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<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/"><img src="http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/misc/nytlogo153x23.gif" alt="The New York Times" align="left" hspace="0" vspace="0" border="0"></a></div><br></div>
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<div class="timestamp">April 8, 2012</div>
<h1>Taking Credit Where None Is Due</h1>
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As Friday’s jobless numbers showed, the economic recovery has been listless and fragile, but <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/image/april_jobs_numbers.jpg">its upward trajectory</a>
has been clear enough that Republicans have been forced to acknowledge
it. To avoid giving President Obama the slightest bit of credit for the
improvement, however, they have come up with increasingly convoluted
explanations that have little relationship to reality. </p>
<p>
Mitt Romney, for instance, has said that the American people revived the
economy while Mr. Obama made it worse. And last month he said it was
President George W. Bush, not Mr. Obama, <a title="Buzzfeed report" href="http://www.buzzfeed.com/zekejmiller/romney-raises-the-bank-bailout">who saved the economy</a>
by bailing out the financial firms that caused the recession on his
watch. He seems to have trouble sticking to one nonsensical explanation
at a time. </p>
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The prize for the most ridiculous spin, however, has to go to a group of
freshman House Republicans who say that they are the ones who lowered
the unemployment rate and began to restore stability. “If anybody’s
going to get a pat on the back for [lower] unemployment and the better
economy, it’s House Republicans,” Jeff Landry, a freshman from
Louisiana, <a title="The Hill report" href="http://thehill.com/homenews/house/218305-cast-blame-or-take-credit-boehner-pressed-to-switch">told The Hill</a> recently. </p>
<p>
Bear in mind that House Republicans opposed the stimulus bill, which did
more than any other piece of legislation to reduce joblessness. Many
continue to denounce the government bailout of the auto industry, which
has restored it to strength and is responsible for saving more than a
million jobs. And they oppose the very regulations designed to keep a
similar recession from recurring. </p>
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Recall, as well, that this group of antigovernment lawmakers also
created a debt-ceiling crisis that nearly drove the federal government
into a ruinous default. They tried to kill the payroll tax cut for the
middle class. And they succeeded in many of their demands for big cuts
in spending on domestic programs, state aid and unemployment insurance
that are siphoning fuel from the nation’s engine. </p>
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House Republicans haven’t been responsible for a single bill that has
had a positive impact on the economy. But they want to take credit for
the recovery, arguing that they stopped the Democrats from taking
actions like raising taxes on the very rich. “In many ways our greatest
success is the things we’ve stopped,” said David Schweikert, an Arizona
freshman. </p>
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The public is unlikely to be persuaded by these absurd boasts. It’s hard
to see how these lawmakers will explain to voters that they are
responsible for a recovery they have worked so hard to block. </p>
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<br>-- <br>Art Deco (Wayne A. Fox)<br><a href="mailto:art.deco.studios@gmail.com" target="_blank">art.deco.studios@gmail.com</a><br>