Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Sorry, Mr. President: The Obama Administration Did Nothing Similar to Your Immigration Ban – Foreign Policy (blog)


Foreign Policy (blog)
Sorry, Mr. President: The Obama Administration Did Nothing Similar to Your Immigration Ban
Foreign Policy (blog)
By Jon FinerJon Finer was the chief of staff to Secretary of State John Kerry and director of policy planning at the State Department. He also spent four years in the Barack Obama White House, serving as a senior advisor in the offices of the national ...
Trump says extreme vetting pause is same as Obama's 2011 Iraq policyWashington Times
Yes, Trump's (and Obama's) ban on some immigrants is illegalHot Air
Kellyanne Conway Says Obama Started the Muslim BanTMZ.com
LawNewz -Townhall -Express.co.uk
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Sorry, Mr. President: The Obama Administration Did Nothing Similar to Your Immigration Ban - Foreign Policy (blog)

Trump inherits the Obama boom – Daily Kos

Consider Obamas jobs record. During his two terms, the U.S. economy generated 11.3 million new jobs. (See chart at top.) Since the middle of 2010, the Obama economy produced 15.5 million new private sector jobs during 75 consecutive months of employment gains. Thats not only a dramatic turnaround from January 2009, when more than800,000 workers were laid off in a single month, but significant improvement over the anemic 1.3 million jobs added under his Republican predecessor, George W. Bush. (Its no wonder that the Wall Street Journal summed up Dubyas jobs performance as the worst track record on record.)

The unemployment rate, too, has improved markedly since Barack Obama first took the oath of office. Already 7.8 percent then, the jobless rate hit nearly 10 percent in early 2010. But while 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney promised a 6 percent rate by the end of his first term, Obama went far beyond that, leaving office with the unemployment rate down to 4.7 percent.

To put that performance in perspective, its worth looking back at the economic devastation President Obama inherited eightyears ago. As bad as it was believed at the time the administration formulated its $787 billion stimulus program, it later became clear the situation was much, much worse. In 2011, The Economist described the context for the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) passed in February 2009:

The White House looked at the economic situation, sized up Congress, and took its shot. Unfortunately, the situation was far more dire than anyone in the administration or in Congress supposed.

Output in the third and fourth quarters fell by 3.7% and 8.9%, respectively, not at 0.5% and 3.8% as believed at the time. Employment was also falling much faster than estimated. Some 820,000 jobs were lost in January, rather than the 598,000 then reported. In the three months prior to the passage of stimulus, the economy cut loose 2.2m workers, not 1.8m. In January, total employment was already 1m workers below the level shown in the official data.

Nevertheless, the February 2009 stimulus had a tremendous impact in driving economic growth and job creation. As then-directorof the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Douglas Elmendorf explained in June 2012 to Republicans claiming Obama made the economy worse:"

Most economists not only think it should have worked; they think it did work, Elmendorf replied. CBO's own analysis found that the package added as many as 3.3 million jobs to the economy during the second quarter of 2010, and may have prevented the nation from lapsing back into recession.

As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities summed it up, The economy began growing in 2009, and has averaged 2.1 percent annual growth since then. Economists Alan Blinder and Mark Zandi, who by 2011 concluded that federal intervention to save the economy averted Great Depression 2.0, went even further in 2014.The combined federal efforts to rescue the American economy from its greatest collapse since 1929 "dramatically reduced the severity and length of the meltdown that began in 2008; its effects on jobs, unemployment, and budget deficits; and its lasting impact on today's economy." The impact of the measures taken in 2008 and 2009, including the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), the $800 billion Obama stimulus program, Obama's auto bailout,and the Federal Reserve's "quantitative easing," is simply staggering. Without those policy responsesalmost all of which were opposed by Congressional RepublicansBlinder and Zandi estimate:

That said, while the economy added over 2 million jobs annually for each of President Obamas last six years in office, the number of manufacturing jobs has not returned to its pre-recession levels. In addition to that net 300,000 job loss, the workforce participation rate has dropped from its 2007 rate of 66 percent to around 63 percent now, a level not seen since the late 1970s. The aging population might explain between one-third to one-half of that loss. The rest reflects those who have simply dropped out of the workforce and are now looking for a job.

That is just one of the prices Americans paid because the recovery from the recession that began in December 2007 was slower and smaller than it could haveand should havebeen. If anything, Barack Obama has been a tax-and-not-spend liberal. (Adjusted for inflation, federal spending is lower now than when Obama first became president.) After all, stimulus spending largely ended by 2011. More than40 percent of that $800 billion program was tax cuts. Annual deficits have been slashed by two-thirds during Obama's presidency. The good news is that the higher income and capital gains tax rates on the rich that Obama signed into law in 2013 have refilled the United States Treasury, while as predicted had no negative impact on economic growth and job creation. But as has been documented elsewhere, the recovery from the Great Recession would have been quicker and more robust if the federal government had spent more to offset the "anti-stimulus" of shrinking state and local governments. By May 2013, the Hamilton Institute estimated those austerity policies cost 2.2 American million jobs and resulted in the slowest recovery since World War II.

As the Economic Policy Institute lamented in a recent analysis, it is that austerity which has made the recent recovery the slowest in four decades:

Nevertheless, the U.S. recovery from the global economic calamity of late 2007 through mid-2009 was still impressive, especially compared to other leading economies. Since 2007, American GDP growth has been higher than Germany, France, the UK,and Japan.

Helping fuel that American rebound was the rapid turnaround of the U.S. auto industry. By the fall of 2008, General Motors and Chrysler were on the brink of collapse. Without the infusion of cash by the Bush administration in December 2009 and the major rescue package President Obama put in place the next spring, both companies would have failed, as would the supply chain of partsmakers.

The decision to rescue GM and Chrysler, derided by Donald Trump, Mike Pence, and Mitt Romney, had an outsized impact, and not just for states like Michigan, Indiana, Ohio,and Wisconsin. Ultimately, the federal government spent almost $80 billion to save the two companies. But after selling off its remaining shares, the price tag was much lower at $9.3 billion. But as the Center for Automotive Research documented in December 2013, that sum may have been the best investment Uncle Sam ever made:

Had GM and Chrysler failed altogether, the result could have been 4.1 million jobs lost across the U.S. economy in 2009 and 2010, with federal transfer payments and $105 billion in lost income and payroll tax revenue for the U.S. Treasury.

As the Center's chief economist Sean McAlinden put it, "This peacetime intervention in the private sector by the U.S. government will be viewed as one of the most successful interventions in U.S. economic history."

How successful? These pictures of auto industry jobs and auto sales tell the tale:

Despite all of the Republican fear-mongering over job-killing Obamacare and tax increases crushing job creators, the number of full-time jobs continues to expand even as part-time work remains relatively constant. Poverty dropped sharply in 2015, while median household income and wages grew at the strongest clip since before the recession.

Meanwhile, Obamacare has reduced the uninsured rate to its lowest level on record even as it has improved household finances. Together with the Obama administrationseconomic stimulus measures and tax hikes on the wealthy, income equality has started to decline from its recent record highs.

All told, these developments have improved the outlook both on Wall Street and on Main Street. Despite Donald Trumps braggadocio, the stock market was already flourishing under Barack Obama. The Dow Jones jumped by 11,450 points, or 138 percent, during Obamas time in the White House.

Consumer confidence, too, was ramping up long before Trump pulled off his surprise victory in November. One notable downturn came in the spring and summer of 2011, when Republican debtceiling hostage-taking took a toll on both job creation and consumer confidence.

But that wasnt the step that the Kamikaze Conservatives took to undermine the American economy, and with it, Barack Obamas presidency. From literally the night he was sworn in, Obama's Republican opponents engaged in an unprecedented campaign of sabotage designed to derail the economic recovery and his presidency. They didn't just oppose the stimulus (more than 40 percent of which was comprised of tax cuts), but the Fed's quantitative easing program and the White House's auto bailout which saved Detroitand millions of jobsas well. The GOP filibustered his American Jobs Act of 2011 and his plans for an infrastructure investment bank. Not content to rest there, Republican leaders threatened to trigger a default by the United States by refusing to raise the debt ceiling, something they had routinely done 17 times for Reagan (who tripled the national debt) and seven more for George W. Bush (who doubled it again).

Yet in face of it all, the 44thpresidentproduced an economic record that helped earn him recognition as the most successful Democrat since FDR. And thanks to Barack Obama, the 45thpresidentof the United States enters office at a time of American renaissance, not American carnage. Job No. 1for Donald Trump is to stop bragging about the Obama boom he is inheriting. Given Trumps good fortune, job No. 2is simply not to blow it.

* Since 2000, GDP growth has averaged a little less than 2 percent a year. Since the Great Recession of 2008 hit, labor productivity has expanded by less than 1 percent a year. As Neil Irwin explained in the New York Times in August, that means Trump can't get there from here. Our aging population and his planned crackdown on immigration mean a return to the boom days of 1950 to 1973 simply isn't in the cards:

Add it all up, and is Mr. Trump's promise of 25 million new jobs over the next decade and 3.5 percent annual economic growth possible? Only if a burst of innovation arrives that makes every worker's labor go further, and if millions of new immigrants arrive from overseas or the ratio of American adults who want to work rises far higher than it has ever been. Absent all that, the math just doesn't work.

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Trump inherits the Obama boom - Daily Kos

Malia Obama at pipeline event: Do former ‘First Kids’ normally attend protests? – Christian Science Monitor

January 29, 2017 Less than a week after the inauguration of President Trump, an Obama has already spoken out against one of his policies.

No, not the 44th president, who left the White House last Friday. In fact, it was Barack Obamas eldest daughter, 18-year-old Malia, who attended an event at the Sundance Film Festival this week to express solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe the Native American group that for months has protested the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL).

The news was revealed by Divergent actress Shailene Woodley, herself a vocal activist against the oil route, in an interview with Democracy Now!:

AMY GOODMAN: Were you surprised to see Malia Obama yesterday at the protest?

SHAILENE WOODLEY: It was amazing to see Malia. I saw her last night when we did the event with Chairman Dave Archambault. And it was incredible to see her there. Also

AMY GOODMAN: President Obamas daughter.

SHAILENE WOODLEY: President Obamas daughter. Also, to witness a human being and a woman coming into her own outside of her family and outside of the attachments that this country has on her, but someone whos willing to participate in democracy because she chooses to, because she recognizes, regardless of her last name, that if she doesnt participate in democracy, there will be no world for her future children.

Tuesday morning, Trump signed a presidential memorandumordering DAPLs expedited review and approval. That night, Malia, Woodley and others at Sundance assembled in support of Standing Rock.

Opponents of the 1,172-mile pipeline argue that it would run through ancient Sioux burial grounds, and that the project could possibly leak into the Missouri River. Last month, the US Army Corps of Engineers the federal agency overseeing DAPLs construction ordered a stop to construction pending further review.

Malias appearance at the annual movie meeting in Utah came as no surprise, seeing that shes interested in an entertainment industry career. The New York Post reported last week that Malia will be interning with Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, after previously working on the sets of HBO and CBS television shows.

But was her DAPL stance a preview of an outspoken career? Perhaps. While the former president said in his final press conference that neither Malia nor 15-year-old Sasha intend to pursue a future of politics, he did hint at their coming civic engagement:

I think that they have, in part through osmosis, in part through dinnertime conversations, appreciated the fact that this is a big, complicated country, and democracy is messy and it doesn't always work exactly the way you might want, it doesn't guarantee certain outcomes. But if you're engaged and you're involved, then there are a lot more good people than bad in this country, and there's a core decency to this country, and that they got to be a part of lifting that up.

And I expect they will be. And in that sense, they are representative of this generation that makes me really optimistic.

Joshua Kendall, author of First Dads: Parenting and Politics from George Washington to Barack Obama, says that in general, political children tend to be rebels.... There is this tradition of the First Kids really speaking out, and Malia is firmly in that tradition.

The most direct parallel between Malia and another first child, Kendall says, is with Amy Carter, the youngest of former President Jimmy Carters four children. Both were around the same age at the time of their fathers inaugurations Amy was 9, Malia was 10. Both are Ivy Leaguers Amy went to Brown University, and Malia will attend Harvard this fall.

The teenage Amy was known for her political activism, having marched with counterculture figure Abbie Hoffman. Both were arrested in 1986 at an anti-CIA demonstration in Massachusetts. A year later, after she and Hoffman were acquitted, 19-year-old Amy invited supporters to another CIA protest at the agencys headquarters in Virginia.

Kendall chronicled in his book: Everyone out there should be at Langley, she stated before adding with a smile, Tell your parents to come. This was a knowing reference to her famous father, Kendall says.

Carter fully supported his daughter, Kendall says, and the same is also true of former President Gerald Ford. Two days after Ford was inaugurated in 1974, his eldest son Michael then a graduate student at the Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary told the Associated Press that recently-resigned President Richard Nixon should make a total confession of what was his role in Watergate.

Ford, who went on to pardon Nixon, said a month after Michaels comments that All my children have spoken for themselves since they first learned to speak, and not always with my advance approval. I expect that to continue.

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Malia Obama at pipeline event: Do former 'First Kids' normally attend protests? - Christian Science Monitor

Trump’s facile claim that his refugee policy is similar to Obama’s in 2011 – Washington Post

President Trump signed an executive order halting all refugees from entering the U.S. for 120 days, among other provisions. Here's what the order says. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)

My policy is similar to what President Obama did in 2011 when he banned visas for refugees from Iraq for six months. President Trump, statement on executive order, Jan. 29, 2017

In justifying his controversial executive order halting travelers from seven majority-Muslim countries, President Trump claimed that President Barack Obama did the same thing in 2011. But the comparison is a bitfacile.

Heres what happened in 2011.

The only news report that we could find that referred to a six-month ban was a 2013 ABC News article that included this line: As a result of the Kentucky case, the State Department stopped processing Iraq refugees for six months in 2011, federal officials told ABC News even for many who had heroically helped U.S. forces as interpreters and intelligence assets.

The Kentucky case refers to two Iraqis in Kentucky who in May, 2011 were arrested and faced federal terrorism charges after officials discovered from an informant that Waad Ramadan Alwan, before he had been granted asylum in the United States, had constructed improvised roadside bombs in Iraq. The FBI, after examining fragments from thousands of bomb parts, found Alwans fingerprints on a cordless phone that had been wired to detonate an improvised bomb in 2005.

The arrests caused in uproar in Congress and the Obama administration pledged to re-examine the records of 58,000 Iraqis who had been settled in the United States. The administration also imposed new, more extensive background checks on Iraqi refugees. Media reports at the time focused on how the new screening procedures had delayed visa approvals, even as the United States was preparing to end its involvement in the Iraq war.

The enhanced screening procedures have caused a logjam in regular visa admissions from Iraq, even for those who risked their lives to aid American troops and who now fear reprisals as the Obama administration winds down the U.S. military presence, the Baltimore Sun reported.

The Los Angeles Times reported that U.S. official acknowledged delays, but were trying to speed up the process:

A U.S. Embassy official in Baghdad, speaking on condition he not be identified, acknowledged unfortunate delays in issuing special visas, the result of enhanced security clearance procedures, some instituted after the Kentucky arrests. But he said recent changes would speed the process. The State Departments National Visa Center has been ordered to flag special visa applications for expedited action, the official said. And a requirement that Iraqi applicants provide an original signature on certain forms sent to the U.S. has been dropped after Iraqis complained of logistical difficulties. We are making changes, ordered at the very highest levels, that will help shave time off the application process, the official said.

At a September, 2011 congressional hearing, Sen. Susan Collins asked Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano if there had been a hold placed on Iraqi visa applications.

COLLINS: So my question is, is there a hold on that population until they can be more stringently vetted to ensure that were not letting into this country, people who would do us harm?

NAPOLITANO: Yep. Let me, if I might, answer your question two parts. First part, with respect to the 56, 57,000 who were resettled pursuant to the original resettlement program, they have all been revetted against all of the DHS databases, all of the NCTC [National Counter Terrorism Center] databases and the Department of Defenses biometric databases and so that work has not been done and focused.

COLLINS: Thats completed?

NAPOLITANO: That is completed. Moving forward, no one will be resettled without going through the same sort of vet. Now I dont know if that equates to a hold, as you say, but I can say that having done the already resettled population moving forward, they will all be reviewed against those kinds of databases.

The new rules were stringent, The Economist reported, and it resulted in some turmoil.

Immigration authorities soon began rechecking all Iraqi refugees in America, reportedly comparing fingerprints and other records with military and intelligence documents in dusty archives. About 1,000 soon-to-be immigrants in Iraq were told that they would not be allowed to board flights already booked. Some were removed from planes. Thousands more Iraqi applicants had to restart the immigration process, because their security clearances expired when the program stalled. Men must now pass five separate checks, women four, and children three.

State Department records show there was a significant drop in refugee arrivals from Iraq in 2011. There were 18,251 in 2010, 6,339 in 2011 and 16,369 in 2012.But its unclear that equates to an actual six-month pause in visa processing, rather than a dramatic slowdown in approvals as new rules were put in place. One news report said pace of visa approvals having slowed to a crawl, indicating some were still being approved.

The Pinocchio Test

So whats the difference with Trumps action?

First, Obama responded to an actual threatthe discovery that two Iraqi refugees has been implicated in bomb-making in Iraq that had targeted U.S. troops. (Iraq, after all, had been a war zone.) Under congressional pressure, officials decided to reexamine all previous refugees and also impose new screening procedures, which led to a slowdown in processing new applications. Trump, by contrast, issued his executive order without any known triggering threat.

Second, Obama did not announcethere was a ban on visa applications. In fact, as seen in Napolitanos answer to Collins, administration officials danced around that question. There was certainly a lot of news reporting that visa applications had been slowed to a trickle. But the Obama administration never said it was their policy to halt all applications. Even so, the delaysdid not go unnoticed, so there was a lot of critical news reporting at the time about the angst of Iraqis waiting for approval.

Third, Obamas policy did not prevent all citizens of that country, including green-card holders, from traveling the United States. Trumps policy is much more sweeping, though officials have appeared to pull back from barring permanent U.S. residents.

We have sought comment from the White House and also from Obama administration officials and so may update this if more information becomes available. But so far this is worthy of at least Two Pinocchios.

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"My policy is similar to what President Obama did in 2011 when he banned visas for refugees from Iraq for six months.

in a statement

Sunday, January 29, 2017

-01/-29/2017

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Trump's facile claim that his refugee policy is similar to Obama's in 2011 - Washington Post

Trump, like Obama, signs flurry of first week executive actions – The Hill

President Trump's first week in office has been marked by a series of significant executive actions as he looks to start in on some of his key priorities.

Presidents have a handful of tools to push through policy without waiting on Congressincluding executive orders and the less formal process of presidential memoranda. Both allow the president to direct executive agencies on how he wants them to enforce existing law.

Trumps pace ofsix orders and eight memoranda in his first seven daysputs him roughly on pace with former President Barack ObamaBarack ObamaTrump, like Obama, signs flurry of first week executive actions Ex-Defense secretary: Trump's changes to security council a 'big mistake' De Blasio: Trump's immigration order 'un-American' MOREs first week in office. But Trump and Obama both dwarfed other recent presidents in their use of executive actions early in their term.

Donald TrumpDonald Trump'60 Minutes' changes lineup to re-broadcast Syrian refugee piece Trump, like Obama, signs flurry of first week executive actions Feinstein to introduce two bills in response to Trump's ban MORE 5 Executive Orders, 9 Presidential Memoranda

Trump used executive actions during his first week in the White House tostart fulfilling campaign promises.

Trumps first moves were lifted right from his presidential bid: an order calling for agencies to minimize the burden of ObamaCare ahead of the impending repeal, along with a memorandum freezing all new government regulations.

On Monday, Trump withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and announced a federal hiring freeze.

The same day, he announced theinstitution of an expanded version of the Mexico City policy, a Reagan-era rule suspended by Democratic presidents that forbids federal money fromgoing to foreign nonprofits that receive perform or support abortions outside of America.

Remember this one, since every president has changed Americas stance on this anti-abortion policy when their party retakes the White House.

Later this week, Trump instituted measures dealing with pipelines and manufacturing: ordering pipelines to use as much American-made material as possible, reauthorizing the Dakota Access and Keystone Pipelines and calling for expedited reviews for companies looking to build new factories.

Trumps next twoexecutive ordersdealt withothermajor campaign promisesstarting the construction of a wall on the Mexican border and anotherthat laid out policies on deportations.

He closed out his first week with twoFridayactions. One order banned immigration from Syria while pausing all refugee admissions while a memorandum called for a rebuilding of the military.

Barack Obama6 Executive Orders, 9 Presidential Memoranda

Obamasignedseveral executive actions in his first seven days, a departure from the slower first-week paces of presidents immediately before him.

Those actions mostly centered on a few major themesincreasing transparency, softening detention policies and promoting a more liberal environmental policy. All of these matched with key Obama campaign planks.

Obama laid out an ethics plan that instituted lobbyist gift bans and placed limits on lobbyists entering government or appointees leaving it. He also issued a broad memo calling for government transparency, greased the wheels for more disclosures of presidential recordsby repealing a more restrictive George W. Bush order,and called on agencies to adopt a presumption in favor of disclosure for Freedom of Information Act requests.

Obama also called for reviews of detention policies,orderedthe closure of the Guantanamo Bay detention center and ended the use of enhanced interrogation techniques like waterboarding.

On energy, Obama issued threeenvironmental orders. They includedincreasingfuel economy standards and granting California a waiver to enact tougher emission restrictions.

Obama signed three other ordersone reversing the Mexico City Policyin favor of abortion rights, one freezing senior executive branch pay and a third that allocated funding for Palestinian refugees.

George W. Bush0 Executive Orders, 2 Presidential Memoranda

Bush is the only one of the last five presidents not to issue any executive orders in his first week in officehis first executive orders came on his ninth day in office, creating the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

But both of the memoranda Bush signed in his first week in office were substantial. The first reinstated the Mexico City policy, while a second limited executive branch hiring.

Bill ClintonBill ClintonTrump, like Obama, signs flurry of first week executive actions Chelsea Clinton attends NYC protest against Trump immigration ban Trump brings his campaign tactics to the White House MORE2 Executive Orders, 6 Presidential Memoranda

Clinton got to work quicklywhen he took office after12 years of Republican control of the White House, removing social policies favored by Christian conservatives.

Five of Clintons six earliest memoranda dealt with social issues in some form.

He lifted the ban on fetal tissue research, removed the Title X gag rule that barred federally funded clinics from providing information on abortions, allowed military hospitals to perform abortions as long as no Defense Department funds were used and eased restrictions on the medical abortion drug RU-486.

He also rescinded the Mexico City policy, beginning thefirst-weektug-of-war over the policy.

His other orders include an ethics pledge, the creation of the National Economic Council and a regulatory review.

George H.W. Bush1 Executive Order, 0 Presidential Memoranda

Coming off of two terms of serving as President Ronald Reagans vice president, the elder Bush didnt find too much in the executive branch that he felt he needed to fix immediately.

Bush issued no presidential memoranda during his first seven days, according to theAmerican Presidency Project, and only signed one executive order on ethics reform.

That order created the Presidents Commission on Federal Ethics Law Reform, which was tasked with making a report about potential reforms to help ensure full public confidence in the integrity of all Federal public officials and employees.

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Trump, like Obama, signs flurry of first week executive actions - The Hill