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There's More to Being President Than Deal-Making
Townhall.com ^ | January 25, 2016 | Ken Blackwell

Posted on 01/25/2016 5:52:45 AM PST by Kaslin

Politically we appear to be living in the year of the outsider. Donald Trump has shocked the established political class and its loyal journalistic following. Senators Ted Cruz and Bernie Sanders are upsetting governing elites almost as much as Trump. The public says it is angry and isn't going to take it anymore.

Yet the prescription offered by these three candidates is very different. The Donald constantly trumpets that he is a deal maker. Cruz and Sanders are more interested in the substance of the deal and always ready to say no deal.

There's no doubt that politics involves compromise. Even such dominant figures as Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Ronald Reagan had to accept less than what they wanted.

However, all of them started with strong convictions as to what needed to be done. From there they pushed to get as much as they could. And they compromised when there was no alternative. For them, deal-making was not a substitute for principle, but the culmination of principle. How do you put your beliefs into practice?

For Donald Trump deal-making appears to be the end, not the means. Hence his book, The Art of the Deal. Businessmen who've worked with him say he is most interested in the hunt and loses interest after he bags his prey.

In the presidential race he rarely offers policy prescriptions beyond generalities and platitudes. He will make Mexico build a wall, for instance. What seems to excite him about being president is the same thing which energized him in business. "The problem with Washington, they don't make deals, it's all gridlock," he proclaimed. "I'll get everybody together. We'll make great deals for the country."

But what precisely are those "great deals"? Trump complained that President Barack Obama "signs executive orders because he can't get anything done." Actually, the president has done pretty well politically--unfortunately!

He won passage of a budget-busting "stimulus" bill that enriched Washington more than the public. He pushed through a health care "reform" measure which turned American medicine over to the federal government. And he has used presidential power to pursue his agenda even against the Republican congressional majority--which was no more interested in making "great deals" with the president than he was with the GOP.

Trump made a similar criticism of Cruz, who "doesn't have the support of one other Republican Senator." Complained Trump: "Guys like Ted Cruz will never make a deal because he's a strident guy."

Actually, Cruz has resisted deal-making in Congress not because he is strident but because he is principled. Much the same can be said of Bernie Sanders. For these two senators, the reason to be in office is not to pass legislation, but to pass what they consider good legislation. If that proves impossible, they are unafraid of gridlock.

Think about some of the most celebrated political deals, which have proved to be disastrous in practice. Ronald Reagan's 1983 tax-hike plan: the promised three-for-one in spending cuts never materialized. George H.W. Bush's abandoned "read my lips" promise to oppose tax hikes. Before the Democrats lost control of Congress Bill Clinton won big increases in outlays and taxes, which he later admitted were too high. George W. Bush and the Republican Congress passed a huge Medicare drug benefit which they made no attempt to pay for.

Then, as mentioned earlier, there's Barack Obama who, with the help of his Democratic friends in Congress, won approval of the "Affordable Care Act" that we never will be able to afford. They also gave us hundreds of billions of dollars in economic "stimulus" which spent hundreds of thousands of dollars, and sometimes even millions of dollars, for every job "created"--without boosting the economy. The president has made dubious agreements with Cuba and Iran; he's trying to make another on Syria and there's talk about him reaching out to North Korea. Imagine the other horrible "deals" which he might have made had Republicans not won control of Congress.

So the next time a presidential candidate, any presidential candidate, starts talking about making deals, the right question is: what kind of deals? Would the new policy protect Americans' property and liberty? Would the new law respect our liberty? Would the new regulation advance our prosperity? Would the new measure bolster the moral foundations of our society?

If not, as president he or she should say "no deal!"

It's true that Washington isn't working. It certainly isn't serving the people. But the answer is not to elect a dealmaker. Rather, Americans need to elect a maker of good deals.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: donaldtrump; tedcruz
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To: Vermont Lt; Impy; BillyBoy
For some reason I found myself interested in Galaxy_Quest 1999 yesterday and DVRed and watched it, maybe for some laughs.

The cast of a cancelled Space Adventure show’s (satirizing Star Trek) only work is conventions and cheesy TV commercials.

Until a alien races seeks them out thinking reruns of the show are history videos, and needed help fighting a mean race of other aliens.

Being childlike in a certain way they never heard of acting and think the show was real and those characters are real.

Till the actors appear to have failed and are forced to explain it to them, using the word ‘lies’ ,that ‘acting’=’lies’

41 posted on 01/25/2016 7:12:33 AM PST by sickoflibs (Donald Trump : 'It will be wonderful. It will be glorious., You will be amazed, Just wait')
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To: Kaslin

Thanks for posting the article. You are a regular poster and I for one appreciate the effort.

I certainly believe a president has to be more than a simple dealmaker. Anyone can make deals but it takes a smart person to make good deals, I believe Trump will make good deals.

A president has to be a leader. The President has to be able to take a case to the people, let them know why he believes it is good for the country and then as for their support and carry through on the promise. I believe Trump will do that.

A president has to show that the primary concern is the US citizen. Certainly one should have compassion for international tragedies and circumstances but that compassion cannot be a weakness that underlines the primary responsibility to protect the citizens.

Security comes from protection of person from enemies of the country foreign and domestic. Security comes from economic security allowing one to have a job and pursue a meaningful place in society. Security is proper education of kids academically, through proper morals and respect.

I believe Trump will be good in all those areas.


42 posted on 01/25/2016 7:25:49 AM PST by georgiarat (Obama, providing incompetence since Day One!)
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To: grania

Reagan made very few deals with Tipp. Their relationship was friendly after working hours and they never discussed politics off the clock. I remember Tipp saying “over my dead body” on a bill he opposed, and Reagan saying with a smile, “Well, that may be.” Trump is miles away from Reagan in style and substance.


43 posted on 01/25/2016 7:49:08 AM PST by RightLady (It's gotta be Cruz)
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To: RightLady

Reagan made very few deals with Tipp.

Every piece of legislation passed requires that a deal be made.


44 posted on 01/25/2016 7:58:06 AM PST by Amntn ("The only special interest not being served by our government is the American people" - Donald Trump)
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To: RightLady
Trump is miles away from Reagan in style and substance.

On that opinion Trumpsters and deniers will never agree. Trump is doing exactly what had to be done to WAKE UP a nation that was accepting our demise. One thing that had to be done is to destroy political correctness....gosh, did he ever!

Trump's got a bit of PT Barnum in him, for sure. He's a US original. But he's also got a sense of style and substance and I'll add class....look at those kids and grandkids as evidence of that!

45 posted on 01/25/2016 8:13:39 AM PST by grania
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To: Kaslin
The very statement of being a deal maker indicates that the person making that statement is more than an administrator of the laws of the land, Constitutional and Legislative.

He must be a lawmaker too.

Have we ever seen a person like that.

Very interesting conclusion of people who know the Constitution so well. They really want a deal maker.

Appreciate your work here Kaslin.

46 posted on 01/25/2016 8:56:14 AM PST by Walt Griffith
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To: Kaslin

Well who do you want dealing with Putey, the Ayatollah, the Saudis, ISIS and the Norks? Trump or Hillary?


47 posted on 01/25/2016 10:45:55 AM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
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To: moovova
There's More to Being President Than Deal-Making

I completely agree. You've also got 'beautiful wall' building!

48 posted on 01/25/2016 2:02:44 PM PST by houeto (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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