As part
of the current unemployment crisis, at last look there were
453,000 claims for insurance, a number that is likely to
surge when part-time government workers employed on the
Census end their term this summer. Yet, there probably is
no greater indication of the radical extreme to which the
Republican party has become than to witness their rejection
of legislation to extend unemployment benefits in the Senate.
In the past, some Republicans supported such legislation
to keep benefits flowing, but this time, their unanimous
rejection for a second time killed it. They were joined
by Democrat Ben Nelson of Nebraska
who I wish would change parties to clarify who he really
represents.
A look at a few states
where funds will run out soon turns up a frightening picture:
87,000 people in Michigan which has the second largest unemployment
rate; 67,000 in Colorado face the same fate; 7,000 people
in Georgia; 184,000 in Florida. The legislation would have
created $16 billion to reimburse state Medicaid expenses,
and without it, New Hampshire will
loose $79 million in State funds and it will cost Michigan over $500 million, creating a gaping hole
that could lead to bankruptcy.
In the recent primary
elections, radical Tea Party politicians gained serious
inroads into the Republican party. For example, Sharron
Angle, Harry Reid’s opponent for U. S. Senator from Nevada.
not only believes that Social Security is “welfare” but
that unemployment benefits have “spoiled” people to the
point that “you don’t want the jobs that are available.”
Then, Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah has proposed that everyone who qualifies for
unemployment compensation should undergo a drug test, testimony
to the class and race perspective some Republicans have
toward people who need such assistance.
The fact that Republicans
don’t appear to be concerned about the impact of their rejection
of funds on ordinary people in their states continues to
confirm a heartless and immoral side of the Republican governing
ideology. It is a growing radicalism that is justified by
their elevation of the deficit, much of which was created
by former Republican George Bush, over their constituent’s
pain.
Beyond an immorality
linked to a lack of concern for the less fortunate, Republican
intransigence possibly constitutes a political strategy
for the fall elections. How? A recent NBC/Wall Street Journal
poll found that Congress registered the lowest favorable
ratings in modern history at six percent, while Gallup
found the preferences of those polled to win control of
Congress split between Republicans (45%) and Democrats (43%).
This means that either the public has not blamed the Republican
party, the element in Congress most responsible for the
perceived lack of production, or it blames the Democrats
for what has been produced. Either way, it seems that Republicans
are free to run against Democratic control of Congress,
even though they have attempted to wreck many humanitarian
initiatives.
Such a strategy is possible
partly because of the lack of strength and specificity in
the Democratic narrative about governance that shields the
Republican party from its negative role. President Obama
began this weak narrative by campaigning on “changing the
way things work in Washington.”
But you can’t change that by being vague about what elements
are responsible and what party to which they are attached.
His fixation on bipartisan government also enhanced this
cover-up. So, there was an incomplete analysis of change.
Change from what? Despite the fact that there is an occasional
reference to what the President inherited when he came in
office, the change from what narrative has not been comprehensively
explained. How can Americans then understand how and why
their government has not functioned for them: why the banks
and financial houses collapsed and had to be bailed out,
how and why mortgages were deliberately sold to people who
couldn’t afford them, and why there is a monumental oil
spill in the Gulf that is also tied to lax governmental
regulation in the Republican era?
Word
is that the Democratic party is laying out $50 million for
the fall elections, and a great deal of it should be spent
to build a message factory to help explain to the American
people why the President has done what he has had to do
the past two years, and what feeds the perception that the
Congress is dysfunctional. If Democrats can’t get unemployment
insurance, other important goals are in jeopardy both now
and after the elections.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board
member, Dr. Ron Walters, PhD is a Political Analyst,
Author and Professor Emeritus of Government and
Politics at the University
of Maryland, College
Park. One of his latest books is: The
Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and
Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press)
Click here
to contact Dr. Walters. |