Will The Center Hold?
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The go-along-to-get-along crowd-- the 2 transpartisan Beltway party establishments-- were happy enough how the Cromnibus vote went down Thursday night. But those with actual political-- rather than transactional or careerist-- agendas are frustrated. Below is a Friday morning quote from GOP neo-Nazi extremist Bryan Fischer; nothing short of impeachment and the reinstitution of slavery would make him and his ilk happy.
Author Richard Kirsch is a Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and his Friday post at the Next New Deal was a lot more coherent than Fischer's dark, deranged tweet. Like a number of optimistic progressives-- many of whom weren't the least bit surprised to see Obama, once again, abandon Democratic values and principles to carry water for Wall Street-- Kirsch sees the uprising Thursday-- remember 139 Democrats broke with Obama and opposed the Wall Street travesty; only 57 went with him, even less than the 70 who backed an identical stand-alone proposal in October 2013-- as a "first skirmish in the war for the soul of the Democratic Party."
I hope Kirsch and his DC pals will keep that in mind when the congressional leaders of yesterday's betrayal-- Steny Hoyer, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Joe Crowley, Jim Clyburn, Jim Himes-- make their move for control of the Democratic House caucus. Right now there is nothing but an increasingly fragile Pelosi and the overwhelming disunity of rank and file Democrats standing in their way.
Author Richard Kirsch is a Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and his Friday post at the Next New Deal was a lot more coherent than Fischer's dark, deranged tweet. Like a number of optimistic progressives-- many of whom weren't the least bit surprised to see Obama, once again, abandon Democratic values and principles to carry water for Wall Street-- Kirsch sees the uprising Thursday-- remember 139 Democrats broke with Obama and opposed the Wall Street travesty; only 57 went with him, even less than the 70 who backed an identical stand-alone proposal in October 2013-- as a "first skirmish in the war for the soul of the Democratic Party."
I hope Kirsch and his DC pals will keep that in mind when the congressional leaders of yesterday's betrayal-- Steny Hoyer, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Joe Crowley, Jim Clyburn, Jim Himes-- make their move for control of the Democratic House caucus. Right now there is nothing but an increasingly fragile Pelosi and the overwhelming disunity of rank and file Democrats standing in their way.
Democrats had the leverage to nix a deal that opens the door to more Wall Street bailouts, but they caved in to Republican blackmail.And the far right saw what happened-- albeit for completely different reasons-- as just as much a betrayal of their values as progressives did. Despite pleas, blandishments and threats from Boehnerland, 67 from the fringe went their own way-- and not just the usual suspects-- both the deranged and the principled-- like Louie Gohmert (TX), Justin Amash (MI), Tom Massie (KY), Paul Gosar (AZ), Tim Huelskamp (KS), Paul Broun (GA), Michele Bachmann (MN), Mo Brooks (AL), Walter Jones (NC), Matt Salmon (AZ) and Steve King (IA)-- but also serious conservatives with an eye on taking over the party apparatus-- Scott Garrett (NJ), Mike Conaway (TX), Marsha Blackburn (TX), Jim Sensenbrenner (WI), Bill Posey (FL), James Lankford (OK), Randy Neugebauer (TX), Tom Cotton (AR), Ted Poe (TX), and John Fleming (LA). Seung Min Kim and Lauren French were out bright and early with a far right rage against the machine post at Politico. "[T]hey’re ending the year frustrated at their own party’s leaders, who they think cut them out of the funding process and fumbled a chance to pick apart Obama’s immigration actions as soon as they were announced by not using the must-pass funding bill to undo it."
Progressives lost the battle over the budget last night because President Obama and a minority of Democrats took the side of Wall Street. It is the first of many losses we will see in the next two years as Republicans relentlessly pursue their corporate agenda. The bigger question is whether progressives will lose the war in the Democratic Party.
Blowing up this budget deal should have been easy for Democrats. They were handed a perfect message: the Republicans are willing to shut down the government so they can bail out Wall Street the next time it wrecks the economy.
Democratic votes were needed because a group of 67 right-wing Republicans opposed the bill on the grounds that it did not go far enough in opposing the president’s executive order on immigration. The Republican split gave Democrats the leverage to demand that the bank bail-out provision be stripped from the bill.
But with President Obama twisting enough Democratic arms (57 in total) to give in to the Wall Street-engineered Republican blackmail, that powerful, winning message was diluted.
Democratic negotiators also agreed to the deal to repeal a provision of the Dodd-Frank law that prevents government bailouts of banks who engage in a form of risky trading. Their argument was “Republicans made us do it; it’s the best we could do.” But of course, with all the Wall Street money going to Democrats, that’s a convenient excuse. They can turn around and wink at the lobbyists who deliver Wall Street campaign contributions, playing a game in which the dupes are the American people.
The bailout of banks and Wall Street speculators remains deeply and broadly unpopular. It is an issue that generates anger among grassroots activists on the left and the right. For Americans who see Wall Street billionaires getting richer by gaming the system while families struggle to meet the basics, there could be no clearer contrast.
Progressive Democrats fought back. In a rapid-fire display of the energy and nimbleness of progressive organizations and champions in Congress, the deal was quickly exposed.
Senator Elizabeth Warren laid it out clearly on the Senate floor: “We put this rule in place because people of all political persuasions were disgusted at the idea of future bailouts… Republicans in the House of Representatives are threatening to shut down the government if they don’t get a chance to repeal it.”
In the House, progressive Democrats joined the call. California Rep. Maxine Waters, the senior Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, said, “We don't like lobbying that is being done by the president or anybody else that would allow us to support a bill that ... would give a big gift to Wall Street and the bankers who caused this country to almost go into a depression.”
The vigorous pushback from progressive groups and their allies in Congress convinced Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi to break with the White House. Pelosi said that they were being “blackmailed” to vote for the bill, which she called “a moral hazard.” Still, Pelosi did not use her considerable powers of persuasion to get fellow Democrats to vote no.
For the next two years we will see Republicans do everything they can to deliver for corporate America at the expense of the American people. The only question is whether Democrats will enable them. Will President Obama continue to make compromise after compromise? Will Democrats in the Senate use the filibuster to block the Republican attack on working families? Will enough Democrats in the House keep coming to the rescue of a divided Republican Party?
We will see the same fight in the Democratic primary for president. Will Hillary Clinton break from the Wall Street wing of the party with which she aligned as a senator from New York? Will her challengers make the same sharp contrast that Senator Warren did, when she began her speech on the Senate floor by asking, “Who does Congress work for? Does it work for the millionaires, the billionaires, the giant companies with their armies of lobbyists or lawyers? Or does it work for all the people?”
As I wrote after the election last month, Democrats who used a populist economic message-- who named the corporate villains and declared that “we all do better when we all do better”-- won. Democrats who ran to the mushy middle lost.
But this is not just a fight for the soul of the Democratic Party, it’s a fight for our very democracy. As Justice Louis Brandeis said almost a century ago, “We may have a democracy or we may have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we cannot have both.”
Americans are yearning for champions who stand up for them. If we have any hope of changing the direction of our economy from enriching the rich at the expense of the rest of us and of recapturing our democracy from the CEO campaign contributors and Wall Street bag men, it will be because progressive forces and elected champions stand up not just to Republicans but to President Obama and any Democrat who takes the side of Wall Street against America’s working families.
It is clear that progressives and the American people will lose battle after battle in Congress over the next two years. The real question is whether we will lose the war.
Republican Reps. Steve King of Iowa and Michele Bachmann of Minnesota said they devised a plan and presented it to Boehner: a 60-day continuing resolution for all government agencies with language that would undo Obama’s immigration actions. They didn’t get their way.Yes, with the Republican Party it will always come down to whose priorities bio first, Big Buisness or the racists. The racists lost this round. The lobbyists won:
“We almost brought the rule down,” Bachmann said Thursday. “We almost won. But then you heard the bones breaking, with the arms that were twisted. But we almost won.”
...The rash of conservative complaints about the so-called cromnibus ran the gamut. One common grumble was that they didn’t have enough time to read what turned out to be a fat, 1,603-page bill. Conservatives also failed to include a rider that may have allowed corporations to duck Obama’s contraceptive coverage rules, and they felt they weren’t consulted early enough in the process.
But it was the fight over immigration that left conservatives most exasperated.
Labels: progressives vs Democrats, Republican civil war, Richard Kirsch
1 Comments:
I don't suppose anyone noticed the virtually unanimous vote of the House trying its hardest to foment WWIII. http://tinyurl.com/ppdth8h
Resolution: "Strongly condemning the actions of the Russian Federation, under President Vladimir Putin, which has carried out a policy of aggression against neighboring countries aimed at political and economic domination."
Usually its the GOP projecting its depravity onto others, now all but 12 Dems piled on to accuse Russia and that demon Putin of attempted
"political and economic domination."
This is analogous of our being outraged when some dictator or another kills "his own people."
Black youth and austerity murder aside (not to mention Double Speak re Putin/Ukraine), presumably the problem is local murder and attempts at domination.
If a country murders and attempts to dominate far away that, presumably is the basis of exceptionalism.
The five Dem "no" votes:
Grayson
Hastings (FL)
McDermott
Miller, George
O'Rourke
------eom
John Puma
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