Steve Benen of the Washington Monthly:
Bills that pass with bipartisan support have traditionally meant one party reaching out to moderates from the other party to put together a reasonably good-sized majority. If the usual Senate majority has around 53 members or so, finding some moderates from the other side of the aisle meant passing a bill with as many as 60 votes. It reflected a fairly broad base of support for the legislation.
Under the current circumstances, though, the expectations for the majority are skewed -- Republicans have almost entirely excised moderates from their ranks, and voters have handed Democrats a huge majority. If the governing party passes a bill with 60 votes, all of a sudden, we're told, that's not good enough anymore. In reality, it's a distorted standard -- it's not the Democrats' fault Republicans have become too conservative, failed at governing, and were punished by voters.
It's probably a mistake for the White House to try to change and/or parse the meaning of the word "bipartisan." But it's an even bigger mistake for the political world to hold the Democratic majority to skewed and unreasonable standards.
4 comments:
It's not the Democrats' fault that most of the Republican leadership and senior members of major committees ought to be in jail for the rest of their natural lives...
...their UNnatural lives, you mean. They don't seem to die, but like zombies and vampires, keep popping up from their political graves and demanding attention...
i wish obama would stop trying to be the nice guy with these schmucks - even sarah palin can see that there is nothing he can do to win them over for anything - even a cure for cancer
Especially if the Republicans' friends in Big Pharma can't make oodles of money off the cure....
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