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DMI on the 2008 State of the Union
Please click on the links below for DMI's rapid response to the President's proposals in each policy area: Budget INTRODUCTION
The American people want change. Every Presidential candidate, Democrat and Republican, has made this a mantra. But DMI's look at the domestic policy content of the State of the Union Address reveals no alteration from President George W. Bush. This year the President labored to keep breathing life into the same worn out ideology that has repeatedly failed
The President continues to proclaim the foundation of our economy sound when so many current and aspiring middle-class Americans are losing their spot in the American Dream. He prioritizes ideology over proven methods of stimulating the economy and providing health care. He uses the language of consumer choice to dress up what really amounts to unbridled corporate power and profiteering. He continues to assert that the market will right itself, if only people understand it more and restrict it less, despite all of the evidence to the contrary.
Despite the praise-worthy components of President Bush’s address tonight – his signing of the Energy Independence and Security Act, his cooperation with Congress to pass a stimulus reform that would include millions of low-income Americans he initially intended to exclude, his newfound interest in supporting military families – his approach reflected a commitment to ideology, as opposed to willingness to see how that ideology has actually impacted current and aspiring middle-class Americans.
After years of insisting that the economy was doing great as middle-class families were squeezed by stagnant wages and a rising cost of living, it takes weak corporate profits to make the President recognize that times are tough.
The President tells us that he trusts the American people. The more important question is whether the American people have any reason to trust the White House. The President’s support of choice in this State of the Union address reveals that he is choosing not to heed the call of the American people for common-sense solutions to the challenges they face.
Yet, what is most important in this address, is not the President delivering it, but the ideas represented. This State of the Union can serve eitheras a blueprint for continuing to move backwards, or a line of demarcation away from a policy outlook that has caused irreparable harm to
Please click on the links below for DMI's rapid response to the President's proposals in each policy area:
Budget
Read DMI on the 2008 State of the Union in its entirety |
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