Saturday, November 03, 2012

Romney Knows It's All Over

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Today, for the first time in memory, the Republican Party failed to deliver the weekly radio address to stations. Romney taped it, but never distributed it. He's just going through the motions now and riding out the embarrassment that's coming his way on Tuesday, probably worrying about how harsh the attacks from the far right on him and his world will be once AP calls the election for Obama. Romney's closing argument is, basically, vote for me or the House Republicans will wreck the economy by refusing to raise the debt ceiling. Sounds to me like a clarion call to defeat Republicans running for Congress. Even with unrelenting GOP obstruction of every single attempt Obama and the Democrats have made to fix the horrendous economy Bush and the GOP left, the final jobs report before Tuesday was more terrible news for Romney (and great news for America): 171,000 jobs added in October, coupled with sharp upward revisions to the prior two months data brought the average over the last three months to 170,000.
Most of the other data in the household survey was also positive. The number of people involuntarily working part-time fell by 257,000 reversing most of the September rise. The number of discouraged workers was 154,000 below its year ago level, continuing its recent pattern. The percentage of unemployment due to people who voluntarily quit their jobs, a key measure of workers’ confidence in their labor market prospects, rose to 8.3 percent. With the exception of the 8.7 rate reported in March, this is the highest share since December of 2008.
Yesterday in his Times column Paul Krugman referred to Boehner, Cantor, Ryan and their thuggish cronies as the backmail caucus.
If President Obama is re-elected, health care coverage will expand dramatically, taxes on the wealthy will go up and Wall Street will face tougher regulation. If Mitt Romney wins instead, health coverage will shrink substantially, taxes on the wealthy will fall to levels not seen in 80 years and financial regulation will be rolled back.

Given the starkness of this difference, you might have expected to see people from both sides of the political divide urging voters to cast their ballots based on the issues. Lately, however, I’ve seen a growing number of Romney supporters making a quite different argument. Vote for Mr. Romney, they say, because if he loses, Republicans will destroy the economy.


O.K., they don’t quite put it that way. The argument is phrased in terms of “partisan gridlock,” as if both parties were equally extreme. But they aren’t. This is, in reality, all about appeasing the hard men of the Republican Party.


If you want an example of what I’m talking about, consider the remarkable-- in a bad way-- editorial in which the Des Moines Register endorsed Mr. Romney. The paper acknowledged that Mr. Obama’s signature economic policy, the 2009 stimulus, was the right thing to do. It also acknowledged that Mr. Obama tried hard to reach out across the partisan divide, but was rebuffed.


Yet it endorsed his opponent anyway, offering some half-hearted support for Romneynomics, but mainly asserting that Mr. Romney would be able to work with Democrats in a way that Mr. Obama has not been able to work with Republicans. Why? Well, the paper claims-- as many of those making this argument do-- that, in office, Mr. Romney would be far more centrist than anything he has said in the campaign would indicate. (And the notion that he has been lying all along is supposed to be a point in his favor?) But mostly it just takes it for granted that Democrats would be more reasonable.


Is this a good argument?


The starting point for many “vote for Romney or else” statements is the notion that a re-elected President Obama wouldn’t be able to accomplish anything in his second term. What this misses is the fact that he has already accomplished a great deal, in the form of health reform and financial reform-- reforms that will go into effect if, and only if, he is re-elected.


But would Mr. Obama be able to negotiate a Grand Bargain on the budget? Probably not-- but so what? America isn’t facing any kind of short-run fiscal crisis, except in the fevered imagination of a few Beltway insiders. If you’re worried about the long-run imbalance between spending and revenue, well, that’s an issue that will have to be resolved eventually, but not right away. Furthermore, I’d argue that any alleged Grand Bargain would be worthless as long as the G.O.P. remained as extreme as it is, because the next Republican president, following the lead of George W. Bush, would just squander the gains on tax cuts and unfunded wars.


So we shouldn’t worry about the ability of a re-elected Obama to get things done. On the other hand, it’s reasonable to worry that Republicans will do their best to make America ungovernable during a second Obama term. After all, they have been doing that ever since Mr. Obama took office.


During the first two years of Mr. Obama’s presidency, when Democrats controlled both houses of Congress, Republicans offered scorched-earth opposition to anything and everything he proposed. Among other things, they engaged in an unprecedented number of filibusters, turning the Senate-- for the first time-- into a chamber in which nothing can pass without 60 votes.



And, when Republicans took control of the House, they became even more extreme. The 2011 debt ceiling standoff was a first in American history: An opposition party declared itself willing to undermine the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, with incalculable economic effects, unless it got its way. And the looming fight over the “fiscal cliff” is more of the same. Once again, the G.O.P. is threatening to inflict large damage on the economy unless Mr. Obama gives it something-- an extension of tax cuts for the wealthy-- that it lacks the votes to pass through normal constitutional processes.
This week one of Romney's horrid campaign surrogates, Newt Gingrich rented his list out to an advertiser who sent out an e-mail to the Newtster's supporters telling them Romney can't win and that conservatives have to start thinking about 2016 (when, they claim, Obama will try to run again). "The truth is, the next election has already been decided. Obama is going to win. It's nearly impossible to beat an incumbent president. What's actually at stake right now is whether or not he will have a third-term." And Paul Ryan is looking for a job as a professor (or a K Street lobbyist) after a possible double-defeat Tuesday.

Tuesday, it isn't enough to just defeat Romney. It's just as important to defeat Republicans running for the Senate and the House, particularly the ones who set their party's agenda-- not the ineffectual clowns the DCCC is pursuing. The vulnerable senior House Republicans most important to defeat Tuesday are Paul Ryan (WI), Buck McKeon (CA), Eric Cantor (VA), Fred Upton (MI), Mike Rogers (MI), Joe Pitts (PA), Ed Royce (CA), Patrick McHenry (NC), John Kline (MN), Darrell Issa (CA) and Dave Camp (MI). Those are the ones, along with Boehner and Cantor, who set the policies in the House. America would be far, far better off without any of them back in office.


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2 Comments:

At 2:36 PM, Blogger EboTebo said...

We must have a Democratic Majority in both Houses of Congress!!!

 
At 5:32 PM, Anonymous Robs said...

So they are starting the fear mongering for 2016 early? Oh noez! Obama is going to legalize a third term for hizzelf! Man the barricades! Send us money!!

 

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