Lessons in Overreach
Posted: March 9, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Barack Obama, Democratic Politics, Domestic Policy, Elections, Federal Budget, Republican presidential politics, right wing hate grouups | Tags: bipartisanship, leadership, partisanship, Washinton Politics | 9 CommentsPoliticians within the beltway seem to live in a world of their own. No place is this more clear than in the results of the
last two elections where voters in desperate need of solutions for big problems have been misunderstood as providing ‘overwhelming mandates’ for the two party’s special interests’ agendas. The 2008 election was a resounding no to the direction the country ushered in by Dubya and his neocons. The 2010 election was a resounding no to the continued mess of partisanship and the passage of bailouts and a health care reform that no one understood. I don’t think voters understood why this issue was put above solving the basic unemployment and recession-based problems. Polls appear to indicate that neither side gets the message these days even though it appears very loud and clear to many of us.
There’s several places that this is really clear. First, the tea party is a prime example. This movement has been a hodgepodge of people looking for ways to send a populist message to the beltway. However, the movement has funding and leadership that’s hell bent on returning the country to the excesses of Robber Baron days. Some of the electorate voted for tea party candidates thinking more on the folksy rhetoric and less of the hardcore John Bircher philosophy championed by movement organizers. Plus, they just wanted some gridlock until they could get their minds around what was going on with a flurry of laws passed that seemed less related to what they asked for than what US bankers and businesses demanded. They wanted jobs. They got bailouts of Detroit and Wall Street and forced into a health care plan that benefited big Pharma and insurance company interests. It seems like the Democratic party just looked at the election numbers, smiled, and went their merry way. Republicans aren’t doing much better since they just looked at the last election numbers, smiled, and went their merry way.
A Bloomberg national poll indicates that the Washington crowd just doesn’t get it. It has to be a deliberate misconnect. You can’t be so wrong so many times. They just don’t want to listen. People don’t like paying taxes that are then used to fund politician’s pet projects and bailouts for big businesses and banks. They don’t mind tax cuts to the middle class but they’re getting tired of footing the bill for the beneficiaries of the nation’s army of lobbyists. The Republicans have missed the mark with their current assaults on collective bargaining and programs that impact just plain folks. Why can’t both parties just shut up and listen for a change?
Americans are sending a message to congressional Republicans: Don’t shut down the federal government or slash spending on popular programs.
Almost 8 in 10 people say Republicans and Democrats should reach a compromise on a plan to reduce the federal budget deficit to keep the government running, a Bloomberg National Poll shows. At the same time, lopsided margins oppose cuts to Medicare, education, environmental protection, medical research and community-renewal programs.
While Americans say it’s important to improve the government’s fiscal situation, among the few deficit-reducing moves they back are cutting foreign aid, pulling U.S. troops out of Afghanistan and Iraq, and repealing the Bush-era tax cuts for households earning more than $250,000 a year.
The results of the March 4-7 poll underscore the hazards confronting Republicans, as well as President Barack Obama and Democrats, as they face a showdown over funding the government and seek a broader deficit-reduction plan.
The rejection of Dubya and cronies in 2008 wasn’t an invitation for further bailouts of fat cats, expansion of unpopular wars and invention of a health care program while current programs have such severe issues. The Republicans need to understand that the ‘shellacking’ in November wasn’t an invitation for a full on assault on Sesame Street, Yellowstone National Park, and women’s ability to have a menstrual cycle without fearing manslaughter charges. Here’s the message.
When given five choices for the most important issue facing the nation, unemployment and jobs ranked first with 43 percent – – down from 50 percent in Bloomberg’s December 2010 poll — with the deficit and spending cited by 29 percent, up from 25 percent. Health care was chosen by 12 percent, the war in Afghanistan by 7 percent, and immigration by 3 percent.
Asked to choose between jobs and the deficit, 56 percent called creating jobs the government’s more important priority now, while 42 percent said cutting spending was.
Why couldn’t we have gotten a decent jobs program and stimulus right off the bat during the first few months of Obama’s term? We’d have been in a much better position politically, economically, and fiscally. Instead, we got a bunch of worthless tax cuts that siphoned money off to investments abroad and just enough money to stem about 2 years of fiscal disaster in the states.
There are two follies that should haunt a few leaders for the rest of their natural born days. Blame goes first to Obama for carving out the health care reform instead of focusing laserlike on job creation. He clearly created a lot of unnecessary strife and tempests in teabots by taking his eye off the job markets. The second heap of guilt goes to Mitch McConnell and his party of no. The Republicans seem intent on pleasing their base and burying the rest of the country in joblessness and despair. Clearly, this is a man that will do anything to regain a Republican White House. This includes taking our country down with the plan.
Some one needs to tell the President that ending bipartisan strife doesn’t mean selling out to other side. That’s what brought us a health care plan that assaults women’s rights and forces every one to pay and play. The Republican strategy of petulance has been paying off big time for them in terms of policy gains. They need to pay for that petulance. Giving into Republican demands is not bipartisanship. The Republican agenda is clear now. The political moves by Republican governors to force their will no matter what is being met resistance by Democratic legislators. Polls are showing that the public is taking the side of these legislators. The President needs to take a page from their playbooks rather than doing his version of bipartisanship (i.e. giving into Republican bullying on things like tax cuts for billionaires). The leadership shown by Democrats in the heartland is being rewarded and is clearly showing the politicians in Washington the type of future the voters want. Now, if we could only get Washington to listen before the presidential campaign silly season begins.
Did you like this post? Please share it with your friends:
- Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Click to share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
- Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
- Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
- Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Click to share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
- Click to share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
- More





Recent Comments