Republican
overreach is in the air. You can see it, smell it, taste
it everywhere, as you have in years past. And the only
surprise is that is that it happened so quickly this time
around.
In this last election cycle, the Grand Overreaching Party
seized control of the U.S. House of Representatives and
state legislatures and governorships around the country
on a platform of jobs, balanced budgets and fiscal responsibility.
It took not so long before conservatives revealed their
true intentions.
On the federal level there was the sideshow of Rep. Peter
King’s (R-NY) hearings
on radical Islam. People are foreclosed upon, out of
money, out of luck and suffering out there, but what do
the Republicans decide to go after? NPR and Planned
Parenthood, and rape
victims who want an abortion. On the state level there
is the ban
on Sharia law and the war
on the unemployed. There are birther bills, bills to
eliminate birthright citizenship, and voter ID legislation
to deal with the nonexistent issue of voter fraud. Michigan
Governor Rick
Snyder represents the epitome of overreaching, with
new powers to dissolve municipal governments, throw out
union contracts, and eliminate school districts.
And in states in particular such as Wisconsin, Michigan,
Indiana Pennsylvania and Ohio, talk of shared sacrifice
really has meant one-way sacrifice, with cuts to programs
for the poor and working people and no demands made on the
wealthy. In a perverse fashion, devastating cuts in education
and health are paired with equally generous tax breaks to
corporations, as if no one is looking and this grave crime
being committed has no witnesses. Let’s not forget the
attack on unions’ collective bargaining rights under the
guise of deficit reduction. Now, that was diabolically
slick of them.
Even many Republican
voters are having buyer’s
remorse,
with recall efforts underway, and some newly elected governors
losing if an election were held today. Voters, be careful
what you ask for. And yet, this was predictable, with history
providing examples such as the 104th and 105th Congress
and the Republican Contract with America. At that time,
overreach came in the form of an impeachment of President
for marital infidelity, and hypocrisy—and subsequent resignations—of
GOP lawmakers who were guilty of the same.
Why voters send in the same crowd time and again, knowing
their track record and their tendency to perform a bait
and switch, is anyone’s guess. My theory is that voters
were attracted to Republican candidates on the false hope
that eliminating wasteful government spending would create
jobs. In the past, conservatives have used the “welfare
queen” as the perennial scapegoat, a “whipping girl,” if
you will, to attack a bloated bureaucracy and further the
cause of a smaller, limited government. The racial overtones
were not too subtle, as it was understood that it was a
black woman living in the projects on the South Side of
Chicago who, according to President Reagan, “has eighty names, thirty addresses, twelve Social Security cards
and is collecting veteran's benefits on four non-existing
deceased husbands. And she is collecting Social Security on
her cards. She's got Medicaid,
getting food stamps, and she is collecting welfare under
each of her names. Her tax-free cash income is over $150,000.”
That was the Southern Strategy that served the GOP for decades— getting
poor and working class whites to vote against their economic
interests by convincing them that government programs mean
unfair benefits to black people. But what do you do when,
as is the case today, the so-called welfare queens are all public sector workers, who are accused of draining the public
coffers with their million-dollar salaries, the teachers,
police officers and firefighters who are only trying to
feed their families and send their children to school?
And what do you do when you realize some conservative politician
considers you the welfare queen and makes you
the scapegoat?
In the overreaching world of the conservative Republicans
in power, the poor and the working class as a whole are
the welfare queens. And struggling working people will
bear the burden of this new regime of austerity and lopsided
shared sacrifice. GOP overreach is part of a greater problem,
made possible thanks to the growing inequality in America,
the concentration of wealth, the relative weakness of organized
labor, and the ubiquity of corporate power. In the absence
of a national industrial policy— and given the state of
U.S. political system, which is sold to the highest bidder
each day—everything revolves around the short-term needs
of corporations. Corporations have purchased big chunks
of influence in our government, so the regressive policies
we are witnessing reflect these corporations’ quest for
short-term profits, not the long-term needs of the people.
True democracy cannot sustain these conditions, but feudalism
can.
But it seems the people are waking up, finally. As President George W. Bush
once said, “There's an old saying
in Tennessee - I know it's in Texas, probably in Tennessee
- that says, fool me once, shame on - shame on you. Fool
me - you can't get fooled again
.”
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, is
a graduate of Harvard College and
the University of Pennsylvania Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent
Media Center. He
also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos,
and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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