The president signs a $26 billion jobs bill to protect 300,000
nonfederal government workers Wednesday as three out-of-work
teachers look on. AP
Corruption: In an election year in which Democratic
majorities in both houses of Congress are threatened, no price is too
high for extra votes — even if it means taking from the poor.
What do you do when a trillion-plus dollars in "job-creating"
stimulus fails to create jobs? Pass more stimulus — telling the people
not to worry, that this time it's only $26 billion.
But what President Obama signed into law this week was not just good
taxpayer money thrown after bad.
This was not, as the president claimed, about "saving the jobs of
teachers and other essential professionals." It was about using taxpayer
money to pay off teacher union bosses, reward them for past political
favors and get the vote out for Democrats this year.
Some 160,000 public teachers are to find their jobs "saved" this
fall. As House Budget Committee ranking Republican Paul Ryan of
Wisconsin has described it, "we went from bailing out big companies to
now bailing out big governments."
Ryan points out that the goal of this added stimulus is "not
incentives for small business and private-sector job creation. The goal
here is very clear: public-sector job creation," he told Fox News' Neil
Cavuto.
As Ryan put it, "taxpayers from frugal states are basically bailing
out taxpayers from profligate states."
Economic woes were forcing state and local governments to clean up
their act and tighten their belt.
But as our scaremongering president describes it, such responsible
fiscal management "will deprive countless cities and towns of the law
enforcement officials and first responders who risk their lives to keep
us out of harm's way. ... It will take us backwards at a time when we
need to keep this country moving forward."
And so, wasteful state and local governments get a federal bailout.
It works perfectly with the political strategy of the public teachers
unions. The National Education Association public school teachers union
spent $32 million on political activities in 2007 alone.
According to the Center for Responsive Politics, from 1990 to 2004,
94% of political contributions made by the NEA's political action
committees and individual officers went to Democrats.
Let's look at one state, Oregon, where the political influence of the
teachers unions is thought to be stronger than anywhere. As Betsy
Hammond of the Oregonian pointed out last month, "the nation's two large
teachers unions and their state affiliates contributed $357 per teacher
to elections in Oregon," nearly all of which was used to fight sensible
ballot measures such as one requiring that teacher pay raises be based
on their performance.
In Newark, N.J., the public teachers union boasts of "The Most
Comprehensive Public Employee Contract in New Jersey."
Of its thousands of tenured teachers, fewer than a half-dozen were
fired from 2001 to 2005. Could that be why less than 31% of Newark
public school seniors graduated with a normal high school diploma over
the same period?
This $26 billion bailout is about political power that buttresses big
government, not educating kids or maintaining police and fire department
services. Because of that dishonest facade, the president and Congress
have actually been able to raid the food-stamp program to fund their
Democratic Party vote-buying scheme.
Some $12 billion will be swiped from the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, which assists 41 million poor Americans.
Can you imagine the uproar if Republicans raided food stamps for,
say, tax cuts? Yet cutting taxes would be a real "jobs bill." And it
would be worth taking away some peoples' food stamps if it resulted in
them getting a good job in a troubled economy.
Why not let food-stamp recipients trade in their federal Electronic
Benefits Transfer card for a public employees union membership card? Or,
better, why not build an economy that creates real jobs?