Obama enlists Bill Clinton’s aid on economy

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama  sought yesterday to lift sagging confidence in his economic  stewardship by enlisting the help of predecessor Bill Clinton,  as a leading business group issued a scathing critique of the  administration’s policies.

Clinton, who presided over the 1990s economic boom, joined  Obama at a closed-door White House meeting with business  leaders to encourage job creation and investment, including in  clean energy.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a top business group, issued  a rebuke of Obama’s economic agenda, accusing him and his  Democrats in Congress of neglecting job creation and hampering  growth with burdensome regulatory and tax policies.

Four months before the November congressional elections,  Republicans have tried to paint Obama and his Democrats as  anti-business.

Obama is increasingly turning to former President Clinton  to help win over voters and the business community.

Clinton, seen by many in corporate America as sympathetic,  has helped the White House by campaigning for Democratic  candidates running in November’s elections.

And Obama on Tuesday named former Clinton administration  veteran Jack Lew as the White House budget chief to help cut  the huge deficit.

In the hourlong meeting, Obama and Clinton discussed with  the business leaders “a number of different strategies” for job  creation, a White House official said. “They agreed that making  buildings more energy efficient should be a priority as we move  forward with energy-bill discussions.”

In addition to that meeting, Obama also consulted  investment guru Warren Buffett earlier in the Oval Office as he  gathered views on how to boost growth. He ended up having to  loan the billionaire a tie because Buffett’s was frayed.

With unemployment stubbornly high, polls have reinforced  Democrats’ fears of big losses in November.

A survey by The Washington Post-ABC News showed 54 percent  of Americans disapproved of Obama’s leadership on the economy.  In a CBS News poll, only 40 percent of Americans said they  approved of Obama’s handling of the economy.

To counter such perceptions, the administration trumpeted  an analysis from the White House Council of Economic Advisers  that said government funding of clean energy, economic  development, construction projects and other initiatives was  spurring “co-investment” by the private sector.

The report, unveiled by the council’s chairwoman, Christina  Romer, and Vice President Joseph Biden, estimated that Obama’s  $862 billion economic stimulus package had saved or created  roughly 3 million jobs, and was on track to meet its goal of  3.5 million jobs by the end of this year.

Republicans ridiculed the report and said the job-creation  estimates seemed off-base in light of the 9.5 percent  unemployment rate.

“I will, in all honesty, nominate (the report) as a  Pulitzer in fiction, which would be humorous but for 15 million  American workers who face the harsh reality of no jobs,”  Republican Congressman Kevin Brady said at a Capitol Hill  hearing where Romer presented the report.

House of Representatives Republican leader John Boehner  called the estimates “fuzzy math.”
An open letter from the Chamber of Commerce gave Obama  credit for stabilizing the economy after a freefall but said  after that, Obama and the Democrats “took their eyes off the  ball.”

“They neglected America’s number one priority — creating  the more than 20 million jobs we need over the next 10 years  for those who lost their jobs, have left the job market, or  were cut to part-time status — as well as new entrants into  our workforce,” the Chamber said.

“I don’t believe the administration is anti-business,”  Chamber of Commerce president Thomas Donohue told reporters. “I  believe that the administration has a series of views of what  they ought to do about social programs such as healthcare and  environmental issues.”

White House officials said they were surprised by attacks  on Obama’s policies from some corners of the business world.

“The stakes are far too high for us to be working against  one another,” White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and top  Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett said in a letter to the Chamber.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said it was “ironic” the  Chamber was criticizing Obama’s policies towards business,  given corporate profits were up sharply in the United States.

“The Chamber has a different approach to certain issues but  we have different responsibilities,” he told reporters.

The Chamber released its letter to coincide with its “Jobs  for America” summit in Washington on Wednesday.

It declined a White House request to have Jarrett address  the event because, it said, the offer came too late.