Why has job creation  in America slowed to a crawl? Why, after several months of economic  hope, are things suddenly turning sour? The culprits might seem obvious –  uncertainty in Europe, an uneven economic recovery, fiscal and monetary  policymakers immobilized and incapable of acting. But increasingly,  Democrats are making the argument that the real culprit for the  country's economic woes lies in a more discrete location: with the  Republican Party.
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Beyond McConnell's words ("The single most important thing we want to  achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president."), though,  there is circumstantial evidence to make the case. Republicans have  opposed a lion's share of stimulus measures that once they supported,  such as a payroll tax break, which they grudgingly embraced earlier this  year. Even unemployment insurance, a relatively uncontroversial tool  for helping those in an economic downturn, has been consistently held up  by Republicans or used as a bargaining chip for more tax cuts. Ten  years ago, prominent conservatives were loudly making the case for  fiscal stimulus to get the economy going; today, they treat such ideas  like they're the plague.
Traditionally, during economic recessions, Republicans have been  supportive of loose monetary policy. Not this time. Rather, Republicans  have upbraided Ben Bernanke, head of the Federal Reserve, for even  considering policies that focus on growing the economy and creating  jobs.
And then, there is the fact that since the original stimulus bill passed  in February of 2009, Republicans have made practically no effort to  draft comprehensive job creation legislation. Instead, they continue to  pursue austerity policies, which reams of historical data suggest harms  economic recovery and does little to create jobs. In fact, since taking  control of the House of Representatives in 2011, Republicans have  proposed hardly a single major jobs bill that didn't revolve, in some  way, around their one-stop solution for all the nation's economic  problems: more tax cuts.