Obama warns of return to Republicans' disastrous economic policies

September 25, 2010 08:18 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:37 pm IST - Washington

File photo of unemployed Americans at a National Career Fair in Los Angeles in July 2010 photo. Economic policies of the Republican Bush regime are held responsible for the crisis and recession that crippled the global financial system since 2008.

File photo of unemployed Americans at a National Career Fair in Los Angeles in July 2010 photo. Economic policies of the Republican Bush regime are held responsible for the crisis and recession that crippled the global financial system since 2008.

President Barack Obama has said that the Republicans’ plan to slash taxes and cut spending if the Republican party retakes the House of Representatives in the November mid-term elections is no more than “an echo of a disastrous decade we can’t afford to relive.”

Obama used his weekly radio and Internet address on Saturday to skewer House Republicans over the “Pledge to America” they unveiled this week. It also promised to cut down on government regulation, repeal Obama’s health care law and end his stimulus program.

“The Republicans who want to take over Congress offered their own ideas the other day. Many were the very same policies that led to the economic crisis in the first place, which isn’t surprising, since many of their leaders were among the architects of that failed policy,” Obama said.

“It is grounded in same worn-out philosophy -- cut taxes for millionaires and billionaires; cut the rules for Wall Street and the special interests; and cut the middle class loose to fend for itself. That’s not a prescription for a better future.”

Republicans used their own radio address to defend the plan.

“The new agenda embodies Americans’ rejection of the notion that we can simply tax, borrow and spend our way to prosperity,” said one of its authors, California Rep. Kevin McCarthy. “It offers a new way forward that hasn’t been tried in Washington,” an approach focused on cutting spending “which is sadly a new idea for a Congress accustomed to always accelerating it.”

The Republican plan was short on specifics but showed a stark contract between the philosophies of the two parties weeks ahead of midterm elections where Republicans are forecast to make big gains and potentially win back the House.

Perhaps the biggest difference was on taxes, where Republicans want to extend all of George W. Bush’s income tax cuts permanently” at a cost of some $4 trillion over 10 years.

Democrats are proposing to keep the rates where they are for individuals making up to $200,000 and for families earning up to $250,000” but to hit wealthier individuals and some small businesses with tax hikes in January. Their plan would cost $3 trillion.

Now, though, it’s not clear there will be a final vote in Congress on either approach before November’s elections.

Online- Obama address- www.whitehouse.gov

Republican address- http-//www.youtube.com/RepublicanConference

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