Posted on 02/14/2014 12:10:39 PM PST by neverdem
The federal government is, indeed, too big; it spends far, far too much; it taxes and borrows an awful lot more than it should; and it intrudes habitually and without fanfare into what should of right be the business of the states. The president is guilty as charged increasingly lawless and typically dismissive of anybody who dares to protest and his still-unpopular signature legislation is not only creaking under the weight of its own contradictions but is the proximate cause of our current political trench warfare. And, as ever, the whole sorry mess appears to be rolling on inexorably, without the reverse gear ever being engaged or the ratchet dismantled and thrown away.
Equally correct is the Tea Partys insistence that the Republican House should use its power to try to effect a change in course. President Obama and his acolytes may trade in whatever insults they wish, terming recalcitrant legislators nullifiers or terrorists or hostage-takers or neo-Confederates or what they will, and they may do so as loudly as they see fit. But they cannot change the fact that the House is not only allowed to disagree with the White House and with the Senate, but that, in questions financial including whether or not to raise the debt ceiling it is intended to be prime. This, both the Constitution and the Federalist papers tell us plainly, is what the body is for, and no amount of rhetoric can change it. As such, you may mark it down at the outset: The charges that conservatives routinely level against Washington are fair, and they have in me a staunch ally. Laminate my dissenters card and add me to the rolls, Mr. Adams.
Still, all of that notwithstanding, many conservatives have of late demonstrated a worrying tendency to believe that the virtue of their grievances and the legitimacy of their pursuits must automatically translate into political victory and that if these do not, that this is the fault of the leadership of the Republican party. I appreciate that this is difficult for some to hear, but I would venture that the opposite is the case. In my estimation, the only thing of which Mitch McConnell and John Boehner have been guilty in the past few years is to have worked tirelessly within political reality and to have reacted sensitively to the hands that they were dealt. The hysterical epithets and acronyms, the witless talk of the amorphous Establishment, and the lucrative fundraising e-mails all to one side, there is little that either man could have done differently while their party controlled just one half of one branch of government.
Insofar as last years shutdown served a purpose at all, it was to reveal how fragile is the GOPs hand, how extraordinarily determined to stand firm was Harry Reid, and how tricky it is to play offense from a position of weakness. Budgets and continuing resolutions, remember, still need the agreement of the Senate and of the president both of which are staunchly opposed to the Republicans agenda and they rise or fall by the say-so of the public. In October 2013 at least, it was the Democratic party that enjoyed popular support, not Republicans. This is to the discredit of the American electorate, certainly, but that being the case does not render it untrue. Scream all you like about veterans memorials being closed and childrens cancer treatment being canceled and the executive branch being capricious and petty; these things did little to change the dynamic. Instead, the Republican partys popularity dropped to record lows, its members started to fracture into inchoate subgroups, and the medias attention was taken away from the most profitable story Republicans have enjoyed in a decade: Obamacare. One can regret that President Obama and Harry Reid behaved as they did, as I do. One can regret that the American people were not more upset with the White Houses peevish and indulgent behavior, as I do. One can regret that the present economic malaise has not caused more of a backlash, as I do. But one cannot deny reality.
As during last Octobers shutdown, much of the current griping from the right is predicated upon a false dichotomy of precisely the sort that those of a Burkean disposition are supposed to abhor. When a progressive stands up and compares the status quo to his best intentions or suggests that anybody who disagrees with his preferred tactics must be against his aims, too conservatives rightly roll their eyes and sigh knowingly. Alas, of late a number of us have fallen into precisely the same trap as tends to ensnare our friends on the Left comparing difficult reality to promised (often wholly imagined) future victories, and celebrating how brave we are for opposing the way things currently are without outlining a workable means of changing it. There is, Im afraid, a touch of Occupy Wall Street about much of the Rights insurgency an unlovely propensity to believe that if a small group just wishes hard enough for a particular outcome, it will be able to achieve it. The most risible thing I saw during my time in Zuccotti Park was the participants perpetually misguided belief that they were representing a silent majority. The people united shall not be defeated, they would cry, without doing anything at all to indicate that they were indicative of anything of the sort. I have recently encountered a similar tendency among people with whom I politically agree.
Id be willing to risk losing the Senate if we could keep America, Mitch McConnells primary challenger, Matt Bevin, told Glenn Beck this morning. What an astonishingly incoherent and misguided sentence that is. For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? asks the King James Bible. A fair question, yes, but politics is a different game altogether, and, in this case, the alternative isnt an otherworldly victory or spiritual advancement but simply more loss. The question for Bevin must be for what shall it profit a man if he shall lose another debt-ceiling fight and lose his partys shot at the Senate as well? And the answer is not at all. If this is what we are to expect from the revolution a host of nihilistic, suicidal, performance artists who would rather be outside of the control room screaming than inside and in charge then give me the cynical calculations of a Mitch McConnell any day of the week.
Any time, you and I question the schemes of the do-gooders, Ronald Reagan complained in 1964, were denounced as being opposed to their humanitarian goals. It seems impossible to legitimately debate their solutions with the assumption that all of us share the desire to help the less fortunate. They tell us were always against, never for anything. Could this sentiment not be applied currently to some slices of the Right? After all, pretty much every single Republican agrees on the question of Obamacare. Pretty much every single Republican agrees on taxes and spending and the size of government. Pretty much every single Republican agrees on the debt. They disagree, however, on tactics. And tactics matter. Make no mistake: For all the bluster, the Democratic party and the wider progressive movement is absolutely terrified of Obamacare, which has been a liability for almost five years now, and which is not going away. As I noted yesterday, the majority of the elections this year are going to yield fights between a candidate who wants to repeal the law completely and a candidate who is critical of it in at least one way. There is nothing that the president would like more at this moment than to play last October over again to paint the GOP as an extreme, risk-taking, rump party holding the country hostage. McConnell and Boehner were right to recognize that handing him that opportunity this year would have been a disaster.
Back in October, I made three predictions: That Obamacares rollout would be a mess, leading to a bump in the Republican partys fortunes; that while conservatives had failed to secure a delay to any part of the law, President Obama would continue to serve them up illegally; and that, if conservatives could resist the temptation to dress up and play Light Brigade, they could hold the line purely by passing a clean spending resolution and a clean debt-ceiling hike. On the first two counts I was correct. On the lattermost, I was partially correct: We got a clean debt-ceiling hike, thus avoiding a protracted fight that, in their current situation, Republicans cannot win, but we did not quite get a clean spending bill instead, there was a grand compromise, which, although imperfect, preserved much of the sequestration that the Tea Party liked and denied the Democratic party anything approaching the spending levels that they wanted and, just a few years ago, had expected to achieve.
For a party that enjoys such little power in Washington, this has been pretty good going and, unfashionable as it is, I feel that I should buck the trend and praise the party for playing a difficult round adroitly and with foresight. Well done, McConnell. Well done, Boehner. Now win the Senate in November, and give em merry hell.
Charles C. W. Cooke is a staff writer at National Review.
I am a subscriber to the NR dead tree. Except for Steyn and a couple of exceptions these are Republican-drumbeaters.
Fed up.
Is that the same Charlie Cook? I thought the NR had a young one from the UK.
Pat’s his own animal, but I have a hard time imagining him swooning over Boehner and Cantor like this.
*and McConnell*
4q
The roofs eventually going to fall in anyway, so let it happen sooner rather than later. I no longer care with this lousy government and the clowns in charge.
Thank you for correcting my error. Yes this is a different Cook(e) but it seems they are cut from the same cloth.
The debt should indeed be downgraded but only after new blood gets control of House and Senate or the Article COS gains serious substantial power to pass a Balanced Budget Amendment.
Then a debt downgrade with the budget resolution should be a wash.
It can’t keep going the way it is now; it just can’t. To guard the currency, we need real discipline and determined resolution.
How is he swooning? He wrote:
"Yet Boehner was holding a losing hand. Had he added a GOP wish-list bill to the debt ceiling, Harry Reids Senate would have rejected it. President Obama would have denounced it as putting at risk the full faith and credit of the United States.
"Big Media would have piled on. The markets would have been rattled. The Dow would have begun to swoon. Corporate America, cash cow of the Republican Party, would have begun to howl.
"A clamor to pass a clean debt ceiling bill or risk a new recession would have arisen. And the House Republicans would have caved, as they finally had to cave on the budget bill last fall."
If I didn't agree with his analysis, I would have linked the roll call votes when they were available after the votes. The pubbies were probably going to lose the PR war. Why lose for nothing?
So what did they win by surrendering?
I hate to lose, especially for nothing. Pick your fights when yor're going to win, e.g. amnesty for illegals is a loser. There's a reason to watch the polls. Obama's approval rating in polls is still too high, IMHO. Explaing economics to the general public is no mean feat.
OMG! Where is the PROJECTILE BARF ALERT on this one?
In answer to your question, I want debt REPUDIATION . Never mind a downgrade. Lest you think me operating several cards short of a deck, the demand side of the equation will never change. The lust for more spending will never cease. We have to look at the supply side.
They lose because they always sell out rather than put up an articulate fight. They are as good as on the same team as the Dems, as evidenced by their actually giving back a chunk of the sequester that they had won, not from putting up a good fight, but because of the Democrats’ miscalculation.
And, of course, they are always duplicitous in what they say and what they end up doing. There is no decent defense of the GOP leadership in the party, the Senate, or the House.
I wrote in comment 26: "Do you want the debt downgraded? That's different from the question of whether McConnell and Boehner should be replaced."
I meant credit rating downgraded, but I hve no problem replacing them. I think they should be replaced for a number of reasons.
What is it, a dozen times in the last decade that something was successfully negotiated with the raising of the debt ceiling?
But as I was trying to convey before, they already failed by it coming down to this. They play the same deceitful games of pretending that a slight slowing of a particular rate of growth is a ‘cut’ and they already gave up the store so many times over—e.g., funding Obamacare rather than delaying it, giving back the sequester, then trying to shave military pensions of all things, another obscene farm bill, another massive, bloated budget, etc., etc.—that they shouldn’t be given credit for yet one more cave in.
NRO praises RiNO’s. Film at eleven.
Is Pat Buchanan a RINO? Check the link in comment# 26.
You said that four times in this thread alone .... and twice in the other one ..... I think that's called "spamming".
Besides, it's a false dichotomy. One needn't capitulate to Obama and the Media every time, in order to be a pillar of financial probity.
But please admit that capitulation and cowardice is what it is, that Boehner and the RNC are doing. Then let's move along.
Of course, it's a couple of other things, too, but by now you've proved you don't want to talk about that. Namely, that Chamber of Commerce bagmen wanted the GOP to roll over so their bond holdings wouldn't get rattled -- never mind that it's Obama's policies that are degrading the economy and the credit of the People of the United States.
So how come your favorite Chamber "K" Street bagmen never jump all over Obama the way they do the Tea Party?
Wanna dance now?
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