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Robert Reich
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Robert Reich is the nation's 22nd Secretary of Labor and a professor at the University of California at Berkeley. His homepage is www.robertreich.org.

Entries by Robert Reich

Why Obama and the Democrats Shouldn't Negotiate With Extortionists

(141) Comments | Posted September 30, 2013 | 10:10 AM

As a child I was bullied by bigger boys who threatened to beat me up if I didn't give them what they wanted. But every time I gave in to their demands their subsequent demands grew larger. First they wanted the change in my pocket. Next it was the dessert...

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Why Won't Bill O'Reilly Debate Me?

(470) Comments | Posted September 24, 2013 | 10:52 AM

Updated with video (9/25/2013).


Watch the Inequality for All trailer here:


Bill O'Reilly slammed me on his Fox News show Monday night for mentioning, in a New York Times op-ed last weekend, that he has called me a Communist. In that op-ed I referred to his Communist name-calling as an example of the kind of ad hominem incivility that now passes for political debate in America -- of which O'Reilly is a part.

O'Reilly took umbrage that I would even bring it up. Apparently he thinks it's perfectly fine to call me names but offensive for me to criticize him for doing so.

Yet O'Reilly refuses to have me on his show to debate any of this -- either his initial charge I'm a Communist, or his indignation that I mentioned it in last weekend's op-ed. When he first claimed I was a Communist I challenged him to a debate -- a civil debate. He refused. He still refuses. He won't even debate the topic of my op-ed -- the increasing shrillness and divisiveness of Fox News and other media outlets, which are only adding to the vitriol of American politics.

Why won't O'Reilly debate me? What's he afraid of?

Please email him and tell him that instead of talking about me he should have the courage and decency to talk with me directly. His email address is: oreilly@foxnews.com.

ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of Nations." His film, "Inequality for All," will be out in September. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common...

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The House Republicans' Dangerous New Constitutional Doctrine: Repealing Laws by De-Funding Them

(235) Comments | Posted September 23, 2013 | 11:55 AM


Yesterday morning on ABC's "This Week," Newt Gingrich and I debated whether House Republicans in should be able to repeal a law -- in this case, the Affordable Care Act -- by de-funding it. Here's the essence:

GINGRICH: Under our constitutional system, going all the way back to Magna Carta in 1215, the people's house is allowed to say to the king we ain't giving you money.

REICH: Sorry, under our constitutional system you're not allow to risk the entire system of government to get your way.

Had we had more time I would have explained to the former Speaker something he surely already knows: The Affordable Care Act was duly enacted by a majority of both houses of Congress, signed into law by the President, and even upheld by the Supreme Court.

The Constitution of the United States does not allow a majority of the House of Representatives to repeal the law of the land by de-funding it. If that were the case, no law is safe. A majority of the House could get rid of unemployment insurance, federal aid to education, Social Security, Medicare, or any other law they didn't like merely by deciding not to fund them.

I believe the Affordable Care Act will prove to be enormously popular with the American public once it's fully implemented -- which is exactly why the Republicans are so intent on bulldozing it before then. If they were sincere about their objections, they'd let Americans try it out -- and then, if it didn't work, decide to repeal it.

The constitutional process for repealing a law -- such as Congress and President Clinton did with the old Glass-Steagall Act -- is for both houses to enact a new bill that repeals the old, which must then be signed by the President. If the President vetoes it, then the repeal can only go into effect if the veto is overridden by two-thirds of the House and the Senate.

The Republicans who are now running the House of Representatives are pushing a dangerous new constitutional doctrine. They must be stopped. There should be no compromising with fanatics.

ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of Nations." His film, "Inequality for All," will be out in September. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common...

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Why the Upcoming Shutdowns and Defaults Are Symptoms of a Deeper Republican Malady

(846) Comments | Posted September 22, 2013 | 11:06 PM

Congressional Republicans have gone directly from conservatism to fanaticism without any intervening period of sanity.

First, John Boehner, bowing to Republican extremists, ushers a bill through the House that continues to fund the government after September 30 but doesn't fund the Affordable Care Act. Anyone with half a brain...

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The Myth of the 'Free Market' and How to Make the Economy Work for Us

(1741) Comments | Posted September 16, 2013 | 12:05 PM

One of the most deceptive ideas continuously sounded by the Right (and its fathomless think tanks and media outlets) is that the "free market" is natural and inevitable, existing outside and beyond government. So whatever inequality or insecurity it generates is beyond our control. And whatever ways we might seek...

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Happy Birthday Occupy

(318) Comments | Posted September 15, 2013 | 8:16 PM

Two years ago the "Occupy" movement roared into view, summoning the energies and attention of large numbers of people who felt the economic system had got out of whack and were determined to do something about it.

Occupy put the issue of the nation's savage inequality on the front pages,...

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Beware Capitalist Tools

(1376) Comments | Posted September 11, 2013 | 8:57 AM

Forbes Magazine, which calls itself the "capitalist tool," seems to have a penchant for publishing right-wing diatribes posing as serious economic analyses. The latest is by Paul Roderick Gregory, who accuses me of "false facts and false theories" in a recent piece I wrote about why...

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Happy Anniversary Lehman Brothers, and What We Haven't Learned About Wall Street Over the Past Five Years

(290) Comments | Posted September 10, 2013 | 8:29 AM

While attention is focused on Syria, the gambling addiction of Wall Street's biggest banks is more dangerous than ever.

Five years ago this September, Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, and the Street hurtled toward the worst financial crisis in eighty years. Yet the biggest Wall Street banks are far larger now...

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Syria and the Reality at Home in America

(507) Comments | Posted September 7, 2013 | 4:08 PM

While all eyes are on Syria and America's response, the real economy in which most Americans live is sputtering.

More than four years after the recession officially ended, 11.5 million Americans are unemployed, many of them for years. Nearly 4 million have given up looking for work altogether. If they...

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Obama's Political Capital and the Slippery Slope of Syria

(296) Comments | Posted September 5, 2013 | 12:27 PM

Even if the president musters enough votes to strike Syria, at what political cost? Any president has a limited amount of political capital to mobilize support for his agenda, in Congress and, more fundamentally, with the American people. This is especially true of a president in his second term of...

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What Low-Wage Workers Need Most

(652) Comments | Posted August 30, 2013 | 10:46 AM


ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of Nations." His film, "Inequality for All," will be out in September. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common...

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Breakfast With My Mentor

(135) Comments | Posted August 29, 2013 | 10:54 AM

A few days ago I had breakfast with a man who had been one of my mentors in college, who participated in the struggle for civil rights in the 1960s and has devoted much of the rest of his life in pursuit of equal opportunity for minorities, the poor, women,...

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Trimmings for Labor Day

(1274) Comments | Posted August 26, 2013 | 9:12 AM

The good news this Labor Day: Jobs are returning. The bad news this Labor Day: Most of them pay lousy wages and low if non-existent benefits.

The trend toward lousy wages began before the Great Recession. According to a new report from the Economic Policy Institute, weak wage...

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Private Gain to a Few Trumps Public Good for the Many

(327) Comments | Posted August 22, 2013 | 2:53 PM

Congress is in recess, but you'd hardly know it. This has been the most do-nothing, gridlocked Congress in decades. But the recess at least offers a pause in the ongoing partisan fighting that's sure to resume in a few weeks.

It also offers an opportunity to step back and ask...

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The 7 Biggest Economic Lies

(1869) Comments | Posted August 14, 2013 | 12:40 PM


ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of Nations." His film, "Inequality for All," will be out in September. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.

Also on HuffPost:
...

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Why the Anger?

(1888) Comments | Posted August 12, 2013 | 5:06 PM

Why is the nation more bitterly divided today than it's been in 80 years? Why is there more anger, vituperation, and political polarization now than even during Joe McCarthy's anti-communist witch hunts of the 1950s, the tempestuous struggle for civil rights in the 1960s, the divisive Vietnam war, or the...

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The Three Biggest Lies About Why Corporate Taxes Should Be Lowered

(2026) Comments | Posted August 5, 2013 | 3:33 PM

Instead of spending August on the beach, corporate lobbyists are readying arguments for when Congress returns in September about why corporate taxes should be lowered.

But they're lies. You need to know why so you can spread the truth.

Lie #1: U.S. corporate tax rates are higher...

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Why Republicans Want Jobs to Stay Anemic

(1851) Comments | Posted August 4, 2013 | 9:10 AM

Job-growth is sputtering. So why, exactly, do regressive Republicans continue to say "no" to every idea for boosting it -- even last week's almost absurdly modest proposal by President Obama to combine corporate tax cuts with increased spending on roads and other public works?

It can't be because Republicans...

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Why Republicans Are Disciplined and Democrats Aren't

(1309) Comments | Posted July 24, 2013 | 3:22 PM

As we head toward renewed battles over the debt ceiling, sequester, and government funding, it's important to understand why Republicans are disciplined and Democrats aren't.

For the past five years of the Obama administration Republicans have marched in lockstep to oppose just about everything Obama and the Democrats have proposed....

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Detroit, and the Bankruptcy of America's Social Contract

(1177) Comments | Posted July 20, 2013 | 9:02 PM

One way to view Detroit's bankruptcy -- the largest bankruptcy of any American city -- is as a failure of political negotiations over how financial sacrifices should be divided among the city's creditors, city workers, and municipal retirees -- requiring a court to decide instead. It could also be seen...

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