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Never Let a Crisis Go to WastePosted on Feb 2, 2009By E.J. Dionne The coming week will test the strength of President Obama and the Democrats: Will they lose their nerve, or will they face down a rapidly forming conventional wisdom that will allow them to claim “victory” only if their economic stimulus package passes with substantial Republican support? Up to now, Obama has handled his own public image with the same dexterity he showed in the campaign. His outreach to Republicans is popular because a streak of anti-partisanship has run through the American soul since the founding of the republic. From the time he announced his candidacy, Obama has broadened his appeal by speaking to this mistrust of parties. The president’s quest for a new tone in Washington also has a practical motive. He believes that economic recovery is about psychology as well as money and that Americans will have more confidence in the future if they see the nation’s politicians cooperating to resolve the crisis. This may be true, but it creates a problem. If achieving bipartisanship takes priority over the actual content of policy, then Republicans are handed a powerful weapon. In theory, they can keep moving the bipartisan bar indefinitely. And each concession to their sensibilities threatens solidarity in the president’s own camp. That’s why last week’s unanimous House Republican opposition to the stimulus plan was so important. For the most part, the Republicans escaped attack for rank partisanship. Instead, what should have been hailed as an administration victory was cast in large parts of the media as a kind of defeat: Obama had placed a heavy emphasis on bipartisanship and he failed to achieve it. Advertisement Obama prides himself on playing the long game and in refusing to be distracted by political chatter. He has been known to observe that it is he, and not those who criticized him for insufficient toughness, who is seated in the Oval Office. Moreover, the Senate should, in principle, be less partisan than the House, partly because 10 Republican senators represent states that Obama carried last year. Surely they will be more accommodating than House Republicans whose constituencies are more homogeneously conservative. The administration’s assumption is that the Senate will make modest changes in the bill—adding a few tax cuts and shaving some spending to appease Republicans—and that the package will arrive on the president’s desk having received enough cross-party support to carry that treasured bipartisan label. This process could have the ironic effect of making the package even bigger to include extra tax cuts and additional infrastructure spending that might appease various Republican senators. The GOP may be rhetorically anti-government, but its politicians still love to deliver roads, bridges and water projects. That might be an acceptable outcome for the White House, since there is a strong strain of economic opinion that sees the current stimulus, large as it is, as being still too small to give the economy the jolt it needs. The real test is whether Obama is willing to fight for a stimulus bill that achieves some of his larger objectives. The aspects of the House bill that Republicans and conservative commentators have so eviscerated are the very parts that take substantial steps toward implementing the president’s own priorities. Obama placed a heavy bet during his campaign on a promise to reform the heath care system. To the great consternation of conservatives, the House stimulus bill takes big steps toward broadening the number of Americans government would help to obtain health insurance. Will those provisions be protected in the final bill? The president has spoken passionately about the inadequacy of our schools and the increasing difficulty young Americans are having in affording higher education. The House stimulus bill includes a lot of education money. Will students be thrown over the side in pursuit of a nebulous cross-party comity? No doubt our supremely calm president is certain that in the end, all will be well. But Rahm Emanuel, his spirited chief of staff, had it right: “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.” Just how high a price is Obama willing to pay for a handful of Republican votes? © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
Copyright © 2009 Truthdig, L.L.C. All rights reserved. |
By The Old Hooligan, February 5 at 11:02 am #
The Republican ass-kissing needs to stop before it starts. When President Obama had the Repoublicans up to the White House for dinner and drinks in hopes of securing their support for Bipartisan passage of the Stimulus Bill, what happened?
Not one member of the Republicans stood and voted with the President when the time came. They didn’t mind eating his food and drinking his booze, but show any hint of Bipartisanship when the chips were down? Nope.
Now Republican Governors are telling Republican Congressmen (and women) to knock off the crap and get with the guy. And my favorite bit concerns Sarah Palin, she who couldn’t open her mouth last Fall without trying to paint Barack Obama (in so many words) as a “Terrorist Sympathizer,” simply because his middle name happens to be Hussein. She may hate his Biracial guts, but she knows the guy “gives good bailout.”
I wonder what Governor Palin would say if she found out that Jesus’ middle name was Hussein? All my life the Old Man would get pissed off and holler “Jesus H. Christ” at the top of his lungs. What if that was what the “H” stood for? Something tells me that Ms. Palin would suck up to Satan himself if there was money to be made off the deal.
Report thisBy AmiBlue, February 4 at 3:39 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
The president needs to get his own blue dogs in line, pass needed legislation, and then let the repubs stew in their own juice. Surely, he has learned to go after what is achievable, and bipartisan ship with repubs is not achievable.
Report thisBy Sam, February 3 at 12:27 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
Personally, I agree with the new RNC Chairman Steele: Bipartisanship really is overrated. If the Republicans want a battle over the economy, give it to them. Afterall they done SUCH a good job over the past eight years.
Report thisBy Georges Marciano, February 2 at 8:18 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
Georges Marciano who has been begging the IRS to audit him for over three years states that he owes IRS in the millions .....yes I said millions. I have emailed the IRS, we have sent letters. He has received a refund check from them and at the same time they sent him a letter stating he never filed? Georges has sent all the documents to the IRS, FBI, Los Angeles Sherriffs department, Beverly Hills police department and yet nothing….they have not even assigned anyone to the case….
http://irstaxneverfiled.wordpress.com/ on this site it shows the absolutely rediculous documents from the IRS . The question is why do they make such a big deal over Daschle and Geithner and their taxes and yet the Georges Marciano who actually wants to pay his taxes they are ignoring?
Report thisBy Spiritgirl, February 2 at 5:31 pm #
The Grand Ole Party is proving not just how out-of-step and entrenched they are, but, how to make themselves irrelevant! Far from demonstrating a willingness to be bi-partisan, the Republicans continued insistence on tax cuts (again to wealthy businesses & the rich), and much less government spending - is proof that not only have they no ideas to contribute, but that they are wedded to an ideology that has continuously failed this nation and put us right smack in the mess this country is in economically!!
Report thisBy Thomas Mc, February 2 at 4:32 pm #
Obama tried the carrot, now he should try the stick. Remove absolutely anything from the bill the Republicans might like, and pass it without them. Show them that if they want partisanship, they will be the ultimate losers.
Report thisBy ProgCat, February 2 at 2:52 pm #
It boils down simply to this: A successful President Obama and Democratic controlled Congress constitutes the end of GOP power. They don’t care what the American people want or need. This is about hanging on to their congressional seats and power.
It is in the GOP’s interest to obstruct every and anything President Obama puts forward and to weaken bills so much that they would fail helping solve the problem.
If I can see this, I’m sure President Obama can too. I will be watching this power-struggle with great interest.
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