The Worst President Since Before the Civil War
By Steve McCann
AmericanThinker.com
Three years ago, the people of the United States elected someone who has turned out to be the worst president since the pre-Civil War era. Barack Obama, whether in economic matters, domestic affairs or international relations, has been an abject failure and has severely jeopardized the future of the American people.
This must be the focus and message of those seeking the Republican presidential nomination, who must not allow themselves to be focused on demeaning each other and sidetracked by falling for the usual tactics of the Democrat and media smear machines (epitomized by the latest specious attack on Herman Cain).
A cursory examination of Obama's overall record compared with other presidents reveals someone driven purely by statist ideology, whose narcissism renders him incapable of change regardless of the long-term consequences. He does not seem to care what happens to the American people.
Ronald Reagan and Franklin Roosevelt faced far worse economic conditions when they came into office than were in play when Barack Obama was elected president. Yet with one a fiscal conservative (Ronald Reagan) and the other (Franklin Roosevelt) a liberal Democrat, even though they pursued differing solutions to the dilemmas at hand, neither put the nation squarely and inexorably on the road to bankruptcy and second-class status.
Barack Obama and his apologists continuously claim that he inherited the worst economy since the Great Depression and that if it were not for his policies presently in place, matters would be far worse. The reality is that he did not inherit the worst economy since the 1930s, and his policies have diminished the standard of living for the majority of Americans.
The actual factors in play for Barack Obama, Ronald Reagan, and Franklin Roosevelt when they assumed office were as follows:
|
Annual GDP Growth |
Unemployment Rate |
Inflation |
Barack Obama |
1.1% |
6.7% |
1.0% |
Ronald Reagan |
.1 |
7.6 |
12.6 |
Franklin Roosevelt |
-13.0 |
24.0 |
-10.0 |
For the average American, the employment numbers are
the most critical. The following chart is a side by
side comparison of the employment situation for
Barack Obama as of Election Day 2008 versus the
present day after three years of his failed
policies:
|
November 2008 |
October 2011 |
Difference |
Unemployment Rate |
6.7% |
9.1% |
+35.8% |
Total Employment |
144.25 million |
140.07 million |
-4.18 million |
Employment-Goods Producing sector |
20.9 million |
18.1 million |
-2.8 million |
Part-time Workers (Only Jobs Available) |
1.57 million |
2.9 million |
+84.7% |
Unemployed 27 Weeks or more |
2.2 million |
6.3 million |
+4.1 million |
Avg. Weekly Wage (inflation adjusted) |
$654.03 |
$655.87 |
+.2% |
(http://www.bls.gov/schedule/archives/empsit_nr.htm#current)
How does Barack Obama compare to some of his predecessors, who inherited far more severe financial crises? As a further comparison, while he did not inherit a financial crisis, Jimmy Carter is included, as he is considered by many the worst president in the post-World War II era, and many of his policies triggered the massive recession and inflation inherited by Ronald Reagan.
(Note: The Bureau of Labor Statistics changed its method of calculating the unemployment rate in 1994. Therefore, in order to make this a more valid comparison, those workers the BLS considers discouraged and marginally attached to the labor force and therefore not part of the unemployment rate calculation have been added below.)
|
Unemployment Rate as of Election Day |
Unemployment Rate Three years later |
Difference |
Barack Obama |
7.9% |
10.75% |
-36% |
Ronald Reagan |
7.6 |
8.3 |
- 9 |
Jimmy Carter |
7.8 |
5.9 |
+24 |
Franklin Roosevelt |
24.1 |
20.1 |
+17 |
Barack Obama has chosen uncontrolled and unbridled
government spending, much of it directed to his
cronies and fellow ideologues, as his solution to
restarting the economy. This has created an enormous
amount of new debt for the nation with nothing to
show for it. One of his predecessors, Franklin
Roosevelt, also chose that route as part of his plan
to rescue the American economy. However, he never
took it to the extreme that Obama has done, with the
aid of his allies in the Democratic Party. During
Obama's tenure, he has added over $4,000 billion ($4
trillion) to the national debt.
Using the historical actual deficits as a percentage of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) applied to today's GDP, the comparison would be as follows (Herbert Hoover has been added, as he faced the actual massive collapse of the economy in 1929, the first year of his term.)
|
Average Deficit as % of GDP First Three Years of Term |
(2011 Dollars) Additional National Debt |
Barack Obama |
9.23% |
$4,005 Billion |
Ronald Reagan |
4.08 |
1,800 |
Franklin Roosevelt |
3.50 |
1,531 |
Jimmy Carter |
2.27 |
986 |
Herbert Hoover |
.01 |
15 |
(http://www.usgovernmentspending.com)
The ultimate measure of the success or failure of a president's economic policies is the growth of the nation's Gross Domestic Product while facing economic headwinds. Here, too, Barack Obama cannot measure up to those who faced enormous challenges, as his policies and regulatory obsession have shown him to be an anti-capitalist ideologue with more in common with the Occupy Wall Street Movement than with the American people.
|
Barack Obama |
Ronald Reagan |
Franklin Roosevelt |
Actual inflation adjusted GDP Growth First Three Years |
.3% |
13.7% |
23.4% |
It should be noted that Franklin Roosevelt, after
re-election in 1936, began to pursue more statist
policies including demonizing the rich, higher
taxes, passing union-friendly legislation, and
additional government spending, so that by the third
year of his second term, the GDP had contracted by
6.5% and unemployment rose to 19.0% from a low of
14.0% in 1937. Yet the annual budget deficit as a
percent of GDP averaged 3.85% for Roosevelt's first
two terms as compared to Obama's 9.23% to date. (http://www.shmoop.com/great-depression/statistics.html)
By any measure, Barack Obama is not only a failure in his economic policies, but he is, in the aggregate, the worst steward of the American economy since economic measurements began to be recorded.
It is little wonder that his re-election strategy is centered on demonizing his potential opponents and deliberately appealing to the base nature of the human race -- greed and envy -- as manifested in his class warfare rhetoric. This is a record that cannot be defended under any circumstances, and one the Republicans must focus upon and unceasingly bring it before the American people.