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The End of Shutdowns

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Posted on Apr 11, 2011

By E.J. Dionne, Jr.

One image perfectly captured the absurd, irrational and wholly unnecessary confrontation over whether to shut down the federal government on the basis of differences over a small part of the budget.

During a tea party rally near the Capitol last Wednesday—“rally” being generous for a gathering of a few hundred people—Rep. Mike Pence, the Republican fire-eater from Indiana, declared that if Senate Democrats refused to accept “a modest down payment on fiscal discipline and reform, I say, ‘Shut it down!’ ”

And the crowd erupted, lustily and joyfully: “Shut it down! Shut it down!”

As the shouting persisted, it became clear that the government of the most powerful country in the world was being held hostage by a band of fanatics who (1) represent a very small proportion of our population; (2) hate government so much that they relished the idea of closing its doors, no matter the cost; and (3) have neither respect nor patience for the normal democratic give-and-take between competing parties and points of view.

In no serious country do threats to shut down the government become a routine way of doing business. Yet in our repertoire of dysfunction, we are on the verge of adding shutdown abuse to the abuse of the filibuster in the Senate.

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Republicans, however, were rewarded for going to the brink. Because so many on House Speaker John Boehner’s side were eager for a shutdown and President Obama was so determined to avoid one—and to stay out of the spotlight until the final days—Boehner had the upper hand.

Republicans have won two rounds since December: on tax cuts for the wealthy, and now on spending cuts. At least Obama got some economic stimulus out of last year’s tax deal. The latest agreement is a modest setback to economic growth and, depending on how you want to count, gives Republicans either three-fifths or close to four-fifths of the cuts they sought.

True, the administration and Senate leader Harry Reid pushed Boehner toward more sensible cuts, protected important programs such as Head Start, and beat back the GOP’s proposed policy changes on family planning, the environment and other issues. But notice that these victories were largely defensive. Republicans, with control of just one house of Congress, defined the terms of debate. “Concessions we can believe in” was not the slogan Obama ran on.

At the heart of Obama’s “Win the Future” State of the Union address was an argument that government action is essential in making the United States more competitive and innovative, and in expanding opportunity for Americans who are being left behind. By distancing himself from this round of the budget debate, the president forfeited an opening to challenge the anti-government assumptions embedded in Republican arguments that are shaped far more by the tea party than its numbers in the country (or its falling poll numbers) would justify.

Of both big policy battles since the 2010 elections, Obama insisted that the most important thing was to get them behind us so we could move on to the main act. But when, exactly, will the main act begin? When will he fully engage? When will he challenge the idea that government’s central obligation is to shrink itself?

The vast majority of Americans oppose shutdowns. They do not share the aggressive antagonism toward government that is distorting our politics. Unless Obama gives voice to this sensible sentiment, we will face more episodes like this one. For if government is turned into something evil, no one has an obligation to stewardship of its institutions. Recklessness in pursuit of political victory becomes a virtue. Indifference to those who are served by or work in government becomes a badge of honor.

In those tea party shouts of “Shut it down!” the “it” drips with contempt. We cheer when drug dens or terrorist havens are shut down. There should be no glee over shutting down our government. Threatening the functioning of the public sphere is not an acceptable tactic in a democracy.

For Obama, it is not good enough to cast himself as the school principal scolding competing congressional gangs. He needs the courage to defend the government he leads. He needs to declare that he will no longer bargain with those who use threats to shut the government down or force it to default on its debt as tools of intimidation. We’re all a bit weary of Obama telling everyone to be grown-ups, but this would be the grown-up thing to do.

E.J. Dionne’s email address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com.
   
© 2011, Washington Post Writers Group


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Not One More!'s avatar

By Not One More!, April 13, 2011 at 4:42 pm Link to this comment

We are mice and keep voting for cats to be our rulers. Some mice think the white cats are better, some think that the black cats are better. But in either case, we have fat cats that feed on us mice.

If you think that the solution lies in the hands of the democratic party leadership, then you don’t really understand the question.

If you think that there is a difference between being held 2 inches or 8 inches under water, then continue voting for the democrats.

If you realize they both act parties on behalf of the corporate elite, then there is only one logical thing to do, vote third party, vote none of the above, but vote so that the ‘winning’ party doesn’t receive a ‘majority.’

http://www.NotOneMore.US - take the Pledge for Peace

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By aacme, April 12, 2011 at 8:40 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

@ Felicity and boiled frogs

Of course it was planned. By Ronald Reagan. Why do you think he is such a hero to the right? For “Defeating Communism”? Yeah, sure. It’s called “Starving the Beast”.
Reagan’s budget director, David Stockman, who has apparently had a change of heart, has explained it all.

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By Second Amendment Democrat, April 12, 2011 at 3:09 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I’m not sure why you still continue to think of Obama as a “Democrat,” that he is an agent of Change, or that our best interests factor even remotely into his decision processes. So far he has done NONE of the things he promised, and given the GOP their every wish. Gov. Jesse Ventura warned us, behind the scenes they’re all on the same side. The Republocrats. And there is no legal way out of the end-run that has been pulled.

It is time for a new serious third party that works for Small Business, the working man, Local Production and less corporate presence. Vote out all pols from BOTH parties and wipe the slate clean of the mainline corruption. By the time the flacks have bought the new pols, it’ll be election time again.

And we need a way to vote the Supremes off the island as well. It never occurred to the Founding Fathers that it would only take buying out five people to completely subvert the system. (And that’s only if they don’t already agree with you, Bush Sr. was an expert at planting moles…

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By boiled frogs, April 11, 2011 at 6:06 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

@ felicity

I too believe this situation was planned and that includes the wars we are in. Why else would Rethugs lead by Newt Gingrich in 1995 chant for a balanced budget in 7 years? They wanted a huge war chest - literally - so they could launch their wars of empire in the Mid-East. If we’d had huge deficits as Bush took office most Americans would not have been chanting for war.

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By TDoff, April 11, 2011 at 5:15 pm Link to this comment

When you right, you right, E.J.. Next time, instead of going through the whole facade of the farcical threats and counter-threats, speeches and counter-speeches re: The Shutdown, they should just toss a coin, like the NFL does when they start a game. ‘Heads’ we stay open. ‘Tails’ we close-up shop.

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By felicity, April 11, 2011 at 1:17 pm Link to this comment

Face it, if a country launches and wages two wars and
at the same time cuts taxes, that country is going to
have some serious budget problems. 

I continue to hold the belief that this situation was
planned for - notice how many domestic government
programs are on the chopping block - a situation
Republicans have been planning for for at least 30
years.  What better way to realize their plan than to
starve the government to death and what better way to
do that than wage wars and reduce taxes.  Believe
Republicans when they say they want to reduce the
size of the government.  They mean it.

The War of 1812 was paid for when the federal
government enacted a sales tax.  The Civil War saw
the government enact the first income tax in America
to pay for that on-going war.

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By TDoff, April 11, 2011 at 12:33 pm Link to this comment

As the US has become more and more openly ruled by corporate connivers and financial finaglers, and the legal-lepers and political-putzes they have bribed to do their bidding, the nation has fallen far, adopting the code of these groups, toward becoming an amoral state.

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By SoTexGuy, April 11, 2011 at 8:47 am Link to this comment

Obama will oppose the Republicans when and if doing so will further his
reelection efforts.

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By Brian, April 11, 2011 at 3:43 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Ha!  Don’t hold your breath.  Obama does not believe in
taking a stand for anything if its ‘hard’

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