My fellow columnist and Opinion Editor Alex Potter recently wrote that the unforeseen election of Republican Scott Brown in the traditionally blue state of Massachusetts was “ringing endorsement of the inherent conservatism of the American people.” I would argue that instead, the election was a sign that the American people are fed up with the polarized, partisan politics of Washington.
The election of Scott Brown signals the end of the Democratic supermajority that supposedly enables them to pass anything they want, anytime they want. If only it were that simple . . .
Since taking office, President Obama has had to fight tooth and nail within his own party to pass “radical” legislation such as the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act and the budget. With Brown’s election, the Democrats have announced that they will seek a “scaled-back bill” on health care. They’ve stopped mentioning the cap and trade bill stalled in the Senate altogether. All of these changes have occurred despite the fact that the Democrats still control the Senate by 18 votes.
Most of the media has focused on the consequences of Brown’s election on the Democratic party, entirely forgetting the effects on the Republican party. Now that the Democrats no longer have the ability to push legislation through, the Republican party is going to have to prove that they aren’t just “the party of no.”
So far, they haven’t done too well. The Senate recently defeated a White House proposal to form a bipartisan commission to deal with the debt and deficit. Several Republicans who once co-sponsored the bill voted against it. In the polarized world of Washington, any Republican who is seen as cooperating with the President is likely to face a challenge from his own party in the upcoming primaries.
“Polarization is the twin evil of partisanship,” recently explained Ross Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers.
Baker believes that while partisanship is natural, the real problem comes from the personalization, search for immediate political gain and volume of conflict that characterize polarization.
But our president is not giving up on his promise to change the polarized world of Washington. Last Friday, Jan. 29, Obama attended a House Republican retreat in Baltimore, spending 90 minutes in one of the longest public debates any President has had with a hostile audience.
Defying expectations, it was an incredibly civil debate. Obama complained that the Republicans had painted him as radical while the Republicans countered that the president has failed to listen to any of their ideas. Both sides agreed that they were to blame for the vicious polarization that has marred Obama’s first year in office.
As the New York Times noted, the debate more closely resembled the British tradition where the Prime Minister submits to questions in the House of Commons than anything ever before seen in Washington.
If Republicans and Democrats can keep that spirit of civility then maybe Americans can have not just a president, but a government that we can believe in.
Will Canine • Feb 4, 2010 at 8:40 pm
The election of Scott Brown, and the Tea Party Movement’s approval rating (hovering about 15 pts above the Dems and 20 above the GOP), show that Americans are tired of politics as usual. They are seeing the wheeling and dealing process our democracy is forced to endure (see Russ’ article on the filibuster) that awarded Nebraska with free medicare for a watered down bill, not the promises of fairness and change from 2008.
Americans crave principal. The tea party movement, Obama’s campaign (not administration), and the “culture war” paradigm that has been the norm since long before Pat Buchannan named it in 1992 all show that it is strong, values based arguments which Americans respond to. Let me be clear: though I think its awesome that Obama took the GOP to school in the Q&A sesh last week, smart, correct policy talk does not win voters or legislative victories. Americans all over the political spectrum want strong, principled leadership, and they arnt seeing it in the Democratic party.
The problems progressives and liberals face is this poo-pooing attitude towards confrontation and strong, values based arguments. We are right, and we need to say so strongly, not complain that the GOP isnt playing nice. Of course they arnt, when have they? When will we wake up and realize that, even with a huge majority, we cant win by complaining that our opponents throw elbows? I want to see a hard left hook from Obama, Reid and Pelosi, not wishy-washy, misplaced hope that the GOP will suddenly become “civil.”
Gary Wang • Feb 4, 2010 at 11:05 am
Lisa, I wonder though how it’s possible for America’s government to become less polarized. The incentive for Republicans to cooperate with Obama and Co are slim to none. If they cross the aisle, they could face a conservative primary challenge yes. They will get heat/hate in the right wing echo chamber of Glen Beck/Limbaugh/Fox News. The GOP leadership can strip them of seniority on key committees. The GOP is trying to duplicate what happened in 1994. They uniformly opposed the Clinton healthcare plan. The Democrats got weak-kneed and squabbled. And the Republicans retook the House for the first time in 40 years in 1994.
Now? It’s the same pattern. Total obstruction of the Democratic agenda. Count on the public to not really assign blame to one particular party (the Republicans) even though they’re more at fault. Then when the Democrats fail to pass healthcare reform because they’re afraid of being percieved as a) too liberal b) too out of touch with “main street”, then capitalize on a dispirited liberal base and an energized conservative base.
I disagree with the political logic that the public will somehow hold Republicans accountable for “being the Party of No”. That historically hasn’t happened. Rather, anti-incumbent sentiments swell and the public thinks “let’s give the other guys a chance”. In today’s 24/7 media spin cycle, memories fade fast and people forget how the Republican dominated congress and administration for the last 8 years failed to do anything meaningful on healthcare, climate change, and the deficit.
So, if Washington is polarized, the solution isn’t to equivocate between both parties saying they’re both at fault. Rather, it’s to hold to your principles. I mean, the democrats have 59 rather than 60 senators. As Obama noted in meeting with the senate dems yesterday, that’s still the second largest majority in decades…too bad it’s acting like 49 senators instead of 59…