim to be a force for justice and fairness. How long
do they want to ban a man like Mr. Summers from public life?
It was rumored that Mr. Obama wanted Mr. Summers back as head of
Treasury. Perhaps the angry feminists kept Mr. Summers out of his
old office. The man the President-elect has announced as his
secretary of treasury, Timothy Geithner, is probably a suitable
replacement. The economic team Mr. Obama is assembling strikes me
as pretty good, but the way it was assembled is a bit worrisome.
Are all the fanatics in the Democratic Party going to be able to
get a hearing with this president? He is going to have to
maintain both feet on the ground in the months ahead. The
delusional malcontents that a Democratic presidential candidate
courts in an election can cause a Democratic administration grave
problems.
Now that brings to mind the visuals that the President-elect is
using when he addresses the American people. He appears enhaloed
by American flags, not one or two but a whole ring of flags.
Moreover, he speaks from a lectern proclaiming "Office of the
President-Elect." In point of fact, there is no Office of the
President-Elect, and Mr. Obama is not even in an office. He is on
a stage. Arguably, a stage has been his office during much of his
public life, given the fact that he is America's first
motivational speaker to become president. Actually, I doubt that
this is the point Mr. Obama is trying to make. He is engaging in
theater. Yet this dramatic setting is implausible. According to
statute, he will not actually be president-elect until the
Electoral College meets on the Monday after the second Wednesday
of December to elect him according to the votes cast on November
4.
My advice to our incoming president is to avoid the implausible
stage effects. There is plenty of drama out there, for instance a
real war and a real economic crisis. Now he has appointed former
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker to be chairman of a new
presidential advisory board to oversee our emergence from this
economic mess. Mr. Volcker is one of the great figures of his
generation, known for slaying inflation in the early 1980s and a
dozen other contributions to the commonweal. It is a sign that
our first motivational speaker might actually know what he is
talking about -- when he is talking seriously.