Delaware Liberal

Weekend Open Thread

Welcome to the weekend edition of your open thread. You’ll have to entertain yourselves today, my brother is visiting from Tennessee. We went to run a 10 K in Kennett Square. I did manage to finish, so yay me! Free Radical is now in favor of mountain top removal after the race because in his words “hills are assholes.”

There was a big swing in the generic Congressional ballot from +3 Republicans to +5 Democrats in the last month.

Americans want Democrats to control Congress after this fall’s elections, a shift from April, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll released Saturday. But the margin is thin and there’s a flashing yellow light for incumbents of both parties: Only about a third want their own lawmakers re-elected.

The tenuous 45 percent to 40 percent preference for a Democratic Congress reverses the finding a month ago on the same question: 44 percent for Republicans and 41 percent for Democrats. The new readout came as the economy continued showing signs of improvement and the tumultuous battle over the health care law that President Barack Obama finally signed in March faded into the background.

I hope this change is because of the improving economy and the actions of Congress rather than a statistical aberration. Only time will tell if this is real.

It’s a shame to put this in an open thread because it really deserves its own post:

If the economy produces jobs over the next eight months at the same pace as it did over the past four months, the nation will have created more jobs in 2010 alone than it did over the entire eight years of George W. Bush’s presidency.

I hear the sweet, sweet sounds of wingnut heads exploding.

First, the numbers: From February 2001, Bush’s first full month in office, through January 2009, his last, total U.S. nonfarm employment grew from 132.5 million to 133.5 million, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s an increase, obviously, of just 1 million. From January through April of this year, the economy created 573,000 jobs. Over a full year, that projects to 1.72 million jobs. Job-creation numbers are notoriously volatile, so the actual result could run above or below that estimate. But Obama administration economists are increasingly optimistic that job growth this year will exceed expectations. Few of them will be surprised if more jobs are created in 2010 than over Bush’s two terms.

Democrats have saved the economy.

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