Economy is weak, voters are angry — time for third party?

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“The mood of America is glum. Two-thirds of the public is dissatisfied with the way things are going in the country” and voters’ anti-incumbent mood is approaching 1994 and 2006 levels, when control of Congress changed hands.

So reported the Pew Research Center on Nov. 11, summarizing its latest poll.

I think there’s reason to believe that the public’s anger is even deeper than Pew’s estimate because voters believe — correctly — that “the way things are going” is not getting better.
If so, and with Republicans and Democrats fighting all the time and improving nothing, there’s an opening for a third-party challenge as strong as Ross Perot’s in 1992.

Running against deficits, free trade and the inadequacies of the two major parties, the quirky industrialist led the field with 39 percent of the vote in June 1992, dropping to just 18.9 percent in November because he torpedoed his own campaign.

The likeliest figure to seize upon this opening is populist demagogue (and self-styled “Mr. Independent”) Lou Dobbs, formerly of CNN, so let’s hope a better alternative appears — or the direction of the country improves.

But, right now, the prospects are dismal. My favorite economic guru, David Smick, editor of International Economy magazine, summarized them in a speech last week at the Colony Club of New York, soon to be excerpted in Commentary magazine.

“Americans are worried,” he said, “about a pending national fiscal nightmare that could doom the U.S. economy to slow growth and second-rate status.

“They instinctively sense we may be becoming like Britain after the Second World War, quickly fading in relevance, our currency losing credibility, our industrial and entrepreneurial edge dulled, our people deeply frustrated.”

For one thing, he said, for unemployment to fall from 10.2 percent to 5 percent, the economy would have to produce 250,000 jobs a month for the next five years, whereas the average monthly job growth rate over the past 20 years has been 90,000.

“Reducing unemployment to where it was before the (current) crisis may be impossible,” he said. “So get ready for an American workforce full of long-term anxiety — and anger.”
Smick, once chief of staff to the late Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.) and a 1996 presidential campaign adviser to Democratic Sen. Bill Bradley (N.J.), added that the barely recovering economy is burdened by “a 300-pound backpack of personal and public debt.”

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