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Politics : A US National Health Care System? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (15494)3/26/2010 6:30:35 PM
From: stockman_scott4 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42652
 
Republican elite in disarray after David Frum is sacked by think-tank

timesonline.co.uk

America’s conservatives were in open disarray after the abrupt sacking of a leading Republican for daring to blame his own party for “the most crushing legislative defeat since the 1960s”.

David Frum, who coined the phrase “Axis of Evil” as a speechwriter for President Bush, was fired by the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) after posting a column on his website that called healthcare reform a disaster for Republicans and blamed it squarely on their own refusal to compromise with the Obama Administration.

A prominent neoconservative throughout both Bush terms, Mr Frum said that his departure was forced by a furious reaction to his column from donors to the AEI, a powerful Republican think tank that has many former Bush administration officials on its staff.

His sacking came at the end of a week that conservatives predicted would mark the beginning of the end for Democrats in Washington. Instead President Obama has a new nuclear arms treaty to add to his healthcare Bill and it is the Republican movement that is flailing — unsure how a revived White House agenda will play with voters, embarrassed by the ugly excesses of its own rank and file and wrong-footed not just by Mr Obama but by Mr Frum himself.

He posted his column within minutes of the Democrats’ securing the votes to pass health reform last weekend, condemning a Republican strategy of “no negotiations, no compromise, nothing”. He accused his party of trying to repeat its humiliation of President Clinton in 1994 while forgetting that Mr Obama won office with a far larger proportion of the popular vote. “We went for all the marbles, we ended with none,” he wrote.

As the column was distributed among Republican moderates and gleeful Democrats, quills were sharpened on the right for retribution. On Tuesday the Wall Street Journal dismissed Mr Frum in an editorial as “the media’s go-to basher of fellow Republicans” and attacked him for “peddling bad revisionist history that would have been even worse politics”. On Thursday, he was taken out to lunch and offered the chance to stay on at the think-tank “on a non-salaried basis”. He declined.

Another former Republican White House advisor, the economist and historian Bruce Bartlett, has since claimed that AEI staff have been muzzled for agreeing with too many of the Obama Administration’s health reforms. Several current fellows at the think-tank have denied the claim.

If tensions within the Republican movement were confined to think-tanks and the fringe it would amount to business-as-usual for a party that lost badly in the last two big election years. However, mainstream figures including the standard-bearers of the Republican establishment, are being forced to the right by “purity tests” on key issues and a groundswell of Tea Party activism that moderates fear could marginalise the party in the long term.

In Tucson and Phoenix, Senator John McCain hit the campaign trail with Sarah Palin, his old running-mate, in an effort to head off a primary challenge from John Hayworth, a talk show host who considers the Senator too soft on immigration, same-sex marriage and health reform — even though Mr McCain has led Republican demands this week for the entire Bill to be repealed.

In Florida, the once-popular Republican Governor Charlie Crist has been attacked relentlessly by Tea Party bloggers since supporting the Obama stimulus package last year. He faces defeat by Marco Rubio, a firebrand of the hard right, at the midterm elections in November.

Among potential 2012 Republican presidential contenders, Mitt Romney has been forced to condemn the health reforms as an “historic usurpation of the legislative process” even though it is based largely on a Bill he shepherded into state law as Governor of Massachusetts. Mike Huckabee, until recently a favourite of social conservatives, slid back to also-ran status three months ago when a prisoner he released nine years ago went on a shooting spree.

The backlash against health reform has not yet descended to shooting, but it turned so nasty this week that a succession of Republican leaders risked alienating Tea Party agitators to denounce it. Death threats and bricks — such as one thrown through a district office of Congresswoman Louise Slaughter — have no place in politics, John Boehner, the House minority leader, told reporters.

No senior Republican has dared to criticise Mrs Palin for urging her supporters to “reload” and take aim at vulnerable Democrats, whose districts are identified with rifle crosshairs on her website. This may be because, as Mr Frum said, “the elite isn’t leading any more; it’s trapped”. It is a trap that threatens moderate conservatism as a whole. If Mr Obama’s reforms prove more popular than anticipated, Mr Frum and his allies must find a way to reassert control of their party, or get used to irrelevance.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (15494)3/26/2010 6:36:31 PM
From: Sdgla1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42652
 
The adults are in charge ? How pathetic a statement.

Obama scolds and embarrases our ally Netanyahu {over 1600 apts in an undisputed portion of Jerusalem} while a madman is building nukes in Iran.... Russia and China openly defy the Obama admin and laugh at our push for Iranian sanctions.

This POTUS makes Pres Clinton look like Pres Lincoln with his insulting behavior at the State of the Union towards an equal branch of our government and his daily press conferences/stump speeches in order to satisfy his minimum daily requirement of applause. Where's the presidential decorum ? Openly challenging the GOP as if they do not represent 50% of the public re health care by saying bring it on .

No change for the better going on here... just the most partisan hack job in the recent memory.

If only BO showed the same spine to our enemies as he does our allies.

Adults ? Pelosi at 11% and Reid at 8%. BO has the steepest approval drop of any POTUS ever !



To: RetiredNow who wrote (15494)3/26/2010 10:27:46 PM
From: Eric1 Recommendation  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 42652
 
Going to Extreme

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: March 25, 2010

I admit it: I had fun watching right-wingers go wild as health reform finally became law. But a few days later, it doesn’t seem quite as entertaining — and not just because of the wave of vandalism and threats aimed at Democratic lawmakers. For if you care about America’s future, you can’t be happy as extremists take full control of one of our two great political parties.

To be sure, it was enjoyable watching Representative Devin Nunes, a Republican of California, warn that by passing health reform, Democrats “will finally lay the cornerstone of their socialist utopia on the backs of the American people.” Gosh, that sounds uncomfortable. And it’s been a hoot watching Mitt Romney squirm as he tries to distance himself from a plan that, as he knows full well, is nearly identical to the reform he himself pushed through as governor of Massachusetts. His best shot was declaring that enacting reform was an “unconscionable abuse of power,” a “historic usurpation of the legislative process” — presumably because the legislative process isn’t supposed to include things like “votes” in which the majority prevails.

A side observation: one Republican talking point has been that Democrats had no right to pass a bill facing overwhelming public disapproval. As it happens, the Constitution says nothing about opinion polls trumping the right and duty of elected officials to make decisions based on what they perceive as the merits. But in any case, the message from the polls is much more ambiguous than opponents of reform claim: While many Americans disapprove of Obamacare, a significant number do so because they feel that it doesn’t go far enough. And a Gallup poll taken after health reform’s enactment showed the public, by a modest but significant margin, seeming pleased that it passed.

But back to the main theme. What has been really striking has been the eliminationist rhetoric of the G.O.P., coming not from some radical fringe but from the party’s leaders. John Boehner, the House minority leader, declared that the passage of health reform was “Armageddon.” The Republican National Committee put out a fund-raising appeal that included a picture of Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House, surrounded by flames, while the committee’s chairman declared that it was time to put Ms. Pelosi on “the firing line.” And Sarah Palin put out a map literally putting Democratic lawmakers in the cross hairs of a rifle sight.

All of this goes far beyond politics as usual. Democrats had a lot of harsh things to say about former President George W. Bush — but you’ll search in vain for anything comparably menacing, anything that even hinted at an appeal to violence, from members of Congress, let alone senior party officials.

No, to find anything like what we’re seeing now you have to go back to the last time a Democrat was president. Like President Obama, Bill Clinton faced a G.O.P. that denied his legitimacy — Dick Armey, the second-ranking House Republican (and now a Tea Party leader) referred to him as “your president.” Threats were common: President Clinton, declared Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina, “better watch out if he comes down here. He’d better have a bodyguard.” (Helms later expressed regrets over the remark — but only after a media firestorm.) And once they controlled Congress, Republicans tried to govern as if they held the White House, too, eventually shutting down the federal government in an attempt to bully Mr. Clinton into submission.

Mr. Obama seems to have sincerely believed that he would face a different reception. And he made a real try at bipartisanship, nearly losing his chance at health reform by frittering away months in a vain attempt to get a few Republicans on board. At this point, however, it’s clear that any Democratic president will face total opposition from a Republican Party that is completely dominated by right-wing extremists.

For today’s G.O.P. is, fully and finally, the party of Ronald Reagan — not Reagan the pragmatic politician, who could and did strike deals with Democrats, but Reagan the antigovernment fanatic, who warned that Medicare would destroy American freedom. It’s a party that sees modest efforts to improve Americans’ economic and health security not merely as unwise, but as monstrous. It’s a party in which paranoid fantasies about the other side — Obama is a socialist, Democrats have totalitarian ambitions — are mainstream. And, as a result, it’s a party that fundamentally doesn’t accept anyone else’s right to govern.

In the short run, Republican extremism may be good for Democrats, to the extent that it prompts a voter backlash. But in the long run, it’s a very bad thing for America. We need to have two reasonable, rational parties in this country. And right now we don’t.

nytimes.com