Archive for
September, 2010
Tuesday, September 28th, 2010
Mark Reutter
PPI Fellow Mark Reutter is the former editor of
Railroad History and author of
Making Steel: Sparrows Point and the Rise and Ruin of American Industrial Might (2005, rev. ed.).
by Mark Reutter

Download the entire memo.
Since announcing an $8 billion “down payment” for high-speed rail development, the Obama administration has been silent about how to pay for a program as ambitious as the Interstate Highway System.
The interstates cost more than $250 billion in current dollars to build. A fast train network, based on systems being developed worldwide, most noticeably in China, could be equally expensive.
So far, Congress has come up with $2.5 billion in general fund appropriations for high-speed rail (HSR) in 2010, and the administration has asked for $1 billion a year for the 2011-14 budgets. Such allocations are hardly enough to begin detailed engineering for California’s HSR proposal between Los Angeles and San Francisco, let alone the nine other intercity corridors that the White House has envisioned.
On Labor Day, President Obama proposed a $50billion transportation infrastructure program that would include 4,000 miles of rehabbed and new railway track. The proposal calls for integrating HSR projects into the next surface transportation bill, a promising step that would ensure some level of federal commitment to the program over the five- or six-year life of the bill. But again, the president did not specify how he would finance HSR or the larger infrastructure program other than to say that his administration “is committed to working with Congress to fully pay for the plan.”
The president’s reticence raises a legitimate question: Can the nation afford HSR in a time of looming federal deficits?
The answer is yes – financing HSR is entirely feasible, but will only happen if the administration and its congressional allies take bold steps to rebalance our transportation priorities. Fortunately, there is both a funding source and a road map for moving from today’s scattershot federal transportation spending to a results-driven enterprise.
The funding source is the Highway Trust Fund, with approximate funds of $52 billion a year. Allocating a portion of highway funds for rail construction is an equitable way to wean drivers away from auto travel by providing them with a faster, safer, and more environmentally sound alternative.
Congress could easily allot $5 billion a year for HSR construction – without an increase in the gas tax – by cutting out earmarks and formula-based grants that now soak up billions of dollars, according to the General Accountability Office (GAO). Such fund reallocations could not only jumpstart HSR projects but serve as seed money for public-private partnerships to get the work done.
Already, international rail operators have expressed interest in competing for high-speed train contracts in the U.S. But these groups are waiting for the Obama administration to lay out a comprehensive financing plan before structuring bids. The use of a well-established and reliable source of transportation financing could make these deals happen.
Download the entire memo.
Tags: 2011-14 budgets, California’s HSR, China, federal commitment, federal deficits, GAO, gas tax, General Accountability Office, high-speed rail, Highway Trust Fund, HSR, international rail operators, Interstate Highway System, Labor Day, Los Angeles, Mark Reutter, Obama Administration, public-private partnerships, San Francisco, surface transportation bill, Transportation, transportation fund, transportation infrastructure
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Tuesday, September 28th, 2010
Lee Drutman
Lee Drutman is a senior fellow and the managing editor for the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Lee Drutman
This week, Progressive Fix will be focused on infrastructure.
That’s because the Progressive Policy Institute is co-hosting a major infrastructure forum this Wednesday through Friday here in Washington, D.C.
The timing of the forum couldn’t be better. It comes less than a month after President Obama laid out a plan for $50 billion in U.S. infrastructure investment.
As my colleague Scott Thomasson wrote at the time:
The President is sending a strong message this week that his administration’s thinking has moved beyond another round of scattershot stimulus toward a real plan for sustainable growth. Today’s speech suggests that the mantra for spending has changed from an obsession with injecting federal spending to thinking rationally about actually investing it. That’s welcome news, and it’s not a moment too soon.
This week we’ll be gathering leading experts from the private and public sector to talk about how to build on the President’s initiative and about how investing in infrastructure can create jobs and strengthen the American economy for the 21st century.
The forum will feature leading thinkers on infrastructure like Tom Friedman, Leo Hindery Jr., Ev Ehlrich, and PPI Fellow Mark Reutter, as well as political leaders on infrastructure like Congressman Rosa L. DeLauro (D-CT), who has introduced legislation to create an infrastructure bank, and Sen. John Warner (D-VA)
We’ll be sponsoring panels on “High Speed Rail”, “Retooling the American Economy”, and “Financing Future Growth.”
The forum will also highlight the “top 100” strategic infrastructure projects and new PPI proposals for using public dollars to leverage private investment to create jobs and spur economic growth.
You can find a full program for the forum here. All events are at the Washington Hilton and open to the interested public.
To register for “Keeping America on Track: The Future of High-Speed Rail”, click here. For the North America Strategic Infrastructure Leadership Forum, click here.
We will also be unveiling two new policy memos this week, one on high-speed rail and a second on an infrastructure bank.
Finally, check back with the Progressive Fix over the course of the week for full coverage of the panels. I’ll be reporting on all the great ideas that are sure to come out of this incredible collection of leading lights.
So stay tuned as we lay out a vision for a road forward on infrastructure.
Photo credit: Jason
Tags: Ev Ehlrich, Financing Future Growth, high-speed rail, Infrastructure, infrastructure bank, John Warner, Leo Hindery Jr., Mark Reutter, policy memos, PPI, President Obama, Progressive Fix, Progressive Policy Institute, Retooling the American Economy, Rosa L. DeLauro, Scott Thomasson, strategic infrastructure projects, sustainable growth, tom friedman, Transportation
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Monday, September 27th, 2010
Lee Drutman
Lee Drutman is a senior fellow and the managing editor for the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Lee Drutman
Our top five reads of the day:
- James Traub explores the declinist narrative emerging in foreign policy circles: “The way I would put the post-hegemonic dilemma is that the United States must leverage the international system to produce outcomes that promote its national security: whether in regard to regulating the global economy, stopping nuclear proliferation, propping up weak states, or promoting democracy and good governance abroad.”
- Fareed Zakaria calls on newly rising powers to start to act like global leaders: “The newly rising powers — China, India, Brazil — rightly insist that they be more centrally involved in the structures of power and global decision making. But when given the opportunity, do they step up to the plate and act as great powers with broad interests? On trade? Energy use? Climate change?”
- Thomas Friedman urges the U.S. to get serious about building the electric car industry: “If only China puts the gasoline prices and infrastructure in place, the industry will gravitate there. It will be a moon shot for them, a hobby for us, and you’ll import your new electric car from China just like you’re now importing your oil from Saudi Arabia.
- Alex Goldmark explains two reasons why the public has a hard time seeing the benefits of infrastructure: “Answers fall along two lines: a communication failure and a leadership failure.”
- James Oliphant sees the seeds of a new moderate movement in American politics: “The efforts are loosely organized and embryonic, but politicians, advocacy groups and others are piecing together a framework to promote moderate candidates and advance positions they say have been eclipsed by partisan sniping on the right and left.”
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Monday, September 27th, 2010
Lee Drutman
Lee Drutman is a senior fellow and the managing editor for the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Lee Drutman
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September 29, 2010 / 9:00 – 10:30 am
Panel: Keeping America on Track: The Future of High-Speed Rail
Jefferson West Room, Washington Hilton
Introductory remarks by U.S. Representative Marcy Kaptur (D-OH)
Moderator:
- Michael Riley, Managing Editor, Bloomberg Government
Panelists
- Pierce Homer, Transportation Director, Moffatt & Nichol
- Ken Orski, Editor and Publisher, Innovation Newsbriefs
- Mark Reutter, Fellow, Progressive Policy Institute
- Petra Todorovich, Director, America 2050
To register for “Keeping America on Track: The Future of High-Speed Rail”, click here.
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September 30, 2010 / 9:45 – 10:00 a.m.
Keynote Speech: Competitiveness Through Innovation
IBR East Room, Washington Hilton
Introduction by Will Marshall, President, Progressive Policy Institute
Featured speaker
- Senator Mark Warner (D-Va.)
October 1, 2010 / 8:45 – 9:00 a.m.
Keynote Speech: Rebuilding America: Can Our Political System Deliver?
Columbia Hall 5 & 7, Washington Hilton
Featured speaker
- Norman Anderson, CEO, CG/LA Infrastructure
- Will Marshall, President, Progressive Policy Institute
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October 1, 2010 / 9:00 – 10:30 a.m.
Panel: Retooling the American Economy for Jobs, Innovation, and Competitiveness
Columbia Hall 5 & 7, Washington Hilton
Moderator:
- David Wessel, Economics Editor, Wall Street Journal
Panelists
- Tom Friedman, New York Times Columnist, Pulitzer-Prize Winning Author
- Jason Furman, Deputy Director, National Economic Council, White House
- Roderick Bennett, Advisor to the General President of the Laborers’ International Union of North America
- John Woolard, CEO, Brightsource Energy
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October 1, 2010 / 10:45 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
Panel: Financing Future Growth: How Do We Pay For New Projects?
Columbia Hall 5 & 7, Washington Hilton
Moderator:
- Will Marshall, President, Progressive Policy Institute
Panelists
- U.S. Representative Rosa L. DeLauro (D-CT), Sponsor of National Infrastructure Development Bank Act of 2009 (H.R. 2521)
- Chris Bertram, Assistant Secretary for Budget and Programs and C.F.O., U.S. Department of Transportation
- Leo Hindery, Jr., Investor, Managing Partner of InterMedia Partners VII; former President and CEO of AT&T Broadband; former President, Tele-Communications, Inc. (TCI)
- Ev Ehrlich, Economist, President of ESC Company; former Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs
To register for the North America Strategic Infrastructure Leadership Forum, click here.
Tags: America 2050, AT&T Broadband, Bloomberg Government, Brightsource Energy, Chris Bertram, Commerce for Economic Affairs, David Wessel, ESC Company, Ev Ehrlich, HSR, Innovation, Innovation Newsbriefs, InterMedia Partners, Jason Furman, John Woolard, Jr, Keeping America on Track: The Future of High-Speed Rail, Ken Orski, Laborers' International Union of North America, Leo Hindery, Marcy Kaptur, Mark Reutter, Mark Warner, Michael Riley, Moffatt & Nichol, National Infrastructure Development Bank Act, New York Times, Panel, Petra Todorovich, Pierce Homer, PPI, Rosa L. DeLauro, Tele-Communications, Terry O’Sullivan, tom friedman, Transportation, U.S. Department of Transportation, Wall Street Journal, Washington Hilton, White House, Will Marshall
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Monday, September 27th, 2010
by Joel Berg
The number of billionaires based in New York City increased from to 56 to 57 from 2009 to 2010 and their collective net worth increased by $19 billion (from $183.5 billion to $202.65 billion), even as poverty soared, according to data recently released by Forbes magazine and analyzed by my organization, the New York City Coalition Against Hunger.
Given the soaring poverty, high unemployment, and stagnant wages for rank-and-file workers, these numbers show the folly of the politicians who want to further extend tax cuts for the mega-rich while doing nothing to prevent subway fair hikes – which are essentially tax increases on millions of working New Yorkers.
One of the main reasons that transit authorities in New York and elsewhere have to raise fares is that operating subsides from the federal government and state governments have been slashed, and one of the main reasons that neither the federal government nor the states have enough money for such subsidies or other vital purposes is that they no longer require the wealthiest to pay their fair share of taxes.
A person in New York working full-time at a minimum wage salary ($7.25 per hour) for 52 weeks would earn $15,080 in a year, often too little to feed their family. According to the Coalition’s calculations, that means that New York’s 57 billionaires collectively have as much money as the annual earnings of 13 million minimum wage workers. Those billionaires have an average net worth of $3.6 billion, which means that on average, each billionaire has as much money as the annual earnings of 232,000 minimum wage workers.
I am a committed capitalist. I firmly believe that our society should reward hard work and talent with success, as it once did for my grandparents and so many others after they came to this country. I don’t believe in government trying to guarantee equal outcomes, but government should ensure a level playing field for equal opportunity.
But does anyone believe that the main reason that the average New York City billionaire has 232,000 times as much money as the average minimum wage worker is that the billionaire works 232,000 times as hard or is 232,000 times as talented?
In the last few decades, all too often, wealth at the top has been generated by rigging the system in ways that actually hamper the long-term economic health of the society as a whole. We need to replace the crony capitalism of today with what I call the ‘opportunity capitalism’ of previous generations that gave families who worked hard and played by the rules the ability to get ahead.
And we need to once again ensure that the ultra-rich pay their fair share of taxes, which are necessary to maintain basic services. Government’s retreat from progressive taxation has resulted in food stamps funding cuts at the federal level, food pantry and soup kitchen cuts at the state level, and school lunch cuts at the city level. This is not just vague economic theory – this is real-life pain for hungry families.
Photo credit: Steve Wampler
Tags: billionaires, capitalist, crony capitalism, Economy, equal opportunity, equal outcomes, federal government, Financial reform, food pantry, food stamps funding, hungry families, long-term economic health, mega-rich, minimum wage salary, New York City, New York City Coalition Against Hunger, Opportunity Capitalism, progressive taxation, rank-and-file workers, school lunch cuts, soaring poverty, soup kitchen, state governments, subway fair hikes, tax cuts, ultra-rich
Posted in
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Monday, September 27th, 2010
Lee Drutman
Lee Drutman is a senior fellow and the managing editor for the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Lee Drutman
Last Monday, I shared my optimism that in Jon Stewart’s “Rally to Restore Sanity” and Michael Bloomberg’s funding of moderate candidates, there was reason to hope that the center might hold after all, and maybe even become vital.
Over at the Chronicle of Higher Education Brainstorm blog, Laurie Essig had a very different take. Where I see a vital center, she sees a “muddled middle” that is “in fact continuing to represent the interests of corporations and corporate-controlled media against the interests of the majority of Americans.”
It’s worth spending a few minutes with Essig’s deconstruction of the so-called muddled middle, because it reflects a certain unfortunate way of thinking about the political center. It also offers an opportunity to defend what’s vital about the vital center.
Essig argues that: “The first thing that is clear is that the Muddled Middle wishes to merge the Left and the Right as ‘the same’”
I’m not quite sure where Professor Essig finds this clarity. I cannot think of a single political moderate who sees or even wishes to see the Left and the Right as being “the same.” They clearly represent very different political ideologies. This much is obvious to anyone with even half a brain.
But they do share one troubling similarity: they both view the world in black and white terms, and both equate any form of compromise with surrender.
In Essig’s view, and the view of many on the political far left, “the world’s greediest corporations continue to highjack our democracy.” Anybody (i.e. the moderates) who does not believe we are locked in an existential good-versus-evil struggle on the behalf of poor working class folks against the powerful interests is therefore complicit with the political right. If only the world were so black and white, it might be comforting to be sure that one was on the side of righteousness. But nothing is every that simple.
In my mind, the wisdom of the vital center is the ability to recognize two big things. First, that while the far Left and the far Right are fundamentally different in what they believe, a politics that forces everybody to choose one extreme or the other is a politics of stalled gridlock, brutal warfare, or both. We have a country to govern, and that country is quite divided, but also largely moderate. And if there is a true American tradition, it is pragmatism.
Second, the world is a complex place, and it rarely fits neatly into pure black and white. Individuals, corporations, and governments are all capable of both good and evil, of both brilliance and stupidity, of both innovation and inefficiency – often at the same time. To me, a sign of wisdom is being willing to accept this complexity, and to be humble about it. It is to be open to the possibility that one has not, in fact, figured it all out, and to be willing to experiment.
To borrow from Arthur Schlesinger Jr., “Problems will always torment us, because all important problems are insoluble: that is why they are important. The good comes from the continuing struggle to try and solve them, not from the vain hope of their solution.” (The Vital Center, p. 254)
So sign me up for Jon Stewart’s Million Moderate March. I’ll be there, with an open mind, eager to hear what everyone has to say.
photo credit: Dale Basler
Tags: "Rally to Restore Sanity", Arthur Schlesinger Jr, black and white, Chronicle of Higher Education Brainstorm, corporate-controlled media, far Left, far Right, good-versus-evil struggle, Jon Stewart, Laurie Essig, Michael Bloomberg, muddled middle, poor working class, pragmatism, vital center
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Friday, September 24th, 2010
by Claire Versini
Some of the week’s best reads from Progressive Fix:
- Lee Drutman: Jon Stewart, Michael Bloomberg, and the Resurgent Center: “Over the last few days, I’ve become cautiously optimistic about the future of the political center. Something seems to be happening. Maybe it was Christine O’Donnell’s surprise Tea Party victory over moderate Michael Castle in the Delaware primary, but it feels like maybe, just maybe, the dormant defenders of moderation and reason are being roused from their slumber.”
- Jim Arkedis: It’s Time to Repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”: “DADT was always meant as a transitional policy from the Clinton era, born out of a fight the 42nd president picked (and essentially lost) with the military brass. It’s time to move our military into the 21st century — Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has endorsed its end, as has Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen. So has Colin Powell.”
- Scott Thomasson: No Compromise from Obama on Bush Tax Cuts, Except Dividends: “President Obama stood his ground on his tax plan during Monday’s CNBC town hall forum, arguing that he can’t make the math work for both keeping the deficit in check and giving away tax breaks to the richest two percent of Americans. When asked about possibilities for compromise, including cutting rates for households with incomes between $250,000 and $1 million, Obama didn’t flinch and stuck to his talking points.”
- Ed Kilgore: Election 2010 Hits the Final Stretch: Will the Republican Wave Happen?: “With just six weeks left until Election Day, it’s getting to that time when the sheep can be separated from the goats. There are some developments that have been long expected but have not yet materialized.”
- Will Marshall: No Retreat on Health Care: “Obama still did the right thing. America today doesn’t need artful dodgers in the White House; we need leaders willing to take on the hard cases. That inevitably offends powerful interests and voting groups. In fact, presidents who leave office about as popular as when they come in probably haven’t done very much.”
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Friday, September 24th, 2010
Lee Drutman
Lee Drutman is a senior fellow and the managing editor for the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Lee Drutman
Our top five reads of the day:
- Henry Farrell thinks that the Tea Party is a passing phenomenon: “When the Tea Party runs into trouble, it’ll run into trouble. At the moment, it is running on a feedback loop, where more organizational efforts lead to primary success, leading to more organizational efforts and so on. But this feedback loop is going to break down at some point, and very possibly sooner rather than later.”
- Marc Ambinder praises Arnold Schwarzenegger for not caring who his reforms upset: “when you speak to Schwarzenegger, you realize he lacks the crippling desire to be liked that most politicians unctuously exude. And indeed, after he pushed and pushed and pushed, after he threatened to cut out the bottom of California’s social safety net, after unions spent millions of dollars demonizing him, he isn’t very well liked.”
- Mark Muro and Bruce Katz see regional clusters as the key to innovation: “Twenty years after Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter introduced the concept to the policy community and 10 years after its wide state adoption, clusters—geographic concentrations of interconnected firms and supporting or coordinating organizations—have reemerged as a key tool and rubric in Washington and in the nation’s economic regions.”
- James Ledbetter explains why the Republicans are fundamentally unserious about cutting spending: “But the plain fiscal fact is that the national Republican Party has been addicted to its own forms of government spending at least since the Nixon administration. The very notion of taking a “pledge” evokes their addiction—This time it’s different, we swear!”
- Melissa Lafsky reports on how Americans still scared of nuclear power and wonders why: “And yet here we have evidence that of 20,000 members of a pool of highly-educated people, 47% of them believe nuclear power should be phased out entirely as an energy source. And in Europe, an amazing 66% of respondents stated they were not comfortable with the risks associated (note that “associated” doesn’t mean “accompanying”) nuclear power.”
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Friday, September 24th, 2010
Will Marshall
Will Marshall is the president of the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Will Marshall
Ordinarily, U.S. presidents don’t make headlines by extolling liberty and democracy before an international audience. But when President Obama did just that yesterday at the United Nations, it signaled a welcome shift from his previous reticence on these themes.
Here’s the key passage:
Yet experience shows us that history is on the side of liberty; that the strongest foundation for human progress lies in open economies, open societies, and open governments. To put it simply, democracy, more than any other form of government, delivers for our citizens. And I believe that truth will only grow stronger in a world where the borders between nations are blurred.
For sure, in his 2009 Cairo speech and elsewhere, the President has argued that individual freedom and democracy are universal aspirations. But in general, the administration’s voice has often seemed muted when it comes to standing up for liberal values.
Critics, for example, have cited Obama’s apparent downgrading of human rights in relations with China; U.S. eagerness to “reset” relations with Russia even as that country slides back into authoritarianism; and, the White House’s failure to offer full-throated support to Iran’s “green” movement which arose in protest over a rigged 2009 election.
The administration’s ambivalence about America’s responsibility to abet the spread of liberal democracy is no mystery. It’s a reaction to George W. Bush’s ill-conceived “freedom agenda”, which seemed to conflate U. S. democracy promotion with the use of force in Iraq and threats of “regime change” in hostile countries like Iran and North Korea. Bush’s unmodulated, even messianic, rhetoric about supporting democratic revolutions everywhere rattled America’s foes but also unnerved our friends as well.
President Obama has devoted his first two years to reassuring the world that America is returning to its tradition of cooperative internationalism, and he’s largely succeeded. The U.S. “brand” has been refurbished and America’s global approval ratings have risen.
But in rectifying its predecessor’s mistakes, this administration sometimes leaned too far in the opposition direction. At times it seemed to embrace foreign policy “realism”, which emphasizes material interests and geopolitics and downplays the role of political values and structures in shaping countries’ international conduct. In a telling omission, the administration has organized its foreign policy around the “three Ds” – diplomacy, development and defense – conspicuously excluding a fourth D for democracy.
But realism is antithetical to liberalism, which is why it has been most often associated with Republicans like Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, George H.W. Bush and Brent Scowcroft. From Woodrow Wilson’s day on, Democrats have argued that America can best advance its interests and ideals by throwing her weight on the side of individual rights, economic freedom and democracy. Their guiding philosophy is not realism but liberal internationalism, which holds that a freer world is a safer, more prosperous world.
Obama seemed to reaffirm that outlook yesterday. At the same time, the President continued to be clear that his administration’s approach to supporting democracy would be nothing like Bush’s. Picking up a theme introduced in recent speeches by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, he promised greater U.S. support for embattled civil society organizations in authoritarian countries.
Finally, Obama stressed that promoting democracy is not something America should do unilaterally, but in concert with new democracies as well as old allies. That was a pointed challenge to countries like South Africa and some Latin American countries, who have been reluctant to speak out against human rights abuses and tyrannical rule in their own neighborhoods.
In all, it was an important speech that realigned U.S. foreign policy with core values that have defined it at its best, and led to its greatest triumphs.
photo credit: transplanted mountaineer
Tags: America’s responsibility, authoritarianism, borders between nations, Brent Scowcroft, Cairo speech, China, civil society organizations, cooperative internationalism, defense, democracy, Democratic Party, development, Diplomacy, economic freedom, freer world, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Henry Kissinger, Hillary Clinton, human progress, Human rights, human rights abuses, in concert, individual freedom, individual rights, Iran’s “green” movement, Iraq, Latin American, liberal democracy, liberal internationalism, liberal values, liberty, messianic rhetoric, new democracies, North Korea, open economies, open governments, open societies, Politics and politicians, President Obama, promoting democracy, realism, republicans, Richard Nixon, Russia, Secretary of State, South Africa, three Ds, tyrannical rule, U.S. foreign policy, U.S. presidents, unilaterally, United Nations, universal aspirations, Woodrow Wilson, “freedom agenda”
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Friday, September 24th, 2010
Steven Chlapecka
Steven K. Chlapecka is the director of public affairs for the Progressive Policy Institute.
by Steven Chlapecka
NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 24, 2010
PRESS CONTACT:
Steven Chlapecka—schlapecka@ppionline.org, T: 202.525.3931
PPI and CG/LA Infrastructure Will Bring Together Leading Thinkers
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Just weeks after President Obama announced a major infrastructure initiative, the Progressive Policy Institute and CG/LA Infrastructure will bring together leading thinkers from the public and private sectors at the 2nd Annual North American Strategic Infrastructure Leadership Forum in Washington, DC, September 29–October 1.
The forum will highlight the “top 100” strategic infrastructure projects and new PPI proposals for using public dollars to leverage private investment to create jobs and spur economic growth.
“This forum is emerging as the premier showcase for the kinds of strategic infrastructure investments we need to speed economic recovery and raise America’s game in global competition,” said Will Marshall, president of PPI. “Our goal is to challenge the nation’s political leaders to embrace a bolder strategy for retooling the American economy, lest we fall farther behind in the race for high-speed rail, clean cars, next-generation nuclear energy and other growing markets.”
Featured speakers include: Tom Friedman, New York Times Columnist; Senator Mark Warner, (D-Va.); U.S. Representative Rosa DeLauro, (D-Conn.); Joe Boardman, President and CEO, Amtrak; Leo Hindery Jr., Managing Partner, InterMedia Partners VII; U.S. Representative Dan Lipinski, (D-Ill.); Mark Reagan, Chairman, Global Construction Practice, Marsh Inc.; John Woolard, CEO, Brightsource Energy; David Wessel, Economic Editor, Wall Street Journal; Chris Bertram, Assistant Secretary for Budget and Programs and Chief Financial Officer, Department of Transportation; Terence M. O’Sullivan, President, LIUNA; Ev Ehrlich, President, ESC Company; and more.
The three-day conference will also bring together more than 500 leading executives to showcase major proposed infrastructure projects across the continent.
MEDIA COVERAGE: The event is open to the press. Media wishing to attend should contact Steven Chlapecka at 202.525.3931 or schlapecka@ppionline.org.
For further questions, please contact Steven Chlapecka at schlapecka@ppionline.org, 202.525.3931 (office), 202.556.1752 (cell).
# # #
Tags: 2nd Annual North American Strategic Infrastructure Leadership Forum, CG/LA Infrastructure, Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro, David Wessel, Ev Ehrlich, Infrastructure, Progressive Policy Institute, Senator Mark Warner, strategic infrastructure investments, tom friedman, Transportation
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Friday, September 24th, 2010
Ed Kilgore
Ed Kilgore is a PPI senior fellow, as well as managing editor of The Democratic Strategist, an online forum.
by Ed Kilgore
As the battle for November continued to unfold this week, House Republicans unveiled their long-awaited, long-debated version of the 1994 classic Contract With America. This one was called the Pledge to America.
In figuring out where to fall between cautious national GOP figures who basically would like to overturn the 2006 and 2008 elections and bring back the splendors of the Bush administration, and the elements of the conservative base, radicalized into the Tea Party Movement, who would like to turn back the clock quite a few decades further, the authors of the Pledge struck an interesting balance. The Preamble and Forward of the document are full of fiery Tea Party rhetoric suggesting the illegitimacy of the Obama administration and the need for a radical restructuring of the federal government and the immediate abolition of deficits and debt.
But when the Pledge gets into is specifics, it immediately retreats into limited demands for total repeal of the Obama administration’s initiatives, along with a return to Bush tax and economic policies, and notably abandons the fiscal radicalism that so many Republican candidates this year are campaigning on. There’s no balanced budget promise; no endorsement, even, of a constitutional Balanced Budget Amendment (now, as once before, boilerplate for GOP candidates); and certainly no mention of plans to take on major structural reforms, much less phase-outs, of Social Security and Medicare.
Indeed, the Pledge gives the impression that if the clock could be turned back to August of 2008, before the enactment of TARP, everything would be fine. It will be most interesting to see how that approach squares with candidates and activists who think a return to 1933 is the only possible solution.
The Pledge does create a sort of whack-a-mole problem for Democrats seeking to exploit it. Do they focus on the radical rhetoric that suggests a willingness to go after the basic New Deal/Great Society safety net? Or do they focus on the details that suggest a more modest but equally vulnerable determination to bring back the policies that voters repudiated in 2006 and 2008?
In any event, the very existence of the Pledge offers some hope for Democrats struggling to make the midterm elections something other than a straight-up referendum on the status quo. Under Republican governance, they will be able to argue, things could get worse, unless you really do pine for the salad days of 2006 or 1933.
The other big political development this week, which is still unfolding, is the decision by Senate Democrats against taking the lead on extending middle-class tax cuts and forcing Republicans to champion the extension of upper-class tax cuts, at least until after November. There is still a chance the House will move first, but it’s unlikely given vocal Blue Dog opposition, and the decision is being widely derided as evidence of Democratic over-cautiousness, if not surrender, going into the midterms. It’s an issue that will likely come up, however, in a lame duck congressional session after the elections, though with Republicans, who want to make all the Bush tax cuts permanent, holding a stronger hand.
There’s been some craziness in the polls this week, most notably a Quinnipiac survey showing the very off-the-wall Republican nominee for governor of New York, Carl Paladino, suddenly closing to double-digits against prohibitive Democratic front-runner Andrew Cuomo. The Q-poll did not exactly reinforce its credibility by then releasing a survey showing another lowly-regarded Republican, Joe DioGuardi, trailing Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, by just six percent (Siena, meanwhile, had Cuomo up by 33percent and Gillibrand up by 26percent).
Most survey results this week were more conventional. Mason-Dixon showed Democrat Alex Sink with a 47-40 lead over Republican Rick Scott among likely voters in Florida. The respected Field Poll, also moving to a likely voter model, showed a dead heat between Jerry Brown and Meg Whitman in the California gubernatorial race. And a new national Pew poll showed an unusually large 10-point swing in the GOP’s favor between registered voters and likely voters—though interpretations of such results as reflecting an “enthusiasm gap” often ignore the structural reasons for a Republican advantage in midterm elections.
Finally, Google has come up with a very useful series of maps comparing some of the most credible handicappers’ projections of Senate, House, and gubernatorial elections.
Tags: Alex Sink, Andrew Cuomo, Balanced Budget Amendment, Campaigns and elections, Carl Paladino, Contract with America, enthusiasm gap, Jerry Brown, Joe DioGuardi, Kirsten Gillibrand, Meg Whitman, Pledge to America, Republican Party, TARP, Tea Party
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