Sunday, September 23, 2012

Clinton: No magic fix for economy in just one term

Last Updated 10:12 a.m. ET

(CBS News) Former President Bill Clinton offered a strong defense for President Obama's re-election Sunday morning, arguing that no president could have "fully healed" the economy in four years.

"That's why we've got to keep working at it," Mr. Clinton said on "Face the Nation."

The president's efforts, Mr. Clinton argued, have reversed the downward spiral of losing up to 800,000 jobs per month. "His jobs record is better" than the Bush administration's, he said, adding that no president could have "magically" returned the country back to full employment in just one term.

The former president, who is hosting his annual Clinton Global Initiative conference beginning Sunday, said that the Republicans "militant anti-government" approach will not benefit the economy.

There is "no evidence" that Mitt Romney's "militant anti-government approach will work," Mr. Clinton said. He added that President Obama's "balanced" economic proposal of investment, revenue increases and a spending reduction plan is "more likely to produce broad-based prosperity than Romney's."

Mr. Clinton weighed in on the debate over Romney's taxes, saying the latest release of his tax returns don't tell the entire story.

"It'd be interesting to see how the ordinary income years were treated," Mr. Clinton said. "We're not going to be able to see that."

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney released his 2011 tax returns Friday, showing that his tax rate was 14.1 percent on an income of $13,696,951. His taxes showed he earned no salaried income and most of came in the form of capital gains, which are taxed at 15 percent. Romney has ignored calls from vocal Democrats to unveil up to twelve years of his tax returns.

Mr. Clinton connected Romney's tax rate to the larger political debate about the economy, taxes and the deficit.

"I don't think we can get out of this hole if people at that income level only pay 13 or 14 percent," he added.

As for the president's chances at re-election, Mr. Clinton said he thinks Mr. Obama is winning, but cautioned that the Republican "financial advantage" because of the Republican super PACs "will outspend" the president two-and-a-half to one.

He said this is the first time the national polls are closer than the polls in the swing states because the president has limited money and most concentrate his resources in a small number of key states.

Mr. Clinton also said that he thinks a second term for Mr. Obama will be productive despite bitter partisanship in Congress, because after the elections "the incentives for gridlock will go way down and the incentives for action will go way up."

"Something has to change," Mr. Clinton said about Congress.

He added that the "fiscal cliff" - a series of tax increases and budget cuts set to go into effect on January 1 - is doing to Congress exactly what it was meant to do: "Force them to concentrate."

In response to a question by host Bob Schieffer on whether his wife, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, is contemplating a run for president in 2016, Mr. Clinton said, "I have no earthly idea."

"She's an extraordinary able person," he said, adding that "she's tired"