http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leo-hindery-jr/not-loyal-opposition-with_b_518264.htmlLet's just say that as the dinner progressed, the mood very quickly shifted from sweet to salty, and by the time we got to dessert it had become downright bitter and sour. Readily and unanimously, these leaders described their disenchantment with the administration's larger jobs policies and how divorced the administration seemed to be from the realities facing workers. And what started all of us off in this direction was when, just as we sat down, one of the Labor leaders shared some numbers from a just-completed poll of his rank-and-file members:
• On representing the interests of working and middle class Americans, President Obama drew approval from only 28% of respondents.
• On having a strong, aggressive jobs program to get people back to work, only 17% rated the President and his administration "excellent or good".
• 64% felt neither party was pushing a strong jobs program to get people back to work.
• Only 40% agreed with the statement that last year's stimulus package had "created or saved millions of jobs", and by a margin of 89% to 10% they outright rejected the notion that the Recession is over, as the administration continues to contend.
This litany of concerns is sadly too familiar to too many American workers and it arises from the facts that: (1) last year's stimulus package, when all is said and done, will have "created or saved" -- mostly just 'saved', whatever that means -- at most 2.5 million jobs, when simply from today forward we still need to create 22 million new jobs in order to be at or near real full employment; (2) formal pronouncements keep coming from the very top of the administration that "the Recession is over" even though fully 30 million Americans are effectively unemployed; (3) Congress just enacted a watered-down $17.5 billion jobs bill when what we still need is an all-of-government industrial policy with hundreds of billions invested over time in infrastructure, a National Infrastructure and Production Base Bank to complement these investments, and jobs programs for the millions of out-of-school unemployed youth; and (4) there has been no action whatsoever on the Employee Free Choice Act (or EFCA), a precise promise made on the campaign trail in 2008 that the White House has now let become a 'dirty phrase' in Washington.