📄 Extracted Text (792 words)
From: "Jim Kennedy"
To: "Jim Kennedy"
Subject: WJC Mail: Idea Man
Date: Mon, 16 Dec 2002 19:53:10 +0000
washIngtonpost.com
Still the Idea Man
By David S. Broder
Sunday, December 15, 2002; Page B07
When I finally got around to reading the policy speech that former president Bill Clinton gave in New York this
month, it came as something of a surprise. The news coverage focused on his statement that Democrats were
"missing in action on national security" issues during the midterm election and must fight to reclaim that
territory from President Bush and the Republicans to have any chance to win in 2004.
The irresistible Clinton sound bite was this: "We [Democrats] have got to be strong. When we look weak in a
time where people feel insecure, we lose. When people feel uncertain, they'd rather have somebody who's strong
and wrong than somebody who's weak and right."
While savoring that little aphorism, reporters passed over big parts of Clinton's characteristically sprawling
address to the Democratic Leadership Council, one he said he was reading from "handwritten notes . . . I wrote
out this morning after coming back late from Mexico last night."
But it's worth wading through. What made Clinton's reputation as the most successful Democratic politician of
his generation -- the only Democrat to win two terms as president since FDR -- was mainly his record in
domestic policy. And for this reader, at least, it is the economic and social policy sections of the speech that
compel attention from his party. Whether offering original ideas or repackaging others' proposals, Clinton
continues to challenge conventional wisdom.
For example: In the last campaign, Democrats saw their share of the senior citizen vote continue to decline,
despite all their scare talk that Republican plans to "privatize" Social Security would destroy the most important
part of that safety net.
Clinton bluntly says Democrats should stop defending the status quo and instead consider changes that would
"increase the rate of return" on Social Security. They could follow the model of the government employees'
retirement system (as long-championed by some conservative think tanks) and give people the option, "with 1 or
2 percent of the payroll tax," to invest in one of three mutual funds "that almost always perform as well or better
than the market," while at the same time permitting cautious investors the option of buying government bonds,
so they could "get the guaranteed Social Security return and 100 percent safety."
That was one of the possible changes recommended last year by a presidential commission co-chaired by former
Democratic senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York. But few Democrats have embraced the idea or
buckled down to the task of figuring out how to finance the transition to that new system without reducing
benefits to those either on Social Security or soon to join its ranks. So they have left the door open for
Republicans to champion a reform that is attractive to many younger workers.
More congressional Democrats agree with Clinton's idea that tax cuts should be designed to "juice the economy"
now without "creating long-term fiscal irresponsibility." The way to do that, he says, is to freeze the scheduled
reductions in the Bush tax plan at least for the top rate of income taxes -- affecting the half-percent of Americans
with annual incomes over $400,000, saving $1.4 trillion over the next 20 years. Instead, Clinton urges the
passage of short-term tax breaks for consumers and businesses that would feed straight into the economy.
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On the corporate accountability front, Clinton suggests that Democrats support a requirement that stock options
be exercised "over a long period of time to build employee loyalty and the strength of the company," rather than
insiders' "just taking the money and running . . . leaving everybody else high and thy."
On welfare reform, one of the great policy changes of the Clinton years, the former president now says, "We
need an honest analysis [of] what's happened to people in this downturn. Do we need to provide more incentives
than we are presently providing to help poor people who fall into the cracks?" A good -- and timely -- question as
Congress faces renewal of the 1996 welfare law.
And speaking of families, Clinton says Democrats ought to be trying to expand on the unpaid family and medical
leaves that were mandated for the first time during his presidency. California has instituted paid leave for
workers with family duties. Why should it be alone?
There is more in Clinton's speech -- on health care, community service and other topics. All a reminder that as
long as this fellow is around, the Democrats will not suffer a shortage of ideas.
2002 The Washington Post Company
http://v.w.v.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A55935-2002Dec14?languagerprinter 2,ole0.bmp
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