The New New Deal: The Hidden Story of Change in the Obama Era
Hi, everyone. I’m Michael Grunwald from TIME Magazine, and Josh has generously invited me to blog this week about my new book, The New New Deal: The Hidden Story of Change in the Obama Era.
It’s the story of President Obama’s $800 billion stimulus bill,
which—wait, don’t click away!—was one of the most important and least
understood pieces of legislation in modern history. The much-mocked
Failed-Stimulus was actually a remarkable success. It was also the
purest distillation of what Obama meant by change. And the story of the
stimulus is the best way to understand the president, his policies, his
approach to politics, his achievements, and his problems marketing those
achievements in a city that’s gone bonkers. It’s also the best way to
understand his enemies; The New New Deal documents how Republican leaders secretly devised their strategy of all-out obstructionism before he even took office.
I’ll be in Tampa for the GOP convention, so I’ll write about the
Republicans tomorrow. Today I’ll give a taste of what I discovered about
the stimulus, because almost everything most Americans think they know
about it is wrong. The bottom line is that the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act is, as Vice President Biden would say, a BFD, both the
short-term Recovery and the long-term Reinvestment. Even though
Washington thinks it’s a joke. Even though the country agrees.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
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