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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'Congress' Is Not Flailing. Republicans Are. With whom are the Dems supposed to negotiate in bedlam?
BY CHARLES P. PIERCE
AUG 3, 2020
No, goddammit, Washington Post, Enough of this nonsense. Congress is not flailing. The Republican majority in the Senate is flailing, because the Republican majority is made up of Republicans, and the Republican Party is made up of hyper-ambitious lunatics. Its not Congress thats stiffing the millions of Americans who need relief in this perilous time of tangled national emergencies that are feeding off each other. Its the Republicans. Why is that so hard to say?
The crisis that forced lawmakers to act with unusual speed in March and April to pump an unprecedented $3 trillion into the economy has not abated. By some measures, after a brief leveling off in infections and some positive economic indicators, things have gotten worse. What has faded is the sense of bipartisan urgency that existed in the spring and propelled Congress to act with near unanimity. At that time, the new virus that was wreaking economic havoc around the nation was so alarming it seemed to startle lawmakers out of their partisan corners. But now the election is nearing, and the novel coronavirus is not so novel. The partisan divisions are back on Capitol Hill, and they appear to be as intractable as ever.
Oh, FFS, as all the kidz abbreviate these days. The Democratic House has passed a relief package that deals with all aspects of the current crises, from aid to schools to help for the states with balloting this November. But the Republican president* is in Cloud Cuckoo Land on the pandemic, and the Republicans in the Senate, desperate to hold onto their majority, cant figure out if there are more votes to be had by helping the folks back home, or by pumping more hot-air into the leaky balloon of fiscal responsibility. And Mitch McConnell has so lost control of his caucus that he went home this past weekend having accomplished nothing.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) waited months over the late spring and summer to act, saying he wanted to see what impact the programs already approved were having before agreeing to anything more. During that time the virus itself frustrated widespread hopes that the situation might improve and began to surge in states that had reopened too aggressively. McConnell finally released a $1 trillion bill last Monday as the GOPs answer to the much larger bill passed by House Democrats in May, but he struggled to get consensus within his party and with the Trump administration, including complaints from members of his own conference about everything from the price tag to a new round of stimulus checks.
Between the people afraid of losing their seats, and the senators who want to run for president in 2024, McConnell is paralyzed. Of course, you will never guess what the real problem is.
Democrats have consistently rejected the notion of a short-term fix, and in face of the GOPs disunity they have shown little willingness to compromise on their push for the most generous relief bill possible, with an array of provisions that Republicans reject, such as $1 trillion in new aid for cities and states. Republicans say they do not think Democrats want to pass anything at all because theyd rather have a political issue; Democrats angrily reject that accusation.
Yes. Yes, they do. You know why? Because its bullshit, thats why. McConnell cant even get his caucus to listen to either the White House chief of staff or the Secretary of the Treasury, let alone himself. With whom, exactly, are the Democrats supposed to negotiate here in Bedlam?
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Make NO mistake, Republican fucktoolery is why things are horrific at this moment.
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)not that it will do much good, but it will make me feel better.
Time for them to get up off the pot and get to work.
OAITW r.2.0
(24,455 posts)As long as I've been posting at DU, I've called Bullshit on the Congress label. Especially when the polling lumps both Democrats and Republicans under the "Congress" label. I can't remember when the Republican Party was a serious body looking to pass legidslation that benefits all Americans. W
e should have learned this lesson in 2008, but here we are in 2020 dealing with a totally corrupted organized crime party, masquerading as a serious political party.
chriscan64
(1,789 posts)By McConnell's own admission, 20 gop Senators are voting no on any proposal. His assertion that Democrats are holding this up by not doing all the compromising falls flat. Even the casual news viewer understands that the Democrats want to keep the extra unemployment at $600 and the Republicans want to cut it to $200. Why don't we do an opinion poll of the unemployed to see if they would prefer $600 or $200?
zaj
(3,433 posts)When it's The Republicans in government
central scrutinizer
(11,648 posts)First, do harm. Then search for ways to be even crueler. Oh, and tax cuts.
still_one
(92,174 posts)financial networks