Posted on 11/24/2012 5:57:42 AM PST by Libloather
Reid faces task of mending fences with GOP after campaign attacks
By Alexander Bolton - 11/24/12 06:00 AM ET
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) infuriated Republicans during the campaign with his harsh partisan attacks and now faces the delicate task of mending his relationship with the GOP.
Some Republicans say Reid poisoned his relationship with their party by waging controversial attacks against GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney. They were most angered by Reids charge that Romney had not paid taxes in ten years, attributing the information to an anonymous source.
"I do think he lost more credibility with Republicans because of his aggressive comments during the campaign, said Ron Bonjean, a Republican strategist and former leadership aide who served in the Senate and House.
The make-up of the Senate is almost the same and I think Sen. Reid is likely to produce the same type of gridlock he did before because of his unusually partisan stance," Bonjean added.
Reid said Romney, a fellow Mormon, sullied their shared faith after the GOP nominee told a group of donors that 47 percent of Americans suffered from a sense of victimhood and mooched off the government. Reid declared in the closing days of the campaign that Senate Democrats would not work with Romney to pass his severely conservative agenda.
But sources who know the Democratic leader, a former amateur boxer, say its a classic case of Reid being Reid. He punches hard during the campaign but is willing to pivot to constructive bipartisan relationships after Election Day, just as fighter is willing to embrace his opponent after the final bell.
Sen. Reid knows as well as anyone theres a time for politics and a time for governing, said Rodell Mollineau, a former senior aide to Reid. The time for politics has passed. First and foremost, Sen. Reid cares about governing. So now that the election is over, he would want to find a consensus to move things forward.
Reid immediately extended a peace offering to Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) after Democrats picked up Senate seats.
I look at the challenges that we have ahead of us and I reach out to my Republican colleagues in the Senate and the House. Lets come together. We know what the issues are, lets solve them, he told a boisterous audience and stand of television cameras packing the ballroom of the Liaison Capitol Hill Hotel on Election Night.
The following day, Reid reiterated his offer and made an overture to his home-state colleague, Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.), another target of his campaign barbs. During Hellers race against Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-Nev.), Reid accused his colleague of a failure in leadership for not rounding up GOP votes for an online poker bill.
Heller said during the campaign he often felt like he was running against Berkley and Reid, who mobilized his state network against the Republican.
The day after the election, however, Reid warmly praised Heller as a longtime friend.
Dean Heller and I have been friends for 25 years, Reid said, recalling Hellers role as Nevada secretary of state when Reid almost lost his seat in 1998 in a race decided by a recount. He was so helpful. I have affection for Dean Heller. I like him a lot. Well be able to work together.
Reid also formed a non-aggression pact with former Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.), who almost defeated him in 1998, after Ensign won election to the Senate. Their staffs used to hold joint holiday receptions in the Mansfield Room.
Reid said he had a pleasant conversation with Boehner after Election Day.
I have a fine relationship with him. My staff works well with his staff, he said.
The relationship was much less cordial before the election, especially in 2011, when Reid criticized Boehner for threatening to let the debt ceiling expire and letting the House take a weekend off as their negotiations neared a climax.
Former Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), who served 18 years with Reid in the Senate, predicted Reids partisan rhetoric would not damage negotiations with Republicans on avoiding the "fiscal cliff."
"Not at all," Gregg said. "We have what I call a once-every-four-year period where the music stops and everyone has their portfolio of power. Governing comes first and politics comes second. The window lasts for about eight months. All the payers involved played aggressively in political roles. They have to change hats and govern. Harry Reid is very capable of doing that."
Reids colleague, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who has been at the forefront of efforts to reach a bipartisan agreement on tax reform, also said he is not concerned.
Sen. Reid has a long history of negotiating these agreements. Elections are in effect renewals. Gov. Romney didnt win the election so hes not at the table, Wyden said.
One GOP strategist said the pressure to get a deficit-reduction deal is too high to let bitter feelings left over from the campaign get in the way. Memories of Reids harsh attacks could complicate progress on other issues.
When theres less pressure to get a deal done, some of the stuff he pulled on the campaign trail against Romney could come back to haunt him, said Republican strategist Ford OConnell. Somewhere down the line Republicans may pick a time to get even with Harry Reid because he went off the reservation on some of that stuff. In politics, what goes around comes around.
A senior Democratic aide, however, said it would be foolish for Republicans to contemplate retaliation.
Reid has outflanked and outsmarted Republicans again and again - they simply can't figure out how to beat him. But at the end of the day, he is and has always been a dealmaker, the aide said. Republicans would be wise to stop playing Lucy with the football, give up on trying to beat him, and instead seek to work with him to get the best deal possible.
“...and now faces the delicate task of mending his relationship with the GOP.”
Does anyone really thinks he ‘shives-a-git’?
Tell Reid: GFY.
Nah, he’d enjoy that.
LOL!!
Is there any wonder why this nation is in the state it's in?
What a bunch of codswallop.
Never happen. Seeing themselves as "gentlemen" and "above the fray", the Republican leadership (and many if not most in the Senate caucus) will want to "get along" and "get things done" with the Democrat Socialists.
Yet another reminder of the validity of the alternate name for the Republican Party -- i.e., the "Stupid Party".
Let me tell you this story.
Charles Lollar ran for Steny Hoyers seat in 2010 he was a man running much as Allen West. A brilliant black man, Conservative, Well spoken, he beat Steny in every debate they had, I worked hard to get him elected, but his fellow blacks in Northern Charles County and Prince George’s County were too used to Steny’s entitlements ,and he was beaten.
This year we had Mr. O’Donnell run for Steny’s seat. Mr. O’Donnell worked hard, but the odds were stacked against him. Mr. O’Donnell was well qualifies as he had served as a State representative for many years and was head of the Minority in the State legislature.
Mr. Lollar was asked to help Mr. O’Donnell , but he did not.
Now Charles Lollar is thinking of running for Governor, and because of his refusal to help O’Donnell I am having a hard time making up my mind whether or not to back Mr. Lollar.
I like Mr. West a lot, a helluva lot, but let’s wait and see what he does in the next two years to help Republcans before we reach an ironclad devotion.
Reid will lie to anyone anytime to advance his leftist agenda. He has carried water for Pelosi and Obama for the last 4 years and I don’t see that changing as Reid doesn’t know any better. We lost a good chance to rid ourselves of the Nevada idiot in 2010 and now are stuck with him throughout Obama’s reign. Look for him to smooze with the republicans, but then blame them for everything bad in the past, current or the future. Harry is a human loser and except for the unions in Vegas would have been herding goats in the Nevada desert by now.
Reid belongs in the mental ward of a federal prison and it is where he should live out the remainder of his bitter insanity.
Any republican who cooperates with him or does not actively work to destroy him politically is not keeping his or her oath of office.
The Republicans TALK a big story, but they’ll work with “their good friend across the aisle”.
Who is kidding whom? The GOP will go behind closed doors and begin to take apart the taxpayer like wolves in the wild.
... and the horse he rode in on!!!
Yea, this is a puff piece. Setting up for GOP refuses to work with Reid type deal.
Hold him with his loose tongue accountable.
You forget (or ignore) the Republicans who re-drew his district to make sure he wouldn't return to office.
I would like West to come back to Tennessee where he can run for Senator against Alexander. Alexander will side with Dingy more often than not.
Precisely. This article is nothing more than an a false-front effort to prop up Reid's reputation after all the good work he did for the DemocRAT cause.
Reed is just Obama’s mouth piece.
Not seeing a sarcasm tag, I just rolled my eyes and moved on. But if this was a serious proposal, then you’re right.
Go F*** yourself Reid. You only want Republicans so you can pin the next government dictated disaster on them. You and the Dems own this mess.
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