YORK, Pa. — It’s fitting that Pennsylvania is land of the pretzel — where “Pennsylvania Dutch” Swiss and German immigrants introduced the food to America in the 19th century. Citizens of nearby Philadelphia reportedly consume 12 times the national average of the twisted, baked delight.
A gas station here has pretzel sandwiches and inexpensive bags of broken pretzels. Both are metaphors for what is happening politically to Democrats here, to President Barack Obama in Washington, and to the Democratic Party around the country. The political fates in 21st century America have more twists and turns than a pretzel.
The big news in this state once headed by Democratic powerhouse Gov. Ed Rendell is about a GOP power grab: a proposal by GOPers including the present Republican Governor Tom Corbett seeks to dump Pennsylvania’s winner-take-all allocation of electoral votes and elect Presidents by congressional districts. Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Karen Heller notes that the only other states that do that are Nebraska and Maine. Democrats won Pennsylvania in the last five elections and Obama won the state by 10 percentage points.
“Our state has 1.1 million more Democrats than Republicans, yet the congressional delegation consists of 12 R’s and seven D’s.” Heller writes. “How did this happen? Magic! Instead of gerrymandering, we have GOPermandering.”
Although partisans will screech “false equivalency!” — that obnoxious phrase used by members of each party to look the other way on their own party’s past history — gerrymandering and voter suppression in various forms has not been exclusively practiced by one party. But Republicans have been exploiting their 2010 wins of governorships and legislatures at break-neck pace, seeking to shove through voting rules and requirement changes in several states. In Nebraska, GOPers may change electoral vote allocation TO winner-take-all to make it tougher for Obama. All this reflects a Democratic Party weakened after having virtually squandered its historical 2008 win.
Meanwhile, Barack Obama often resembles a pretzel sandwich. Each week left and right media narratives provide new twists with Obama in the middle. Obama’s polls are declining. Wait! Now he’s making a big speech! Will he rebound? Will he be “another Carter?” Obama will create a new category for future Presidents: “an Obama.” Former President George H. W. Bush reportedly felt campaigning was a chore but loved to govern. Obama seemingly thrives in campaign mode but sags in governance.
The Obama administration often seems like a bunch of college students cramming at the very last minute for a final exam.
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Joe Gandelman is a former fulltime journalist who freelanced in India, Spain, Bangladesh and Cypress writing for publications such as the Christian Science Monitor and Newsweek. He also did radio reports from Madrid for NPR’s All Things Considered. He has worked on two U.S. newspapers and quit the news biz in 1990 to go into entertainment. He also has written for The Week and several online publications, did a column for Cagle Cartoons Syndicate and has appeared on CNN.