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Politics : The Trump Presidency -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (194602)2/22/2021 11:55:35 PM
From: combjelly  Respond to of 357820
 
Uh huh. Sure. You make unsupported claims all the time. Act like they are common wisdom. But they aren't outside of the wingnut echo chamber.



To: i-node who wrote (194602)2/23/2021 12:02:33 AM
From: Sam  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 357820
 
lol--you occasionally provide a link but usually you just spout off with unsubstantiated claims.

Meanwhile, your tribe is such a bunch of snowflakes. They think nothing of Trump's mean spirited and often false tweets, but they come down on Neera Tandon for her tweets, lol. Poor babies. But this is just another way that they are like you--you love to call people "nitwit" or "dumbass", but when someone calls you the equivalent of an affectionate, you get all puffy and sore. What a silly gilly willy you are.

Now Republicans are offended by mean tweets?
Feb. 22, 2021 at 6:09 p.m. EST

NEERA TANDEN, President Biden’s pick to run the Office of Management and Budget, is in hot water. Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.) announced last week that he would oppose her nomination, meaning she needs at least one Republican vote to obtain Senate confirmation. Reports emerged Monday that Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine), Mitt Romney (R-Utah) and Rob Portman (R-Ohio) were all unwilling to provide that vote. Ms. Tanden’s problem? “Her past actions have demonstrated exactly the kind of animosity that President Biden has pledged to transcend,” Ms. Collins said. Or, as Politico quoted a source close to Mr. Romney as saying, she has “issued a thousand mean tweets.”

Yes, Ms. Tanden has been undiplomatic. But the case against her confirmation is weak — especially when you compare her with many of the people Republican senators have endorsed in the past.

Republican opposition to Ms. Tanden because of her sometimes-tough tweeting reflects some mind-boggling hypocrisy. Republicans spent four years playing down and forgiving President Donald Trump’s disgusting tweets. Not a single Republican voted against confirming Richard Grenell, Mr. Trump’s ambassador to Germany, despite his history of Twitter trolling — including nasty comments about the appearances of female journalists and world leaders — which was far worse than Ms. Tanden’s tweets. Mr. Manchin voted to confirm Mr. Grenell, too.

Ms. Tanden is tapped to lead Mr. Biden’s budget office, where it is important for the president to have an appointee who reflects his views. Is it unacceptable for the OMB director to be strongly partisan? Republicans didn’t think so when they jammed through Mick Mulvaney, a co-founder of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, to be Mr. Trump’s first OMB chair, despite Mr. Mulvaney’s destructive opposition to raising the national debt limit and avoiding government shutdowns during Barack Obama’s presidency. When Mr. Mulvaney became Mr. Trump’s chief of staff, Republicans approved conservative ideologue Russell Vought to direct the Trump administration’s budget office. Ms. Tanden, by contrast, has deployed her sharp elbows to battle the Democrats’ left wing as well as Republicans on her right.

It is not fair to hold Mr. Biden’s nominees to a far higher standard because the president has called for unity while his predecessor denigrated it. Ms. Tanden should have been more civil in the past, like many people in Washington. But the Senate should approve presidents’ picks to staff their administrations unless those picks are grossly unqualified. Ms. Tanden’s long service in Washington, as a top player in Democratic politics and policy and as the head of a major think tank, makes her more qualified than was either Mr. Mulvaney or Mr. Vought.

For the most part, Republican senators thus far have been supporting Mr. Biden’s nominations with admirable bipartisanship. They will look silly if they allow some hurt feelings to get in the way now.

washingtonpost.com