David Stockman, formerly a leading conservative Reaganite, now blames
some of the economic program that he once supported for the 2008
meltdown and sluggish recovery. But liberal Democrats who may be excited
about a Stockman defection will be sorely disappointed:
His critique of the Obama economic program is just as strong as what he
says about his erstwhile friends in the Republican Party.
With his new book, The Great Deformation,
published today, Stockman positions himself as a whistleblower of the
highest order, offering a scathing appraisal of what's happening in
Washington. His history gives the story an unusual perspective. In the
late 1970s, as a young Republican congressman from Michigan, Stockman
was in a group of politicians, economists, and journalists who
championed supply-side economics -- the theory that cutting taxes will
lead to an economic boom. Ronald Reagan embraced the theory in his 1980
campaign for the presidency, landing Stockman a spot in Reagan's inner
circle of advisers. After Reagan won, he appointed the then-34-year-old
Stockman to one of the most influential positions in Washington:
director of the Office of Management and Budget. From that position,
Stockman led Reagan's economic program for the next several years.
Stockman became an object of controversy in part to the remarkable cover story in the December 1981 issue of The Atlantic,
a behind-the-scenes look at the making of budget policy in the capital.
"None of us really understands what's going on with all these numbers,"
Stockman told author William Greider. (more)
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