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reminded him of the omission more than once. However dilatory or devious in their own dealings with the taxman, Americans are merciless in their moral posture towards public figures in the same position.

Geithner's appearance is against him, too. Treasury secretaries are supposed to evince gravitas, not resemble just the sort of rumpled 40-something investment banker whose funny-money antics put capitalism on the ropes.

But while Obama's Mr Fixit is only a hair's breadth away from becoming a stock figure on the comedy shows, little of the public derision is rubbing off on his boss. Though the prevailing consensus is that the bail-out and stimulus packages are saddling Americans with a couple of trillion in debt, with a better-than-even chance most of the money will miss its purpose, undermine the dollar and bring on hyperinflation, Barack Obama continues to ride pretty high.

In the president’s opinion, Geithner is ‘making all the right moves’The latest round of polling has his ratings very respectably in the mid-60s, with one spectacular dip into the low 40s, reflecting the public's low opinion of his handling of the AIG bonuses. On that issue, as I suggested here last week, Obama danced on the edge of the volcano and got singed.

Predictably enough Obama has been standing by his man. "I have complete confidence in Tim Geithner and my entire economic team," he said mid-week. In the President's opinion, Geithner "is making all the right moves".

Obama wouldn't be the first president to realise that it does no harm to have public odium pleasantly deflected onto a subordinate. Year after year George Bush watched the mud getting hurled at Karl Rove and Dick Cheney. It was the late great historian Walter Karp who argued that the most politically adept of all presidents, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, conceived his notorious court-packing proposal - up to six new justices on the Supreme Court - to deflect attention from serious difficulties on other fronts.

Franklin D Roosevelt conceived his notorious court-packing proposal to deflect attention from serious difficulties on other fronts
Franklin D Roosevelt

So Geithner gets pelted with mouldy cabbages, while Obama - entirely responsible for the basic economic strategy of bailing out the banks rather than taking them over - charms the nation.

It won't go on forever. If things go badly, the people know perfectly well where the buck stops. There's already a powerful drumbeat of disquiet from Krugman and former assistant Treasury Secretary Paul Craig Roberts on the CounterPunch site that Obama, for all his smoothness, is Hoover-like in his timid orthodoxy.

Back from the political graveyard last week came Eliot Spitzer arguing in a strong column in Slate that Obama's $200bn pay-off to AIG was the real scandal, not the $180m in bonuses.

A few days after writing the column Spitzer was on CNN giving his views. At this point in the former New York governor's unexpected renaissance one of the agents of Spitzer's downfall gave him an untimely nip on the ankle. The madam running the call-girl business patronised by the governor disclosed that another of her clients had been the baseball player New Yorkers love to hate, Alex Rodriguez. Spitzer, A-Rod and Madonna linked hands in a Daily News gossip item. For now, Obama sails smoothly on. 

FIRST POSTED MARCH 27, 2009
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Filed under: Barack Obama, Timothy Geithner, US economy, Bail-out, Credit crunch, Paul Krugman

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For once the skilled politician Obama fails to see the political realities. Every pronouncement from Geitner or edict from the Government on the bailout sends everyone scuttling over to Krugman's web page for the verdict. Geitner has no credibility at all. Obama and his team are the players and Krugman has become the referee.

Posted by hidflect at 4:12am on March 28, 2009

What an awful insult - "..skilled politician..". He sold himself as the Circuit Breaker, the Untrammelled, the Hope and it turns out -wotta surprise!- he's just the (Spare) Change that changes nothing. Look at the time servers & seat warming apparatchiks with whom he' surrounded himself. No Change there. Whomsoever you vote for, the government wins. And, as always, its Comptrollers are the same.

Posted by allan kessing at 12:30pm on March 30, 2009

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