Coop's Corner
March 18, 2010 11:05 PM

Is There Still A "Center?"

By
Charles Cooper
Topics
In The News

health care
Earlier this year, Congress witnessed one of its more bizarre episodes. That was when seven Republicans actually voted against a proposal they had helped sponsor. The measure would have set up a bipartisan fiscal commission to examine where to cut the federal budget. But the seven Congressman in question failed to withstand pressure from their party to deny Barack Obama even the smallest of legislative achievements.

That's pretty much par for the course these days. In a recent piece she wrote for New York Review of Books, Elizabeth Drew lamented the disappearance of what once constituted a political center in this country, especially since the 2008 elections. After the public rejected the Republicans at the polls, the GOP determined - correctly - that it could regain its stride by opposing the White House agenda. Since then, Republicans have rejected the Obama administration's ideas about the fiscal stimulus, cap and trade, financial services regulation and, now, health care.

So with the final health care vote now only days away, post-mortems are already being written. None are likely to be glowing. Washington's in too sour a mood and it's easy to understand why. If you're a liberal Democrat, you didn't get the public option; if you're a moderate Democrat, you're worried about cost and  if you're a conservative, you're not sanguine about carving out an even bigger role for government.

And then there are the politics: Health care reform, the most closely-watched legislative knock-down, drag out in recent memory, has been an especially sorry spectacle, one in which obnoxious behavior got rewarded by higher television ratings and page views.

Under this kind of media microscope, even small warts have looked awful. The big ones appeared even worse, such as when Senator Mary Landrieu extorted an extra $300 million in Medicaid money for Louisiana, or when former insurance company exec and Nebraska Senator Ben Nelson got his state exempted from paying for an expansion of Medicaid. Conservative critics were rightly outraged by both side deals. At the same time, Democrats were similarly miffed after Republicans rebuffed repeated attempts to find ways break the logjam in Congress.

For its own sanity, maybe the public should avert its eyes from future legislative sausage-making. Too late this time around. Egged on by the congenital shriekers from talk radio and the weirder regions of the blogosphere, enough people came away convinced that the other side was hopelessly corrupt.

The nation could use a nice time out but that's not going to happen. Maybe this will blow over if the worst fears of both sides fail to materialize. Somehow, though, I think it will take quite some time for the smoke to clear. Too many still have too much of a vested interest in stoking the flames.


  • Charles Cooper is an executive editor at CNET News. He has covered technology and business for more than 25 years, working at CBSNews.com, the Associated Press, Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. E-mail Charlie.

Add a Comment See all 20 Comments
by vannuys June 4, 2010 7:54 PM EDT
Yeah, letting poor people advance into the ungrateful middle class is a stupid idea. Isn't it, loegerd?
Reply to this comment
by vannuys June 4, 2010 7:52 PM EDT
The flawed healthcare bill was the best we could get because we did not have sixty votes in the Senate. Don't blame the president-blame Joe Lieberman.

Boxer, Kucinich, Feingold, Waxman and Grayson are centrists? SINCE WHEN?
Reply to this comment
by vannuys June 4, 2010 7:50 PM EDT
The conservatives don't want a political center of any kind. In their warped minds, if you're against the banks and the oil companies, you're against America.

In actuality, if you oppose workers, affordable homes and alternative energy solutions which would free our economy from Middle Eastern terrorists, you're against America.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti March 31, 2010 3:47 PM EDT
As I have said, the center are the progressives like Boxer, Barbara Lee, Kucinich and Bernie Sanders. They promote what is best for the masses. The conservatives and Republican have gone so far to the right they remind me of the extremist right wing Nazis.

There is no such thing as a "centrist" Democrat, that would be a Republican like the blue dogs. And "moderate" Republican is the ultimate oxymoron.
Reply to this comment
by NowBeWithThat March 25, 2010 11:07 AM EDT
'Leftward, ho!' - Barack Obama

There will always be centrists, but Mr. Obama isn't one of them. He falsely presented himself as a right-leaning centrist during his campaign but only the kool-aid drinking ho's still believe it.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti April 2, 2010 2:04 PM EDT
Don't drink the KKKcorporate KKKoolAid!
by noloyalisti March 24, 2010 2:20 PM EDT
To call Obama a leftist is ridiculous and ignorant. He supported this corporate health bill, has kept the war profiteers and oil corporations busy in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Palestine and has not really changed anything on Wall Street or with the banksters.

He is way right of center. The Republicans are so far extreme to the right they are off the playing field. Centrists are Boxer, Kucinich, Feingold, Waxman, Grayson, etc. They stand for the majority.
Reply to this comment
by NowBeWithThat March 24, 2010 11:38 AM EDT
During his campaign, Mr. Obama presented as a centrist who would move slightly toward the right. Nothing was farther from the truth.

In reality he is ultraliberal leftist, and seems to be moving steadily leftward.

When all the dirty Chicago-style backroom politics he used to force-feed Americans on Obamacare are exposed, November will be a time for change we can all believe in. Just you wait and see.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti March 22, 2010 2:45 PM EDT
The Center is Barack Obama and the Democratic Congress. Actually they are right of center because the extremist right wing Republican Party has moved the whole debate so far to the right that now most of the Democrats are also toward the right.
Reply to this comment
by krusenjames March 22, 2010 12:38 PM EDT
Short, to the point and utterly closed.
Reply to this comment
by loegerd March 21, 2010 8:12 PM EDT
In other words Obama must be defeated at all costs because he is an extremist along with Nancy Pelosi.
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