Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama promises change, but if he’s elected in the current uncertain economy, those changes may come later rather than sooner, the Wall Street Journal reports. Obama’s big economic priorities–government-sponsored health care for millions, greenhouse-gas reductions, and tax increases—leave the government with a tab in the hundreds of billions and face opposition, even within his own party.
Some analysts say emissions legislation would be the easiest priority to pursue, but suffering businesses would oppose the increased cost. Extending health coverage to millions would be capital-intensive, both economically (estimated $115 billion yearly) and politically, and raising taxes is rarely popular. Other goals that don’t require congressional approval, like naming China a currency manipulator, may take priority until the economy settles. (More Obama administration stories.)