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Bipartisanship Is Bad

 
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As fanciful beasts go, bipartisanship is more like a T. Rex than a unicorn—it actually roamed the earth once. Take 1965, for example. Lyndon Johnson had just clobbered Barry Goldwater by 16 million votes in one of the most lopsided elections in U.S. history; Democrats outnumbered Republicans 68 to 32 in the Senate and 295 to 140 in the House. Yet when the jewels of Johnson's "Great Society"—Medicare and Medicaid—came up on the congressional docket, Democrat Wilbur Mills sat down with rookie minority leader Gerald Ford to craft a compromise bill. Six months and more than 500 alterations later, the Social Security Act of 1965 arrived in the Oval Office with the support of 13 Republican senators and 70 of their House colleagues.

If that kind of cooperation sounds as anachronistic as a massive reptile, that's because it is. When (or rather, if) Obama's health-care-reform bill reaches the floor of Congress, he'll be lucky to get a single Republican vote. Predictably, this has attracted a lot of attention in the overheated halls of Washington from liberals who say that Obama should disregard conservative concerns, from Republicans eager to puncture his "postpartisan" aura, and from centrists who reflexively long for some imagined era of interparty comity. There's only one thing all three sides seem to agree on: Obama should care.

He shouldn't—and neither should we. Fact is, the sort of Republicans who voted for Medicare in 1965 no longer exist. Since the early 1970s, Democrats have drifted only slightly leftward. But thanks to realignment and redistricting—the practice of slicing the electoral map into ever more politically homogenous districts—a 2003 Republican House member with a voting record at the median of his party was about 73 percent more conservative than his Nixon-era counterpart. Which means he was about 73 percent less likely to reach across the aisle—no matter who was reaching out from the other side. And the odds are only getting longer. In 2006 the GOP lost most of its remaining moderates: Lincoln Chafee, Rob Simmons, Charlie Bass, Jim Leach. Three years later, Pennsylvania's Arlen Specter defected to the Dems.

Today's bipartisanship is nothing like LBJ's. Technically, it still requires a deal between Democrats and Republicans. But once that would have required cooperation among centrists who shared principles, if not party affiliations. Now moderate Dems who, say, believe in universal health care must reach out to conservative Republicans who don't, or at least who cannot buck their party. Any bill relying on "modern" bipartisan support to pass would need to be "vague on key areas and weak on others," as liberal wonk Ezra Klein has written.

Earlier this summer Rahm Emanuel, Obama's chief of staff, attempted to redefine bipartisanship. "The test … is not just how many Republican votes you have," he told reporters, but how many Republican ideas. "Whether Republicans decide to vote for things that they've promoted will be up to them." This isn't to say that Republicans should roll over and die, or that Obama's plan is somehow perfect, or that cooperation can't check a majority party's inevitable excesses. But compromise and capitulation are two very different things—and you can't raise a dinosaur from the dead.

NEXT: Americans Marry Too Much

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: earthorbitsthesun @ 08/20/2009 3:41:16 PM

    Yea right, all I need to bring up is President Clinton's "Housing for all" becoming Barney Franks "pet" and President Bush having Senator McCain trying to regulate Barney Franks "pet" and the Democrats defeated in what 2004 or 5? The best the Democrats can say is Bush should have tried harder? Now it's "Health Care for all" even Obama is not ignorant enough to endorse "that one"!

    OMG! Unicorns don't exist? Someone really needs to tell the Democrats, finical analysts as a whole would really be happy to have them understand this minor point!

  • Posted By: Lee Holmes @ 08/20/2009 3:26:13 PM

    Reid indicated that he would pull the ''reconciliation'' trigger but announced through his spokesman Jim Manley that he would seek a ''bi-partisan compromise'' well knowing that if he goes this route, the remainder of his policies will be as dead as Caesar, worried over the condition of Kennedy, who holds the tenuous 60 needed to block filibuster, which brings us to the Beantown Brahmin.

    Back in the Spring of 2004,Kerry almost had it. Before the SBVs and his ''hunting''gaffes, he was inching up past Bush. Here, worried about Senate Succession, due to the fact that Romney, a Republican, was the Governor,with Kerry ahead, and that the rules then allowed Mitt to put his man in, Kennedy approached the Democrat-run state legislature in order to change the rules from governor-appointed successor to statewide special vote. Being able to override a veto, the deal went down and this is where Masachusetts voting law remains.


    Until now.

    Kennedy has now gone back to the state legislature to get the rules changed AGAIN! As Pat Duval, a Democrat, is now Governor, Kennedy, who well knows the sinking popularity for his party even in that state, is now demanding that the issue of senate succession be again handled by the governor, making the rules up, as is typical of either party in power, as they go along. Ergo;

    ''Democracy For Me, But Not For Thee''.

    The Boston Globe Aug.20,2009.

    www.realclearpolitics.com Aug.20,2009

    The News You Will Never See On NEWSWEAK

  • Posted By: bushmaster @ 08/20/2009 8:01:57 AM

    pauljb what you really mean is don't underestimate the gulliblity of americans like you!

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