"Nagging insecurity amid prosperity is the emerging economic theme of the 2004 campaign," proclaims the Wall Street Journal's front page today in a lengthy analysis of the economy, with fresh polling data, that bodes ill for the Bushies.
(I know most people don't subscribe to the WSJ and can't read it on line, unfortunately. DUers may not understand that the bad part of the paper is the limited to the cretinous Editorial page, but there's an "iron curtain" between that and the rest of the paper, which is perhaps the best in the world. The WSJ has consistently posted more stories critical of the Bushies than any other US paper--especially during the pre-Howard Dean period of rampant media intimidation.)
Here's the link, if you are a subscriber:
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/0,,SB107930266951654845-IRjfoNolaR3n5ysaXqHbaqJm4,00.htmlHere are some nuggets from this story which are very hopeful for our side:
The feeling of insecurity is especially intense -- and especially politically significant -- in the 200-mile band stretching from Western Pennsylvania to Eastern Ohio, cleaved by West Virginia's northern panhandle incorporating Weirton. Mr. Bush won West Virginia narrowly in the 2000 election and carried Ohio with just 49.97% of the vote. Former Vice President Al Gore took Pennsylvania, with 50.6% of that state's vote. All three states are considered up for grabs this time around. Their combined 46 electoral votes make up one-sixth of the total needed to win the election
In Pennsylvania as a whole, the unemployment rate is now 5.3%, compared with 5.9% a year earlier and 5.6% for the country. Ohio still struggles the most of the three states, with its jobless rate stuck persistently at 6.2%, up a notch from 6% a year earlier. But, as Mr. Bush noted in his latest appearance there, the state's downturn has been eased by foreign investment, such as Honda Motor Co.'s factories employing 15,600 workers.
But during the three years of the Bush administration, the twin forces of globalization and productivity have helped kill tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs -- particularly steel jobs -- that long defined this area. However bright the economic future may be otherwise for these states, those jobs are likely gone forever.One thing missed in the story is the growing gap between the published unemployment numbers and the actual number of unemployed--which includes millions who have given up searching for a job. The true unemployment rate is closer to 7.7% than the published 5.2%.