As they prepare for their first debate, Barack Obama and John McCain will be upstaged this week by people who will be out of power in four months–members of the Bush Administration and Congress, many of whom retire voluntarily or otherwise at year’s end.
No matter what the candidates say, our economy will be on the operating table in Washington, with the surgery being performed, if not by quacks but lame-duck politicians, few of whom have shown any aptitude for making life-and-death decisions (see “War, Iraq” and “Children, Health Insurance for”).
With bipartisan urgency, Congress will give Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson power to buy up to $700 billion in distressed mortgage-related assets from private holders.
“I hate the fact that we have to do it, but it’s better than the alternative,” Paulson said in his round of appearances of the Sunday morning talk shows. “This is a humbling, humbling time for the United States of America.”
The alternative would be an unthinkable meltdown of the financial markets that would eventually throw millions of people out of work as well as their homes.
On Meet the Press, New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg admitted that “nobody knows exactly what they should do, but anything is better than nothing. You’ve got to restore the public’s belief and the market’s belief that we will go on. And this is not just an American problem, it’s financial markets around the world that are all interlinked and they’re all collapsing.”