02
May
Robert Reich owns the 86 millionth blog
Lance Knobel notes today that former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich has become, so far as Knobel knows, the first cabinet secretary to start a blog. He’s been at it for slightly less than a month, but he’s got the hang of it already.
The first post I read is headlined “Supply-side Crapola.” Others include “GM and Jon Stewart,” in which he relates an offer from the auto maker to pay him for touting the company’s employee buyout — “I told him I’d say nice things about the deal if I thought the deal was good and I’d condemn it if I thought the deal was bad, and I wouldn’t take a dime.” — “Reasonable Paranoia,” and a brief eulogy for William Sloane Coffin.
Here’s what Reich has to say in his supply side post.
Just about every week now I’ve been appearing on Larry Kudlow’s CNBC TV show, talking about the economy. I rather enjoy it. I debate Steve Moore, from the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal. Larry is a card-carrying unrepentant supply-sider who still believes low taxes lead to faster economic growth, which trickles down to everyone. Unfortunately for Larry, supply-side economics is one of those rare economic theories to have been tried in practice (the Reagan administration was the last full-fledged experiment) and failed miserably. By the end of the Reagan years, the federal budget deficit had ballooned and the only thing that trickled down was debt. The first George Bush was forced, finally, to raise taxes (despite what people may have read on his lips) because the bond markets were in full-scale revolt. By the time I got to Washington at the end of 1992 as head of Clinton’s economic transition team, the U.S. budget deficit was $300 billion a year as far as the eye could see. Alan Greenspan made it quite clear that unless we raised taxes, cut spending, and brought the deficit under control, he and the Fed would keep interest rates high to avoid inflation. The rest is history. Clinton reduced the deficit, Greenspan cut interest rates, and the nation enjoyed the longest and most powerful economic expansion in history, including 22 million net new jobs and wage hikes for almost all Americans.But now little Bush is doing another Ronald Reagan. He has cut taxes, especially on the wealthy. As a result, the deficit has exploded, median wages are stuck in the mud, the Fed is now busy raising rates, and we’ve had the most tepid economic expansion in thirty years. But none of this seems to dampen supply-siders enthusiasm. Every time I’m on the show, Larry claims all is well with the economy and urges Bush to cut taxes even more. I admire anyone who can stick to his guns when the guns are aimed at his foot.
He’s a good writer, a progressive thinker and would make a good role model for a whole raft of today’s Democrats. It’s hard to imagine another cabinet official taking the plunge, and even harder to imagine one who leaves the comments on. Three cheers.

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Reich ran for the governership of Massachusetts in the 2002 election. He never made it out of the primary, evidently for the facts that (a) he wasn’t strongly supported by teh Dem party, (b) he openly supported gay marriage, (c) there was some goofily obvious smear rumour circulating (lied about something when in the Clinton–booga booga!–administration; don’t remember the details), and (d)he sort of looks like a midget version of that pencil-necked EPA prick from Ghostbusters.
I’d just moved up here, and even if I’d registered Democrat, I still couldn’t have voted in teh primary, but I liked the guy. What I remember most clearly about him is that unlike the other candidates, he had ideas, some of them half-baked, and some of them unworkable, but man, he had ideas and he was dying to discuss them seriously. (One of them was mandated health insurance, that has now in fact been adopted by the state.)
The more I think about it, the sadder I am he lost. Even more, I’m sad that he failed to really open up the debate, despite his efforts.
Keifus
May 4th, 2006 at 4:44 amThanks for turning me on to his blog. Like you, he has some interesting ideas. In any event, it beats working.
May 4th, 2006 at 12:08 pmHi, guys. Keifus, I’d forgotten about his run for governor. I know there were some things I didn’t like about his positions at the time, but I’ve now forgotten what they were. Everyone looks so good ten years on. I’m liking the blog a lot.
P_Too, you’re getting beat up on the Hitchens thread. I’d defend you, but I’m afraid they’ll turn on me.
May 4th, 2006 at 2:27 pmWeldon, thanks for the heads-up. However, they were hardly beating up on me. After all, no one called me a liar, cheat, or scoundrel. In any event, you certainly should not be defending me when you disagree with me. I posted a rely on that thread to “defend” myself. Not much of a “defense” really, but then again, I really did not say that much worth defending.
May 5th, 2006 at 7:19 am