
It was a year ago that I wrote that once upon a time a mid-term election was an opportunity for the minority party to take control of Congress and leverage its newfound clout into forcing a president to change direction.
I wrote that:
“The Democrats got themselves some clout yesterday in a most impressive showing, seizing the House and coming within a hair’s breath of taking the Senate. (Which they later did when all of the returns were in.)
“So the system more or less worked, and that Great American Center prevailed as it has repeatedly down through the years when the political fulcrum has swung too far to the left or right.
“But I do not see any leveraging of consequence when the 110th Congress convenes in January.
“Fuggedabout sea change. Think log jam.”
Well, I take no satisfaction in being correct. For one thing it was less a case of prescience than because of George Bush’s well-known obdurance and the inherent weakness of the Democratic congressional leadership.
Let me hasten to add that there have been times over recent months when I may have been too tough on the Reid-Pelosi jugger-not. There is only so much it could accomplish without veto- and filibuster-proof majorities in both houses, which is another way of saying that Republican defections on Democratic issues have been few and far between.
Nevertheless, the Democrats:
* Have not been able to deliver on their electoral mandate.
This has been the case with the Iraq war, where they have written blank check after blank check for funding and been unable to force an accelerated withdrawal timetable. Then there is children’s health insurance, illegal wiretapping and torture, with approval of Michael Mukasey by the Senate Judiciary Committee today to replace Attorney General Alberto Gonzales now a lead-pipe cinch.
* Have let Bush “own the debate,” as Atrios put it.
He notes that the Democrats have a choice: “They can send him more reasonable legislation, at which point he vetoes it and says the Democrats are going to let Al Qaeda eat your babies. Subsequently, they can either point out that George Bush vetoed the anti-Al Qaeda baby cannibalism bill or they can scamper like cowards and give him everything he wants. Or they can just give him everything he wants right away.”
* Have managed to look like smacked asses.
My own favorite is the Harry Reid-Rush Limbaugh kerfuffle when the Senate majority leader sent a snotty letter to the right-wing windbag accusing him of smearing American troops. Limbaugh put the letter up for auction at e-Bay and sold it for $2.1 million with the proceeds and a matching contribution going to a Marine Corps foundation. Reid, of course, ended up eating crow.
Nobody said that the Democrats would have an easy go of it. But their performance has been underwhelming from the jump and all the way through to the here and now.
I am with my buddy Will Bunch that there is nothing more important today than the fight over water-boarding. It is quite literally a fight for America’s soul. Buy yet again this is an instance in which the Democrats were unable to talk tough on both terrorism and civil liberties.
You’re either against torture or you aren’t, and the Mukasey nomination was an opportunity for the Democrats to draw the line over an issue that has a moral gravity and is not merely political. Instead, the nomination debate began with party members going in several different directions at once, followed by the inevitable wavering and ending, it would now seem, with a whimper, as the White House yet again held and kept the upper hand.
If I was grading the Dems, I would give them a big fat “D,” although the most important grade is the one that voters will give them next time around.
Senator Charles Schumer’s defense of why he will vote today to approve attorney general nominee Michael Mukasey in today’s New York Times is all you need to know about why Democrats in Congress — and liberals in particular — are being played like a cheap violin by President Bush.
The New Yorker offers these reasons:
(1.) The Justice Department is a mess and needs strong leadership. Mukasey is the man to do that.
(2.) Even though he opposes the Bush administration’s embrace of torture, Mukasey told him privately (italics mine) that he would respect laws against its use.
(3.) This is not the time for the Senate to make “a bold declaration” about torture in general and waterboarding in particular.
Here are my responses to each of Schumer’s rationalizations:
(1.) Yes, Main Justice is a mess, but putting its administrative house in order pales in comparison to calling out the president on torture.
(2.) It’s nice to know that he believes that Mukasey is a man of his word, but we know without question that the president is not. Nor is he about to cede any of the unprecedented power that he has grabbed.
(3.) When is it the time for the Senate to make “a bold declaration” about anything of consequence, let alone something so consequential as torture? The answer is evident: Not any time soon.
Ahem.
Did you really think that the party of let the government do everything was really going to let the Attorney General’s office be empty for 15 months. Do you really think that the Democratic Party would send a message that a cabinet post can be empty for 15 months and nothing bad happens in order to send a phony political message over something that will not matter in a couple of years.
The Democratic leadership in Congress is not trying that hard because they not that Senator Clinton will be the next president and then they can do whatever they want. Why take a beating in politics today when you get everything you want tomorrow without pain?
[...] House Dems: That Was The Year That Was » This Summary is from an article posted at The Moderate Voice » Domestic and international news [...]
SD – Even if Billary win in 08, without 60 votes in the Senate nothing will happen. The Repugligans love the filibuster. I wait for Billary’s first SOTUS appointment.
The Dems are pitiful, Web seems to be the only one with a backbone and most of his war restraining bills are tied up in commitee. Kyl-Lieberman passes and the Webb-Clinton bill is going nowhere.
And I repeat again, the Republicans are pitiful. It’s easier to win than to shape law.
[...] must be brought to the carpet to answer when, exactly, is the right time for the Senate to disavow torture, because he sure as hell [...]
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[...] Clark Dems: That Was The Year That Was » This Summary is from an article posted at The Moderate Voice » Domestic and international news [...]
[...] post by Shaun Mullen This was written by . Posted on Tuesday, November 6, 2007, at 4:58 am. Filed under [...]
And I repeat again, the
RepublicansDemocrats are pitiful.You’re pretty much right.
Dems: That Was The Year That Was…
There is no question that the last few months have been enormously frustrating regarding the inability of the Democratic Congress to address core issues of the Iraq war and usurpation of powers by the President. The two things that temper it are: (1) D…
[...] Abandon all hope. Good thing the Dems are in charge of Congress. Or not. [...]
Not true in the real world, just in the lefty cyber-play-pen world, but thanks for the chuckle.
Of course, once the next defective S-CHIP bill is vetoed, once again there will be “nothing more important today” than increasing the funding for S-CHIP, the hyped-crisis-du-jour that predated the waterboarding issue and which will return sometime soon. And we’ll hear lies again about this is all about “the children,” and America’s soul, et cetera, ad nauseum.
There’s a more subtle point. The Democrats (as is true with Clinton’s stage image and campaign image) dare not go too far left or they risk losing what at this time is all but already handed to them.
She has to get into office first, then she and they get to lunge much farther to the left. At least for two years…
Surely you aren’t upset because the Dems don’t force the US military out of Iraq immediately, or impeach Cheney, tactics that would earn another 1994.
Shaun-
I’m afraid you’re sounding a bit like the Rpublicans today. I wnat. I want. I want.
For them, I’ll use the immigration issue. They want the illegals to disappear into thein air, with no practical solutions of how to achieve that or consideration for the consequences of some of their demans.
For you, it’s Mukasey and torture. Refusing to okay the nomination would not have done anything to strenghen the position on waterboarding.
Bush said he would not nominatie anyone else, so the DOJ would just lumber along the way it is. What would be gained other than an emptry gesture?
This way, at least someone with administrative competence can get the DOJ functioning again.
If Bush is willing to let the DOJ rot just for childish spite, then someone has to step in with an adult sense of responsibility, and there is no one else for that someone to be but Congress.
The question of torture is the same either way.
This way, at least something may improve in the DOJ. It would be nice to see something working in the government, and if the man in charge won’t see to it, then it’s more important to get done whatever can get done than to go off in a huff.
Just saying ‘I want’ won’t get you there.