Dec 16, 2010 - Issue 406 |
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An Historical View from the |
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Smarting from the complaints within his own party about the tax deal he and the Republican leadership had hatched, an increasingly defensive President Obama said,” this is the public option debate all over again.” Then, he claimed, that while he was able to pass a meaningful reform, progressives had instead viewed it as “weakness and compromise” that there was no public option in his healthcare plan. “Now, if that’s the standard by which we are measuring success or core principles, and then let’s face it, we will never get anything done.” “This is a big, diverse country,” Obama said. “Not everybody agrees with us. I know that shocks people.” “This country was founded on compromise.
I couldn’t go through the front door of this country’s founding,” he added.
“And you know, if we were really thinking about
ideal positions, we wouldn’t have a When I read those words my first thought was: that’s not how Abe Lincoln viewed it. On some questions, Compromising is not an inherent virtue. It is, indeed, a necessity. We do it all the time in our personal and social lives, Society would be impossible without it. The question is: compromise over what and on what? Of course tax policy in 2010 is not the monumental issue that slavery was in the 1800s but don’t go belittling people, calling them “sanctimonious,” just because they don’t think a particular “compromise” is justified. Talk about holding the country hostage;
consider what happened a few years after A few days ago I discovered I wasn’t
the only one wondering: what would “President Obama’s tax deal with congressional Republicans may well turn out to be a defining moment in his presidency,” wrote historian Eric Foner. “This is less because of its content than what it tells us about Obama himself and his politics.” “During the 2008 campaign, many observers
compared Obama with Abraham Lincoln,” Foner
wrote in the Guardian (UK) December 9. “Obama encouraged this, announcing
his candidacy in “… Many comparisons between Lincoln
and Obama have no historical merit. One that has validity is that both
made their national reputations through oratory rather than long careers
of public service. “Obama’s rather petulant response
to liberal critics of his tax deal, however, reveals a fundamental difference
between the two men,” wrote Foner. “Obama accuses
liberals of being sanctimonious purists, more interested in staking out
a principled position than getting things accomplished. “ “ “Every major policy of Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson suggested last week that liberals and progressive had little choice but to go along with the Obama-GOP compromise but added, “…this is painful. Democrats in Congress are understandably irate at being lectured so sternly by a president for whom ending the tax cuts for the wealthy was so important that it was non-negotiable - until he negotiated it away.” “It’s a sad story, for the country and especially for the Democratic Party,” wrote Robinson. “I believe the White House continues to underestimate the anger and disillusionment among the party’s loyal base - and the need for some victories, or at least some heroic battles, to lift the spirits of the faithful. Obama needs to train his newfound passion and outrage on his foes in the GOP, not on the friends and supporters that his press secretary once derisively called the ‘professional left’.” The big problem now is trying to figure out what other “compromises” may be in the legislative pipeline. Surely, getting anything reasonable done is going to be doubly difficult next year when the new Congress convenes with the Republicans in control of the House of Representatives. Enter the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, otherwise known of as the Cat Food Commission. Created by the President last spring, under the chairpersonship of former Republican Senator Alan Simpson and former Clinton Administration Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles, it lurks in the corridors of power like the living dead, determined to have its way. The Simpson Bowles proposals, which
among other things targets Social Security and Medicare for sharp cutbacks,
failed to get the support of 14 of the 18 commissions that were required
to guarantee a vote by Congress. But never mind that, they and their powerful backers
are engaged in a full-court press to convince the White House to embrace
their program for nearly $4 billion in budget cuts in the next federal
budget. Simpson and Bowles met with senior White House aides last week
and, according to the Financial Times, urged them “to incorporate
a sweeping debt reduction proposal in the ‘State of The President has previously said the commission’s co-chair’s views would be taken into consideration when preparing the budget. Talk about holding the country hostage, Simpson and Bowles are clearly playing hardball. They are said to have proposed a deal with the President whereby he would agree quickly to their proposals in order to avoid a major showdown in Congress next year. They are operating against the backdrop of a Republican threat to bring the government to a halt when the routine question of raising the Federal debt limit comes before Congress if they don’t get their way on drastic spending cuts. “We believe a bipartisan agreement should be reached before any long-term increase in the debt limit is approved,” Bowles and Simpson said. “I can’t wait for the blood bath in April,” Simpson said November 19. “It won’t matter whether two of us have signed this or 14 or 18. When debt limit time comes, they’re going to look around and say, ‘What in the hell do we do now? We’ve got guys who will not approve the debt limit extension unless we give ‘em a piece of meat, real meat, off of this package.’ And boy the bloodbath will be extraordinary.” That statement prompted economist Paul Krugman to remark, “Think of Mr. Simpson’s blood lust as one more piece of evidence that our nation is in much worse shape, much closer to a political breakdown, than most people realize.” Of course, none of this maneuvering has anything to do with democratic decision making. It is all designed to get around public opinion and the Constitutional process of legislative deliberation. On November 30, the Associated
Press reported, “We keep seeing this same result. A recent CBS News
poll asked Americans what they’d like to see Congress focus on next year.
The results weren’t close - a 56 percent majority cited ‘economy/jobs’
as the top issue. Health care was a distant second at 14 percent, while
tackling the deficit/debt was a very distant third at 4 percent. A week
later, “The actual consequences of this
deal, of course, will be more severe than the political fallout in 2012,”
wrote Zach Carter on the Campaign for At his recent press conference, Obama asserted that the positions of such people on the left would result in nothing being accomplished, except having “a ‘sanctimonious’ pride in the purity of their own positions.” Tell that to Abe, Barack. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Carl Bloice is a writer in |
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