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Newsweek has what we called a thumbsucker posing what if the Republicans were in control of Congress and the White House.
I don’t mean to put words in their mouth, but the answer is:
Not much.
The article divides the issues confronting our federal executive and legislative branches albeit I must observe that health reform and gays in the military would never see the light of day in a nation run by Republicans.
I was looking for answers to what the GOP now known as the party of no would do when they seized majority power. In this regard, Newsweek failed other than regurgitating what they are doing now and the not so distant past — as in the Bush administration.
Before we discuss the difference on the issues, Newsweek summarized the current situation:
In zero-sum Washington, members of the opposition party have little incentive to help the president, especially if it means the credit for their actions could accrue to him and not them. If politics is the art of compromise, then politics as practiced in the capital is the art of preventing compromise at all costs. This is why, infuriatingly, our elected officials spend so much time plotting ways to stick it to the other side with “filibuster-proof super-majorities” and “nuclear options,” while the unemployment rate hovers in the double digits and 46 million Americans go without health insurance. It is why not a single GOP senator voted for the health-care bill now stalled in Congress, and why Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell turned against a GOP-inspired plan for a deficit commission once Obama endorsed the idea.
On jobs, Newsweek said the Republican mantra is simple. Tax cuts and tax credits:
Leave more money in the hands of business owners, Republicans say, and they will use it to place orders—stimulating job growth—or hire new workers themselves.
Republicans would end any stimulus program even though there is evidence the Democrats’ $787 billion plan may have saved the country from sliding into a full scale depression.
On debt, Newsweek contends Republican leadership has failed to address the corp problem — a $1.4 trillion deficit with a $12 trillion national debt growing at the rate of $3.87 billion daily.
Small-government Republicans come down squarely on the side of smaller deficits. It is an issue that goes to their deepest principles, and appeals both to their base and to the growing tea-party movement they hope to win over. Cut spending, reduce government, and restore America’s strength. Sounds great. Except that no one in either party has figured out how to do that in a way that won’t cause a rebellion among the voters.
Neither party is addressing the elephant in the room, Newsweek says.
The real problem is runaway costs in three sacred entitlement programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Until something is done to bring them under control before the baby boomers start retiring en masse, the rest is just talk.
Example:
One Republican, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, has introduced a detailed proposal to cut the deficit by reining in Medicare and Social Security spending. It would shift some of the burden from the government to individuals and introduce, among other things, a voucher system for Medicare. The result? Ryan has attracted just nine Republican cosponsors and zero Democrats.
On health care, the Republican 219-page reform package duplicates what the Democrats took 1,990 pages to write.
Democrats favor one vast nationwide pool and would require insurers to offer plans that meet government minimum requirements for coverage and costs so the industry can’t steer the old and sick into more expensive plans with stingier benefits. Republicans see that as intrusive government meddling. They want a system of small, self-selecting pools of people with similar needs. The free market will see to it that insurance companies meet demand, they say—a claim that is met with skepticism by many economists and health-care analysts, who note that it hasn’t worked that way in places where such ideas have been tried.
On foreign policy, there is little disagreement since the Obama administration essentially is following the policies of the Bush regime. There are red-herring disputes closing Guantanamo Bay prison and the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” rule banning gays in the military. On whether to try military combatants in federal or military courts, Newsweek uses Missouri Republican Sen. Kit Bond as the voice of the GOP:
Republicans insist that revealing which methods can and cannot be used only helps the enemy train against U.S. interrogation. Bond and other Republicans argue it is important for the United States to keep its options open. If Osama bin Laden or Ayman al-Zawahiri were to be captured, Bond says, U.S. officials must have the ability to declare them enemy combatants so that they can be “interrogated until we have obtained every bit of intelligence they possess.”
On education, Newsweek argues the Republicans are light years ahead of the Democrats who still cling to the thought that throwing enough money at the problem somehow will solve it.
(Republicans) have introduced some of the most successful reform ideas for improving failing schools: increasing competition and choice, raising standards and expectations, and relying on hard data to determine what works and what doesn’t.
Yet, they resorted to their old out-of-power ways by voting against Obama’s $4.3 billion Race to the Top initiative—offering rewards to the states that had the most ambitious school-reform programs.
I love these what if — thumbsucker — stories because by looking at the larger picture they shed light on the trees in the forest. The system is suffering from a root rot disease.
I worry that a Rep. rout would bite the country in the ass, especially if it comes at the cost of too much conservative and TP influence.. I prefer more of a balanced congress and WH, and wish for cooperation of some kind (see Clinton's last years- except for the repeal of Glass-Steagall and a few other details).
Cooperation? Don't make me laugh. That died with the myth of Reagan leadership and the myth of conservative fiscal responsibility. What we have now, no matter whom gets elected, is more crushing of the middle class and enslavement of the people to their corporate masters. Lose your job, lose your healthcare, (if you have it), get sick, lose your home to the hospital lawyers. The rich get richer and the people get poorer and treated with distain. As the defense budget grows and grows and……
Don't make me laugh”
Have some more Merlot, no make that Thunderbird, under your rosy scenario. Can't they all just sit around and have a beer and work this all out? (It worked once before.) And, with the new order of HCR, I'm sorry to tell you, there will have to be a Laugh Tax (LT), so do it now, while Harry and company aren't looking.
Yup, we have to bite the bullet. Better now than later when its even worse. Those who actually propose to address the real problems get shouted down by a chorus of politicians and pundits who just want to promise no pain and more entitlements that we can't pay for. Much of the public wants to believe their lies, few are willing to face more grim truths and support those who will do what is necessary.
I'm surprised at you Duck. Burying your head in the sand is supposed to be an ostrich trait, not duck’s.
I'm surprised that Sabato's crystal ball don't see public violence in the future. Must be in denial.
Burying your head in the sand”
That's you snorting silicon, not me, I'm an optimist.
'
It did not work once before with the current cast of characters. There is absolutely no desire on the part of the Republican leadership to do something for the country if it means working with the Democrats.
Anyone who says that Social Security has problems as big as Medicare is lying to you.
Miltary spending. It must be reduced. Out of Germany now! Out of Japan now! Out of Korea now! Ad infinitum…
Yeah really. We should privatize the military and nationalize healthcare.No more military double dippers.
But then we would not be able to go kill all those yucky brown people who worship God using a different name than we do…
Not to mention that we would have no industrial policy left…
Oh I thought the Iraq War II was the pilot for the privatization of our Department of War.
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Industrial policy … hahahah, that was a good one. Spot on actually.
I agree with biting the bullet, here, but who could you actually vote for? Most Democrats wanted HCR, which meant good, reasonable cuts to Medicare in exchange for expanding coverage to the working poor. It is deficit neutral, instead of deficit reducing, though.
The Republicans voiced opposition to ANY medicare cuts. This, as the boomers retire, will increase the deficit. The elderly are much, much more expensive to cover than other segments of the market. Sure, the Republican claim to be fiscal conservative, but everyone who pays attention knows they are lying through their teeth.
I don't see how anyone can deny this.
“Yup, we have to bite the bullet. Better now than later when its even worse.”
Some of us have known this all along. Interestingly, the Dems had the chance to steal Social Security away from Bush and rescue the program, and win votes for long afterward. But they chose to be the most mindless obstructionists then, more than the GOP has been all this past year.
We also have not seen one entitlement reform from the Dems all year, prior to expanding federal entitlements to others.
Oh, well. Expect it to get put off until around 2016 (when it's impossible) and for our current generation of Washington politicians who would still be there and at increased political risk retire in large numbers.
As far as GOP rule, without anything else to indicate otherwise, look back to 2006-2008. (Ugh.)