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Frank Rich- Why Wouldn’t the Tea Party Shut It Down?

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n2doc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-26-11 09:12 PM
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Frank Rich- Why Wouldn’t the Tea Party Shut It Down?
NO one remembers anything in America, especially in Washington, so the history of the Great Government Shutdown of 1995 is being rewritten with impunity by Republicans flirting with a Great Government Shutdown of 2011. The bottom line of the revisionist spin is this: that 2011 is no 1995. Should the unthinkable occur on some coming budget D-Day — or perhaps when the deadline to raise the federal debt ceiling arrives this spring — the G.O.P. is cocksure that it can pin the debacle on the Democrats.

In the right’s echo chamber, voters are seen as so fed up with deficits that they’ll put principle over temporary inconveniences — like, say, a halt in processing new Social Security applicants or veterans’ benefit checks. Who needs coddled government workers to deal with that minutiae anyway? As Mike Huckabee has cheerfully pointed out, many more federal services are automated now than in the olden days of the late 20th century. Phone trees don’t demand pensions.

Remarkably (or not) much of the Beltway press has bought the line that comparisons between then and now are superficial. Sure, Bill Clinton, like Barack Obama, was bruised by his first midterms, with his party losing the House to right-wing revolutionaries hawking the Contract With America, a Tea Party ur-text demanding balanced budgets. But after that, we’re instructed, the narratives diverge. John Boehner is no bomb-throwing diva like Newt Gingrich, whose petulant behavior inspired the famous headline “Cry Baby” in The Daily News. A crier — well, yes — but Boehner’s too conventional a conservative to foment a reckless shutdown. Obama, prone to hanging back from Congressional donnybrooks, bears scant resemblance to the hands-on Clinton, who clamored to get into the ring with Newt.

Those propagating the 2011-is-not-1995 line also assume that somehow Boehner will prevent the new G.O.P. insurgents from bringing down the government they want to bring down. But if Gingrich couldn’t control his hard-line freshman class of 73 members in 1995 — he jokingly referred to them then as “a third party” — it’s hard to imagine how the kinder, gentler Boehner will control his 87 freshmen, many of them lacking government or legislative experience, let alone the gene for compromise. In the new Congress’s short history, the new speaker has already had trouble controlling his caucus. On Friday Gingrich made Boehner’s task harder by writing a Washington Post op-ed plea that the G.O.P. stick to its guns.

more
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/27/opinion/27rich.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
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Ozymanithrax Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-26-11 09:24 PM
Response to Original message
1. Clearly, elections have consequences. n/t
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gratuitous Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-26-11 09:30 PM
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2. Rich nails the salient point
Many of the New Republican Nitwit Brigade have little or no government or legislative experience. The notion of compromise, diplomacy or plain old politicking doesn't register with them. They have no experience, and no gauge except win, Win, WIN. They've already gotten their collective noses bloodied "You mean Obamacare isn't repealed because we voted?" and as the initial giddiness of being elected gives way to the grind of legislating, you can bet they're going to be spoiling for a really big fight, and totally shutting down the government looks like just the ticket.
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seafan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-26-11 10:51 PM
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3. The GOP's government and Labor wrecking machine is at full tilt.
When Frank Rich is right, he is unassailable.


February 26, 2011


.....

The real goal is to reward the G.O.P.’s wealthiest patrons by crippling what remains of organized labor, by wrecking the government agencies charged with regulating and policing corporations, and, as always, by rewarding the wealthiest with more tax breaks. The bankrupt moral equation codified in the Bush era — that tax cuts tilted to the highest bracket were a higher priority even than paying for two wars — is now a given. The once-bedrock American values of shared sacrifice and equal economic opportunity have been overrun.

.....

But this governor (Scott Walker) is merely a petty-cash item on the Koch ledger — as befits the limited favors he can offer Koch’s mammoth, sprawling, Kansas-based industrial interests.

Look to Washington for the bigger story. As The Los Angeles Times recently reported, Koch Industries and its employees form the largest bloc of oil and gas industry donors to members of the new House Energy and Commerce Committee, topping even Exxon Mobil. And what do they get for that largess? As a down payment, the House budget bill not only reduces financing for the Environmental Protection Agency but also prohibits its regulation of greenhouse gases.

Here again, the dollars that will be saved are minute in terms of the federal deficit, but the payoff to Koch interests from a weakened E.P.A. is priceless. The same dynamic is at play in the House’s reduced spending for the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Internal Revenue Service. and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (charged with regulation of the esoteric Wall Street derivatives that greased the financial crisis). The reduction in the deficit will be minimal, but the bottom lines for the Kochs and their peers, especially on Wall Street, will swell.

.....



We are staring into the face of America's true enemy.





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AdHocSolver Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-27-11 02:11 AM
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4. K & R. nt
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