July 29, 2010 11:24 AM

The Red Flag of Partisanship

By
CBSNews

 

(Weekly Standard)  Last November, as members of the House of Representatives considered the health care reform bill, President Obama made a dramatic trip to Capitol Hill. After closing down sixteen blocks of Pennsylvania Avenue, a half-mile long White House motorcade whisked the presidential entourage past cheering tourists to meet with the House Democratic Caucus.

Despite the drama, these trips rarely occur if the outcome is unknown. No sense aggravating a bunch of taxi drivers if you're not going to win.
When he arrived before the roaring group of lawmakers, the president oozed transformational hyperbole. Even lowly House members could "make history" by passing the measure, the president apparently told his audience, according to news accounts.

But not everyone bought the narrative.

"He can make history," one conservative Democrat reportedly said after the meeting. "But I'll be history if I vote for that thing."

Notwithstanding those concerns, we all know how the story ended.

Democratic partisans hoped enacting health care would boost the president's and Congress's sagging popularity, particularly with fickle independent voters that supported Democrats in 2006 and 2008, but have moved decidedly in the GOP's direction this year.

The same calculus motivated the Democratic leadership's sales pitch for stimulus legislation, cap-and-trade, and the Wall Street reform bill.
Legislative success produces political popularity, Democrats argue. Bill Clinton and his party, after all, lost the majority in Congress in 1994 because they failed to pass health care, right?

Yet despite all the legislative notches carved in their belts, Democratic prospects for 2010 still look bleak. It turns out congressional productivity isn't political alchemy after all.

Some believe it's content, not volume, hurting the Democrats. But that argument explains only part of the problem. Other clouds contribute to Obama and his party's dreary political state. Indeed, nagging fears about the economy also deepen voter angst.

The party in power catches the brunt of the political fallout from a bad economy, and this year, independents appear ready to take out their frustrations surrounding stubbornly high unemployment out on the Democrats.

But beyond policy disagreements and a languid economy, I believe a third explanation deserves consideration, particularly when it comes to that often pivotal 10 to 15 percent of the electorate: Independents do not identify or lean toward one party or the other.

These voters, by and large, value balance. By more than a 2-1 margin, an April 2010 Resurgent Republic poll found independents favored a Republican Congress to serve as a check-and-balance on President Obama compared to a Democratic Congress to help the White House pass its agenda.

So what have these voters witnessed from Washington in the past eighteen months? First, a president who promised to rise above partisanship. Second, a Democratic majority in Congress with the means to accomplish its goals without any Republican support on major issues like stimulus, cap-and-trade, health care, and Wall Street reform.

Together, these two factors sowed seeds of doubt among independents.

A Republican political consultant I talked to elaborated. "What I've seen in polling and focus groups is that a red flag goes up with these independents when they watch what has happened over the past year or so. They wonder how it can be that nearly everyone from one party is for something and everyone from the other party is against it. Something fishy must be going on!"

A Democratic lobbyist I talked to agreed. "George Bush and Barack Obama have one thing in common. Neither one wanted to pick big fights with their own party. Both had a figurative chat with their congressional leaders who told them, 'Mr. President you can do this the hard way or the easy way.' Both Bush and Obama chose 'the easy way' which meant a no confrontation approach with your party and walking in lockstep against the other side. That turns off independents."

Strong partisan behavior always aggravates voters with weak or nonexistent partisan ties. Collective decisions by the president and his party leaders in Congress to bypass Republicans over the past eighteen months have contributed to a sharp decline in Democrats' standing with independent voters. And as a result, there won't be nearly as many cheerleaders in the majority party when Obama comes to call on the Hill this winter

By Gary Andres:
Reprinted with permission from The Weekly Standard

Weekly Standard
Add a Comment See all 22 Comments
by larrryshrine August 5, 2010 12:11 PM EDT
I am a registered Democrat who will generally vote Democratic this fall (I know, I'm in the minority here so feel free to hurl insults at me:)).

Here're why: I believe I am voting for the lesser of two evils. I am not proud of the way Obama and Congress have governed - I would like to see rapid troop withdrawal out of both Afghanistan and Iraq - and I would have like to have seen portions of the health bill to go into effect sooner (I have two pre-existing conditions). And I believe the Dems should make a greater effort to enforce immigration at the federal level.

I believe, in their own awkward way, that the Democrats have made at least some effort at bipartisanship. The GOP on the other hand truly has become the "party of no." A patchwork of state immigration laws is not the way to go; it is not even Constitutional, and we must believe in the Constitution, even when it is unpopular - after all, there is a mechanism for amending it. Bills that have had input from both sides still are filibustered - no there's a rule I would like to get rid of for good. And I am frightened by the extreme right wing of the GOP. So there you are: my reasons for voting the way I will. And in America, I certainly have a right to my reasons, just as you do yours.
Reply to this comment
by larrryshrine August 5, 2010 12:11 PM EDT
I am a registered Democrat who will generally vote Democratic this fall (I know, I'm in the minority here so feel free to hurl insults at me:)).

Here're why: I believe I am voting for the lesser of two evils. I am not proud of the way Obama and Congress have governed - I would like to see rapid troop withdrawal out of both Afghanistan and Iraq - and I would have like to have seen portions of the health bill to go into effect sooner (I have two pre-existing conditions). And I believe the Dems should make a greater effort to enforce immigration at the federal level.

I believe, in their own awkward way, that the Democrats have made at least some effort at bipartisanship. The GOP on the other hand truly has become the "party of no." A patchwork of state immigration laws is not the way to go; it is not even Constitutional, and we must believe in the Constitution, even when it is unpopular - after all, there is a mechanism for amending it. Bills that have had input from both sides still are filibustered - no there's a rule I would like to get rid of for good. And I am frightened by the extreme right wing of the GOP. So there you are: my reasons for voting the way I will. And in America, I certainly have a right to my reasons, just as you do yours.
Reply to this comment
by larrryshrine August 5, 2010 12:11 PM EDT
I am a registered Democrat who will generally vote Democratic this fall (I know, I'm in the minority here so feel free to hurl insults at me:)).

Here're why: I believe I am voting for the lesser of two evils. I am not proud of the way Obama and Congress have governed - I would like to see rapid troop withdrawal out of both Afghanistan and Iraq - and I would have like to have seen portions of the health bill to go into effect sooner (I have two pre-existing conditions). And I believe the Dems should make a greater effort to enforce immigration at the federal level.

I believe, in their own awkward way, that the Democrats have made at least some effort at bipartisanship. The GOP on the other hand truly has become the "party of no." A patchwork of state immigration laws is not the way to go; it is not even Constitutional, and we must believe in the Constitution, even when it is unpopular - after all, there is a mechanism for amending it. Bills that have had input from both sides still are filibustered - no there's a rule I would like to get rid of for good. And I am frightened by the extreme right wing of the GOP. So there you are: my reasons for voting the way I will. And in America, I certainly have a right to my reasons, just as you do yours.
Reply to this comment
by 6591Hou August 3, 2010 11:53 PM EDT
There seems to be a concerted effort by a lot of posters to ignore the content of the story and insist on pushing the same political partisan line, i.e. 'my party's all good and the other is all evil'....
Stop voting for anyone just because there's a (D) or an (R) after their name, stop voting for anyone just because they agree with you on one issue when there are many issues. Vote for the person, their principles, their message, not the party - and question everything.
Reply to this comment
by larrryshrine August 2, 2010 11:50 AM EDT
I am a registered Democrat who will generally vote Democratic this fall (I know, I'm in the minority here so feel free to hurl insults at me:)).

Here're why: I believe I am voting for the lesser of two evils. I am not proud of the way Obama and Congress have governed - I would like to see rapid troop withdrawal out of both Afghanistan and Iraq - and I would have like to have seen portions of the health bill to go into effect sooner (I have two pre-existing conditions). And I believe the Dems should make a greater effort to enforce immigration at the federal level.

I believe, in their own awkward way, that the Democrats have made at least some effort at bipartisanship. The GOP on the other hand truly has become the "party of no." A patchwork of state immigration laws is not the way to go; it is not even Constitutional, and we must believe in the Constitution, even when it is unpopular - after all, there is a mechanism for amending it. Bills that have had input from both sides still are filibustered - no there's a rule I would like to get rid of for good. And I am frightened by the extreme right wing of the GOP. So there you are: my reasons for voting the way I will. And in America, I certainly have a right to my reasons, just as you do yours.
Reply to this comment
by PVperson2 July 31, 2010 4:08 PM EDT
I'd rather be for something than against everything, I'll stay democrat.
Reply to this comment
by larry0304 July 31, 2010 9:37 AM EDT
Bush made 2 huge mistakes that precipitated the meltdown and put Obama in office. The first was letting the Frank/Dodd mortgage bill get through. That single piece of legislation caused more damage than any other bill in history.

The 2nd was not realizing the cost nation building can exert on a budget. Staying in Iraq and Afghanistan was stupid.

Now for Obama? Well he has no one to blame but himself for inflicting European socialism on us when we have all seen the results in Europe. For him to be so egotistical and arrogant that he can succeed where they failed is criminal. He's off living life large having a blast while he has made the country to suffer is UNFORGIVABLE. The ONLY small consolation is that he will have to live knowing he was the worst president in the history of the United States!
Reply to this comment
by jimbom121 August 2, 2010 1:44 PM EDT
ummm...you should get your history straight. The bill in 2003 was sponsored in the Senate by Wayne Allard (R) CO, abd the house sponsors were Katherine Harris (R), FL, Jim Leach (R), IA and Madeleine Bodallo (D) GU.
by ames0611 September 13, 2010 10:44 PM EDT
Ever heard of Andrew Johnson? Pretty sure HE was the worst president ever. You should look him up and brush up on your history. You'll feel enlightened.:)
by babooph July 31, 2010 8:42 AM EDT
We need [as H.R. Perot said,to rid the corruption of lobbyists]then get 2 more parties one REAL conservative& one REAL liberal& not this scam republicrat trash the propaganda system pushes..
Reply to this comment
by TJphoto July 30, 2010 9:54 PM EDT
Every 2 years on election night we hear the winners say "No more politics as usual"! Has anyone ever seen that? Come November please vote every incumbent out of office. 13 Trillion Dollars in the hole, why do you want to vote any incumbent back in????? This concept of Party First has got to stop!
Reply to this comment
by vsmit August 1, 2010 1:43 PM EDT
uubrew12
"a severe economic downturn that guarranteed the other 3 Trillion. "??

Guaranteed to be a waste of our children's money. Where are the promised jobs? How is the middle class going to pay for mandated Obamacare enforced by the IRS? Yes, molasses.
by formrusmcsgt July 30, 2010 10:40 AM EDT
I used to vete repub about as often as dem. But then they gave their party to the religious fringe.....
Reply to this comment
by rnrstar August 1, 2010 4:57 PM EDT
That was one of the main reasons I left the Republican party as well. I could no longer tolerate their religious intolerance.
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