Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Can Bipartisanship Work?

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One wants to put America first and the other doesn't give a rat's ass

Earlier today I made reference to what happened in the 1930s when reactionary Republicans used the same arguments against FDR's Stimulus Package-- the New Deal-- that DeMint, Boehner, McConnell, Vitter and the rest of the GOP thugs are using against Obama's today. FDR's 1936 re-election netted him every state but 2-- and every electoral vote but 8-- while the GOP obstructionists wound up with 16 seats in the Senate and only 88 in the House. In today's Washington Post, Eugene Robinson points out that there's a time and a place for bipartisanship and... this crisis isn't it. He points out that with "hardheaded Republicans, time running out-- bipartisanship is doing more harm than good... If the loyal opposition chooses to obstruct economic recovery, those who hold power are obliged to use it."
One of the most effective items in the House bill was $79 billion to be transferred to state governments, which are hurting; in California, our most populous state, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is ordering furloughs of state workers. Any dollar given to the states will fly out the door by sundown. That $79 billion would have instant impact.

But in the Senate, the ad hoc "gang" of moderate Republicans (all three of them) and conservative Democrats cut those state funds to $39 billion. It's wrong to see this as the normal give-and-take of legislative sausage-making, the usual trek down a well-worn path toward the golden compromise that everyone can live with. This is not, repeat not, a time for compromise. Meeting in the middle, which the Senate sees as its role in our democracy, renders the whole exercise potentially useless. If we don't get enough money into the economy, and if we don't do it soon, we risk wasting a king's ransom on a stimulus that's too puny to stimulate.

This is not an issue where the answer is to be found in the "middle." This isn't a matter of left, right and center, it's a matter of yes or no: Does the federal government try to get the economy moving again, or not? This will sound ridiculous, but the fact is that the details of Obama's plan don't matter that much. If anything, many economists believe, the government needs to spend even more than Obama proposes.

Republicans are using this debate as a branding opportunity, positioning themselves as careful stewards of the public purse. This is absurd, given their record when they were in charge. It's also cynical. They know that some kind of stimulus will get passed anyway. If it works, they'll claim their principled intransigence made the plan better; if it doesn't, they'll say, "I told you so."

Obama and the Democrats have public opinion on their side and the wolf at the door. Republicans need to get out of the way-- or get run over.

Peter Baker made a similar case at this morning's NY Times, pointing out that while "Obama has made a show of reaching across the aisle since taking office, inviting three Republicans into his cabinet and wining and dining other opposition leaders," the GOP responded with not a single vote for the Stimulus Package in the House and only 3, very grudgingly and only after cutting between 500,000 and 1.2 million jobs from the bill, in the Senate. Baker says the President is showing a slightly tougher side now, "railing against the status quo and dismissing critics as apostles of a failed philosophy." It's about time.
Three weeks into his tenure, Mr. Obama acknowledged that his effort to change the political climate in Washington had yielded little. He made clear that he had all but given up hope of securing a bipartisan consensus behind his $800 billion economic recovery package, arguing that the urgency of the economic crisis had at least for now outweighed the need for unity.

The Republican obstructionists who would rather see America fail than Obama succeed have ignored two important points from his inaugural address. 1- "On this day, we gather because we have chosen hope over fear, unity of purpose over conflict and discord. On this day, we come to proclaim an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas that for far too long have strangled our politics." They must have been laughing up their sleeves at that one. Later in the speech he said, "To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history, but that we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist." Mitch McConnell, Tom Coburn, Richard Burr, John McCain, Jim Bunning, Jim DeMint, David Diapers Vitter, Johnny Isakson have only been unwilling to unclench their fists in order to give the president-- and American working families-- the finger.

Yesterday in Elkhart, Obama said that he wants good ideas from both sides of the aisle but that doesn't mean he's going to "return to the failed theories of the last eight years that got us into this fix in the first place, because those theories have been tested and they have failed. And that’s part of what the election in November was all about.”
Gone were the soothing notes of the last three weeks. Authoritative and unsmiling, gloomy rather than inspirational, Mr. Obama cast the nation’s economy in dire light and offered a barbed point-by-point critique of the Republican argument that his plan would just create more government jobs and authorize a raft of new wasteful spending.

“It’s a little hard for me to take criticism from folks about this recovery package after they presided over a doubling of the national debt,” he said at the news conference. “I’m not sure they have a lot of credibility when it comes to fiscal responsibility.”

Also in today's Times Bob Herbert pointed out that "the crowd cheered and supported him enthusiastically throughout his appearance." But that wasn't the point of today's column. Although we've been warning about this for the three weeks Obama has been in the Oval Office, Herbert has finally said what no other mainstream columnists have dared to say:
The simple truth is that most Republican politicians would like Mr. Obama to fail because that is their ticket to a quick return to power.
. Herbert predicts doom for this GOP enterprise though. He thinks President Obama is a far better chess player than this crew of "clowns carrying leadership banners for the G.O.P."
He’s smart, deft, elegant and subtle. While Lindsey Graham was behaving like a 6-year-old on the Senate floor and Pete Sessions was studying passages in his Taliban handbook, Mr. Obama and his aides were assessing what’s achievable in terms of stimulus legislation and how best to get there.

I’d personally like to see a more robust stimulus package, with increased infrastructure spending and fewer tax cuts. But the reality is that Mr. Obama needs at least a handful of Republican votes in the Senate to get anything at all done, and he can’t afford to lose this first crucial legislative fight of his presidency.

The Democrats may succeed in bolstering their package somewhat in conference, but I think Mr. Obama would have been satisfied all along to start his presidency off with an $800 billion-plus stimulus program.

As we mentioned yesterday, many Republican governors-- the ones who actually have to cope with the problems 8 years of the Bush economic agenda and these harebrained Republican orthodoxies have caused on the ground-- are urging their congressional delegations to support the Stimulus. Charlie Crist failed to get a single Republican member of Congress to go along. Today's he's sharing the stage with President Obama in Ft Meyers as an example of bipartisan cooperation reaching across the aisle to solve problems. Crist doesn't want to be identified with the obstructionist wing of the GOP that is reaching out to a narrow, shrinking regional base dependent on Rush Limbaugh's ratings.


UPDATE: PRESIDENT OBAMA'S BRILLIANT SPEECH IN FT MEYERS TODAY

If the Republicans even considered putting America first, they would apologize to the American people for their obstructionism and get onboard right now.
I want to start by thanking your governor, Charlie Crist, for joining us today. Governors understand our economic crisis as well as anyone; they’re on the front lines dealing with it every day. And Governor Crist shares my conviction that creating jobs and turning this economy around is a mission that transcends party. When the town is burning, we don’t check party labels. Everyone needs to grab a hose!

Governor Crist and governors across the country understand that. Mayors across the country understand that. And I think you understand that, too. Which is what I want to talk about today.

Last night, I addressed the nation to explain why I believe we need to put the economic recovery plan that is before Congress in motion as soon as possible. But during the day, I spent some time out in Indiana talking to folks. And today, I wanted to come to Florida and visit you all in Fort Myers.

You see, too often the debate in Washington tends to take the measure of our challenges in numbers and statistics. But when we say we’ve lost 3.6 million jobs since this recession began-- nearly 600,000 in the past month alone; when we say that Lee County has seen its unemployment rate go from 3.5 percent to nearly 10 percent in less than two years; when we talk about the plummeting home prices and soaring foreclosure rates that have plagued this area, and layoffs at companies like Kraft Construction and Chico’s-- companies that have sustained this community for years – well, we’re not just talking about faceless numbers. We’re talking about families you probably know.

We’re talking about people like Steve Adkins, who has joined us today with his wife Michelle, and their son Bailey and daughter Josie. Steve’s the president of a small construction company in Fort Myers that specializes in building and repairing schools, but work has slowed considerably. He’s done what he can to reduce overhead costs, but he’s still been forced to lay off half his workforce. And he and Michelle have made sacrifices of their own-- they sold their home and moved into a smaller one.

That is what this debate is about. Folks in Fort Myers and all across the country who have lost their livelihood and don’t know what will take its place. Parents who’ve lost their health care and lie awake at night praying their kids don’t get sick. Families who’ve lost the home that was the foundation of their American dream. Young people who put that college acceptance letter back in the envelope because they just can’t afford it.

That’s what those numbers and statistics mean. That is the true measure of this economic crisis. Those are the stories I heard every time I came here to Florida and that I have carried with me to the White House.

I promised you back then that if elected President, I would do everything I could to help our communities recover. That’s why I’ve come back today – to tell you how I intend to keep that promise.

The situation we face could not be more serious. We have inherited an economic crisis as deep and as dire as any since the Great Depression. Economists from across the spectrum have warned that if we don’t act immediately, millions more jobs will disappear, and national unemployment rates will approach double digits. More people will lose their homes and their health care. And our nation will sink into a crisis that, at some point, will be much tougher to reverse.

So we simply can’t afford to wait and see and hope for the best. We can’t afford to posture and bicker and resort to the same failed ideas that got us into this mess in the first place. After all, that’s what this election was about. You rejected those ideas because you know they haven’t worked. You didn’t send us to Washington because you were hoping for more of the same, you sent us there to change things, and that is exactly what I intend to do as President of the United States.

Now, the problems that led us into this crisis are deep, and they are widespread. We need to stabilize and repair our financial system. We need to get credit flowing again to families and businesses. We need to stem the spread of foreclosures that are sweeping this country. My Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner, outlined a plan to address these challenges this morning.

We know that in order to address our economic crisis, we must address our foreclosure crisis. I know Fort Myers had the highest foreclosure rate in the nation last year. I know entire neighborhoods are studded with foreclosure signs, and families across this city feel like they’re losing their foothold in the American Dream. So we are going to do everything we can to help responsible homeowners here in Fort Myers and other hard-hit communities stay in their homes.

If we want to fully turn this crisis around, the starting point is to get people back to work right now.

Last week, we saw 1,000 men and women stand in line for only 35 Miami firefighter jobs. It’s a story repeated across the country-- there’s so much demand for jobs that just aren’t there. That is both the paradox and the promise of this moment: at a time when so many Americans are looking for work, there is so much work America needs done.

That is why I put forth a recovery and reinvestment plan, and that is the simple idea at its core. It’s a plan that will save or create up to four million jobs over the next two years, ignite spending by business and consumers alike, and make the investments necessary for lasting economic growth and prosperity.

We’ll begin by ensuring that Americans who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own can receive greater unemployment benefits and continue their health care coverage. That means an additional $100 per month to more than 760,000 Florida workers who have lost their jobs in this recession, and extended unemployment benefits for another 170,000 folks who’ve been laid off and can’t find work.

That is not only our moral responsibility-– to lend a helping hand to our fellow Americans in times of emergency – but it also makes good economic sense. If you don’t have money, you can’t spend it. And if you don’t spend it, our economy will continue to decline.

For that same reason, the plan includes $1,000 of badly-needed tax relief for middle class workers and families, putting money back in the pockets of nearly 6.9 million workers and their families here in Florida. And we’ll also provide a partially refundable $2,500 per student tax credit to help 195,000 Florida families send their kids to college, relieving your household budgets in the short run, and rewarding America in the long run.

Most importantly, this plan will put people to work right now by making direct investments in areas like health care, energy, education, and infrastructure; investments that save jobs, create new jobs and new businesses, and help our economy grow again.

More than 90 percent of the jobs created by this plan will be in the private sector-- 90 percent. And they won’t be make-work jobs; they’ll be jobs that lay the groundwork for our lasting economic growth-- jobs that put people to work today preparing America for tomorrow.

Jobs building wind turbines and solar panels and fuel efficient cars; doubling our investment in clean energy, and helping end our dependence on foreign oil.

Jobs upgrading our schools, creating 21st century classrooms, libraries, and labs for millions of children across America.

Jobs computerizing our health care system, saving billions of dollars and countless lives.

Jobs constructing broadband internet lines that reach Florida’s rural schools and small businesses, so they can connect and compete with their counterparts anywhere in the world.

Jobs rebuilding our crumbling roads and bridges, and repairing our dangerously deficient dams and levees so we don’t face another Katrina.

And the jobs of firefighters, teachers, nurses, and police officers that would otherwise be eliminated if we don’t provide states with some relief.

Of course, there are critics who say we can’t afford to take on these priorities. But we have postponed and neglected them for too long. And because we have, our health care still costs too much. Our schools still fail our children. Our dependence on foreign oil still threatens our economy and our security. And we’ve seen the tragic consequences when our bridges crumble and our levees fail.

They say we can’t afford to take on these tasks. But Florida, you know we can’t afford not to.

Now, I’m not going to tell you that this plan is perfect. No plan is. I also can’t tell you with one hundred percent certainty that everything in this plan will work exactly as we hope. But I can tell you with complete confidence that a failure to act in the face of this crisis will bring only deepening disaster. Doing nothing is not an option.

We’ve had a good debate, but the time for talking is over. Folks here in Fort Myers and across America need help, and the time for action is now. The Americans I’ve met understand that even with this plan, our recovery will likely be measured in years, not weeks or months-- but what they don’t have patience for is more waiting on folks in Washington to get this done.

I know people are struggling. But I also know that folks here are good workers and good neighbors who step up, who help each other out, who make sacrifices when times are tough. I know that all folks are asking for is a chance to work hard-- and to have that work translate into a decent life for you and your family. You’re doing your part down here-- and it’s time the government did its part too.

This is a responsibility we did not ask for. But it is one we must accept for the sake of our future and our children’s. And being here in Fort Myers with all of you, I am more confident than ever before that we can and will set our differences aside, commit ourselves to the work ahead, and come together to meet the great test of our time.


STIMULUS PACKAGE PASSES IN THE SENATE-- NOT MUCH BI-PARTISANSHIP THERE

The only difference in the vote count today, 61-37, is that John Cornyn was back to vote after working on the financing for the GOP propaganda efforts with Wall Street banksters and lobbyists.

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4 Comments:

At 10:31 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I don't care how many bi partisans you put in the pool if they can't swim they will probably drown if you just keep them away from the edges. The world needs an entirely new economic system. One without debt and a system based on abundance. The paper money economy is dead. Malthus is dead. Since they are dead they can't tell us. Making money and making sense are mutually exclusive. High unemployment is a sign of success. It is time to start making sense by abandoning the game of monopoly and redesigning the future to work foe everyone in the shortest amount of time possible through spontaneous cooperation without disadvantaging anyone.

 
At 1:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow, I wonder why I never thought of that?

 
At 4:22 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The previous administration is the text book case for out of touch with the people. This new one is at least trying to stay in touch. So people losing their jobs, homes and hope is a good thing? Success? Obviously that person has not lost its job or home. Hope? Please move out of the way and let others care for the people.

 
At 5:19 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Me Said: You didn't have to think of it someone else did it for you. Just like Chemistry, physics, astronomy, biology, genetics, and a million other things. Think of all the days and nights humans have lived on the planet earth and all the inventions and discoveries that were made before you and I even got hear. How truly lucky we are. Remember we only learn more not less. It is time to put all this knowledge to use improving the lives of everyone and not just to making money. We need to redefine what real wealth is. If the boat is sinking in the middle of the ocean it will not be money. It is life jackets and life boats. Paper money will be worthless if there are not enough jackets and boats to go around.

 

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