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Posts Tagged ‘Mitch McConnell’

Even those of us who strongly support Barack Obama concede that this may be the nadir of his presidency. His approval ratings are dreary—though perhaps a bit better than expected, given that job and economic growth are maddeningly—and tragically—stalled. We live under a cloud of fear and pessimism.

Precisely why crippling inertia has gripped the nation—well, that question provides job-creating stimulus for pundits on every point of the political spectrum.

To be sure, Republican obstructionism—the willful suppression of the US economy, the resolve to maintain a dire unemployment rate, no matter how many lives it shatters—all support the main plank of the GOP platform. As party boss Rush Limbaugh declared, they want Obama (and by extension the other 300 million of us) to fail. As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell echoed, the party’s prime objective is to make Obama a one-term president.

But liberals and center-leftish moderates would argue that it didn’t have to be that way. That Obama yielded the national narrative to the Right. That instead of pursuing a robust progressive agenda of job creation and growth, he got sucked into a job-killing (to borrow the GOP’s favorite Homeric epithet) deficit-cutting obsession (and perhaps wasted his first year on Health Care Reform). And that in a quixotic quest to preserve the Obama Brand (“there are no red states, no blue states, only the United States…”)—as well as POTUS’ innately non-confrontational nature and a kind of fetish for compromise—he has repeatedly capitulated.

Or, to use the preferred term, “caved.”  On the public option, on the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, on the debt ceiling, and just today, on anti-smog regulations. Even on “Speechgate,” the flap (or was it a kerfuffle?) with House Speaker Boehner over next week’s Jobs, Jobs, Jobs address to Congress (minus wingnut Tea Party Rep.—and deadbeat dad—Joe Walsh).

At worst, some liberals compare the President to that iconic appeaser, Neville Chamberlain. They’re the most extreme faction. But many less strident critics on the Exasperated Left say that, in an obsession with the political center, Obama has forsaken the core values of his party. And that he’s losing the center anyway—that Adult In the Room bit only goes so far. Moderates like strong leaders, too.

Lately, Obama has received a healthy helping of tough love from the African-American community—wherein unemployment is nearly double the 9.1 national rate, and nearly quadruple the national figure among young adults. Rep. Maxine Waters and the Congressional Black Caucus, and non-politicians like Princeton professor Cornel West and Tavis Smiley have been particularly vocal. Indeed, on Tavis’ show last night the host got into a civilized, but spirited, debate with Prof. Randall Kennedy of Harvard over Obama’s “Black Problem.”

Tavis argues that the President seems to be running away from African-Americans—for instance, on his recent Midwest “listening tour,” when he did all his listening in white neighborhoods— and from the progressive agenda that, skin color aside, fired up an unprecedented African-American turnout in 2008 (if you think it was just a Black thing, and not ideological, see Cain, Herman, West, Allen, et. al.)

Prof. Kennedy countered that, while he, too, is sometimes disappointed in Obama, one must never forget that he is “an electoral politician.” Democrats always lose the white vote—as did Obama in 2008, though he fared better than John Kerry did in 2004. The more the first black president is identified as “The Black President,” the longer his odds of reelection, especially in this bleak economy.

In short, faced with an extravagantly funded Right-Wing hate machine that, despite his mild manner and moderate policies, repeatedly portrays him as a Kenyan Muslim Socialist Anti-American Manchurian Candidate Other—Obama has to be careful. He has to walk a fine line. He has to be Jackie Robinson in his early years with the Dodgers, absorbing all the slings and arrows (and beanballs and spikings) and turning the other cheek.

But eventually, Branch Rickey unleashed Robinson—and the great second baseman’s naturally fiery, combative temperament, flying fists, flashing spikes and all. Anyone who played major league baseball during the 1950s will attest that Number 42 took no shit from anyone.

Obama, while intensely competitive, (ask Hillary Clinton; or, for that matter, Osama bin Laden) isn’t likely to challenge Eric Cantor to fisticuffs under the Capitol dome next week.  And, if we recall, that cool, temperate mien—contrasting with McCain’s post-traumatic anger issues—is one of the reasons we elected him.

But we also elected him to act, and to fight—in his way—for Democratic values, for the middle class, for workers, for the environment. No, direct confrontation isn’t Obama’s style. But is it also possible that he’s holding back, even subconsciously, because of his race?

Specifically, has such race-based restraint done more than mute further Obama’s constitutionally cool public demeanor? Does it carry over to the negotiating table—and, above all, to his policies? Has pulling his punches meant not only refraining from “losing it” on the GOP—but from aggressively pursuing the principles he and his much maligned “base” believe to be right? And, in the process, giving away the store, essentially governing as what, in saner times, used to pass for a Republican

While under Branch Rickey’s gag order, Jackie Robinson channeled his suppressed rage into his work, his .300 hitting, superb fielding and thrilling exploits on the basepaths. The President too, has many accomplishments to boast (see the wonderful web site wtfhasobamadonesofar.com).

But at this crucial juncture, with the nation’s economic and social future hanging in the balance—and the looming threat of a far Right GOP that, (perhaps in the nightmare-inducing person of Rick Perry) strives to undo the 20th Century and take us back to circa 1893—maybe it’s time for Barack Obama to start flashing his spikes.

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Today’s stock market dive was about more than our miserable debt deal, and more than our own economic inertia–it’s not always all about us. There’s, like, Europe and Asia, for instance.

But it is another indication that the GOP’s strategy to destroy a charismatic, brilliant–for whatever missteps he’s made–incumbent president is working, in the words of Dick Cheney, big-time. Indeed, it is the Republicans’ only strategy, given their lame group of wannabes–ranging from the smarmy, job-killing Romney, to utter wingnut, flat-earth lunacy.

That’s the plan— stall the recovery and maintain the high jobless rate. If the rate even approaches 8 percent, or shows some kind of steady downward trend, the GOP is (white) toast. And Mitch McConnell‘s prime objective, a one-term Obama, is hopeless.

To be sure, the President has admitted that he  underestimated the depth and severity of the Bush Recession. In retrospect, it seems to have been a grave error to spend his entire first year in office—and most of his political capital—wrangling over Health Care Reform, instead of working to stimulate more job growth. Perhaps out an inherently non-confrontational nature, perhaps out of an obsession with courting moderate, swing voters he has often seemed to govern on the Republicans’ turf—this after the 2008 election resoundingly rejected GOP policies.

Nevertheless, President Obama and the Democrats have proposed numerous jobs initiatives, some of which Republicans themselves have endorsed in the past. Of course they’ve all been stalled, blocked by GOP filibusters in the Senate, or squashed under the Boehner-Teabaggers in the House.

And the GOP jobs bills? Well, there aren’t any, of course. Republicans know the President owns the economy, and regardless of whose ideas improve it, POTUS gets credit–or blame if it goes south. So why help Barack Obama out–even if it meant an end to suffering, fear and deprivation?

In this time of obscene income inequality, the wealthy are raking it in and sitting on their money, or investing overseas. Corporations, meanwhile, are making the most out of fewer employees, working them longer hours, making them do the jobs of two people and either cutting salaries or keeping them flat. You’re lucky if you have a job, goes the philosophy, so don’t complain or it’s the highway for you. And with the decline of unions, there’s no advocate for fair treatment.

Where are the jobs? Well, they’re either being shipped overseas, or they’re simply not coming back for the reasons I list above–if you’re making a profit by overworking fewer employees, why rock the boat?

Oh, we might see an expansion of employment if we had more consumer demand by the middle and working class. But the Catch-22 of flat wages or joblessness precludes that.

I’m no economist, and our problems are far more complex than all that. But so far, GOP, Mission Accomplished

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Like many, if not most, liberals, and probably more than a few moderates, I am sickened, or at least saddened, by the so-called “debt deal” on the verge of passage. It was pure political/economic terrorism. And one can argue ad infinitum about President Obama’s negotiating skills, lack thereof, whether he’s a true progressive, a centrist, a closet Republican or simply so fixated on “swing” voters that he risks alienating his entire base in the belief that, come Election Day, it’ll fall in line. Or how this manufactured “crisis” played out entirely on Republican turf—how the Beltway media, and our politicians obsessed over long-term deficits at a time of high unemployment and lame economic growth.

Indeed, worst of all is what the deficit mania, and this deal, may do to the economy, specifically to the middle class, the poor, the unemployed and the soon-to-be-unemployed. Obsessing over deficits at this economic moment is like cutting back on cement while the dam is bursting. You might save some extra cement for those “children and grandchildren” in the pols’ talking points—but nobody will be around to care.

And yet, disappointed as I am, I am also realistic enough to know that if a Republican were in the White House—especially the GOP Version 2011—the outlook would be exponentially worse. Of course, one could reasonably argue that under a GOP president, the Republicans in Congress would simply have raised the debt ceiling, just as they have myriad times in the past. But we have a Democrat at 1600 Pennsy—and everything the GOP does, especially ensuring that the unemployment rate remains elevated, is in the service of destroying Barack Obama’s presidency. The owlish legislative master Mitch McConnell told us as much, in a rare moment of absolute candor.

Aside from destroying Obama, the far Right—backed by the likes of the Koch boys—hopes to dismantle our safety nets, expand the growing chasm between rich and poor, and whites and minorities, and take us back to the Gilded Age, when workers had no rights, Big Business ruled unchallenged, and Black folks were lucky to get jobs as maids and sleeping car porters. My father-in-law worked his ass off for 50 years as a salesman; he lives on a piddling pension and Social Security. Without that safety net, and especially without Medicare, he and his wife would either be dead or on the street today. And that’s where I’ll be when I’m his age, if the Teabagger fringe has anything to say about it.

Look at what the Republicans are doing on the state level, in Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan and elsewhere. Assaulting union and women’s rights, and suppressing voter turnout in minority areas, among other outrages. They are out to remake America in their image—or, “take their country back” as they like to say.

But the Progressive backlash against the Walkers, Kasiches, Scotts and Snyders, should be inspiring. And instructive. Now is the time to vent. If you’re pissed off at Obama, go write a blog post. Tweet your ass off. Get it out of your system. Then mobilize in productive ways and fight for progressive change.

Criticize and push and prod the President, sure. But whatever you do, don’t attack him so hard, so viciously and for so long, that you help take him down. He still boasts more progressive achievements than any President since LBJ. And if there is one lesson to be learned from the debt debacle, and the attempted Right Wing takeover in the states, is that elections have consequences. To the extent that liberal and moderate Democrats’ apathy, or exasperation with Obama, led to the 2010 “shellacking,” perhaps the most disastrous election of my lifetime— not for liberals, but for the nation as a whole—those who stayed home, or registered “protest” votes bear some responsibility.

Next time will be even worse. Don’t fool yourself, throw up your hands and say “Meh, Obama, Schmobama, might as well let Romney win.” I remember how ticked off a lot of liberals were at Bill Clinton, how he was viewed as a Republican in Democratic clothing, how he triangulated and dissembled and moved rightward. If there’d been a blogosphere then, God only knows the level of vitriol he might have absorbed from his left. Then, thanks in part to the Ralph Nader candidacy (as well as outright thievery and the stacked Supreme Court), we got Bush-Cheney. And in the depths of that catastrophic administration, I would bet most liberals would have begged to have ol’ Bubba back, warts, stained dress, and all.

And so it will be if we help the Teabaggers take down Barack Obama. But far, far more frightening.

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Okay, mainstream media, I’ve had it. You have frightening power to shape public opinion and, by extension, national politics. You are owned by a diminishing handful of corporations and serve their agendas and their shareholders above all else. And, to be sure, we’re seeing how well that’s working out via the Murdoch debacle. You can take us in and out of wars, recessions, scares, and all manner of crises, real and manufactured.

And most of us aren’t even half-listening. We hear you on the fly, going from room to room, channel-surfing, in-between work (provided we have jobs), school (provided we can afford it), family, sports, reality TV and just getting through the day. So much of your message is received uncritically, taken at face value. You know that—and you exploit it to create whatever “truth” you choose to market for that particular day.

And yet, despite the corrupting profit motive, there are many, many journalists in your employ who are attempting to do the right thing. And it is to those ink-stained wretches, et. al., that I make this plea.

STOP WITH THE FALSE EQUIVALENCIES, ALREADY. THE RIGHT WING NUT JOBS ARE EXACTLY THAT—RIGHT WING NUT JOBS.

Throughout the manufactured-by-the-Right debt ceiling crisis you are continuing to perpetuate the myth that “both sides are equally at fault” and that “the intransigent extremes on both ends of the spectrum” may sabotage any deal, the full faith and credit of blah, blah, blah etc, etc.  Just as with the issue of hate speech and any number of other issues, you fall back on the “everybody’s equally guilty” fantasy.

No. Seriously. This is wrong. There are many thoughtful, sincerely patriotic conservatives, yes. There is, indeed, an entire body of conservative political and economic theory, dating back centuries, practiced by men and women of good will (however wrongheaded). But at this moment in our history the GOP—perhaps the entire government, even the global economy—has been hijacked by lunatic, fanatical extremists—known loosely as the Tea Party caucus—dwelling in a reality of their own invention with the glassy-eyed zeal of cult members. They are more than willing to take the country down, either to serve their hysterical Ayn Randian ideology, a belief that the world is only 6,000 years old and that he moon landing was staged, or—and perhaps above all— simply because they figure that President Obama will go down in the wreckage and that we’ll have a white president in heaven.

I’m sorry, but Dennis Kucinich on his loopiest day can’t even approach this sort of fevered wingnuttery. They lie, they fantasize, they hate-monger—all with the endorsement of corporate powers like the Kochs, and hacks like Grover Norquist, the folks who sign their checks.

Or, they’re being enabled by the likes of Mitch McConnell and John Boehner, old-school pols who know better—who know damn well that if a Republican were in the White House, they’d simply rubber-stamp the debt ceiling increase just as they did all the gazillion times it was raised under previous administrations.

And yet, you sit there and act all judicious in the interest of being “fair and balanced.” You lend the Tea Party nihilists legitimacy. They are a fringe movement and have always deserved to be treated as such. They should be a sideshow. There is no one on the Left in national government who remotely compares.

I’m sorry. It’s got to stop. Sometimes one side is flat out, dangerously bathshit nuts—or just willfully dangerous, out of sheer political opportunism—and this time the wack jobs and the economic saboteurs are on the Right. Whether motivated by purist ideology or political cynicism, they are united in one goal: To tank the economy and inflate unemployment so that, ultimately, President Obama gets blamed—and goes down in flames.

Media—by which I mean non-Fox, legitimate media—it’s time you called them out.

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—On Feb. 28, economic forecaster Mark Zandi released a report for Moody’s Analytics predicting that over the next two years, the Republican-led House of Representatives’ proposal to slash $61 billion from the federal budget could reduce real GDP growth by 0.7 % —and cost the economy some 700,000 jobs. Testifying before the Senate Banking and Urban Affairs Committee March 1, however, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said that his analysis “doesn’t give a number that high.”  The Fed chair said such cuts would result in the reduction of “several tenths [of a percent] on GDP”  and “would, of course, have the effect of reducing growth on the margin.

—The Washington Post‘s Dana Milbank, relying on data compiled by the Center for American Progress, found that the Republican budget plan would force roughly 975,000 Americans from their jobs.

— A Goldman Sachs analysis suggests the GOP’s plan would  slow economic growth and damage a fragile recovery. This from the Huffington Post: “Goldman Sachs economic forecaster Alec Phillips said the GOP plan could slow economic growth by up to 2 percent. Even a compromise deal, with $25 billion in cuts could slow growth by 1 percent…In its latest spending plan, the White House predicted GDP growth of 2.7 percent this year.”

These findings, all released within the past week,  mock the “fiscally responsible” GOP whose cornerstone talking point is to insert the phrase “job-killing” before every one of President Obama’s policies. Republicans are touting Bernanke’s more optimistic analysis—but even that projects a cut in economic growth and certainly no job-creation boom.

Certainly Boehner’s House made its legislative priorities clear from the get-go: Waging war on women’s reproductive rights, eliminating Planned Parenthood, passing abortion legislation that perverts the meaning of “pro-life”—like HR 358, which would allow “morally conflicted” hospitals to refuse women lifesaving abortions.

Oh, and defunding public radio and TV. That Kenyansocialistmuslimterrorist Big Bird.

On the state level, a GOP governors are systematically spurning the Obama agenda—such as money for high speed rail, which Democrats maintain will create jobs and health care reform. This along of course, there is the transparent, concerted effort to crush labor unions in the name of budget-balancing.

There is, supposedly, an economic  philosophy behind the GOP’s fiscal strategy—albeit a flawed one. As  Salon’s Andrew Leonard points out:

“(From The Hill):

House Republicans argue that their bill should become law as part of a “cut and grow” strategy that they say, by removing uncertainty about higher taxes to pay for government spending, would spur spending by businesses.

Let’s be clear here. To reach a balanced budget that would permanently remove such “uncertainty” — without ever raising anyone’s taxes ever again — would require budget cuts so deep that the U.S. economy would immediately flat-line. In fact, the only sensible response to the Republican spending plan from the private sector is to be even more cautious. Standard economic theory suggests that sharp budget cuts will slow the economy — why would any company react to that by expanding hiring?”

But isn’t that precisely the point? Mitch McConnell laid his cards on the table right from the start, when he proclaimed that the GOP’s number one priority is to make Barack Obama “a one-term president.” Actually, Republicans got their marching orders early on, from Boss Limbaugh, who infamously declared that he hoped Obama would fail.

Looking toward 2012,  GOP presidential candidates range from smarmy Mitt “The Guy Who Laid You Off” Romneycare to Tim Pawlenty—who, despite his action-hero campaign video comes off as the kind of guy the people who give wedgies give wedgies to; to the unelectable Newt Gingrich to—well, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann. Barring some other catastrophe, any sane adult knows that  a growing economy and a shrinking jobless rate—however slowly—make President Obama’s reelection all but a slam dunk.

So what possible motivation do Republicans have to put America to work? You don’t have to be a  Beckian chalkboard conspiracy theorist to suggest that, on the federal and state levels alike, the GOP is actively trying to reverse, or at least stall economic recovery in order to take down  Barack Obama.

“It’s not a conspiracy. It’s not that we’re doing this for a political reason to go after the president,” Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett said of his fellow GOP governors’ assault on Obama’s policies.

Salon’s Leonard is also skeptical of the Screw the Economy=Screw Obama theory.

“I don’t know. It’s not that I wouldn’t suspect politicians of such foul Machiavellianism, but I find it hard to buy the thesis that this bunch of Republicans are consciously attempting to damage the economy for political reasons. I think that they just really don’t understand or care about economics. The crew that is in power now has distinguished itself by its ability to reject any kind of objective scientific or economic analysis that doesn’t fit into their political schema. Whether it’s the link between greenhouse gas emissions and global warming or the negative impact of subtracting demand from a weak economy is irrelevant. From the contemporary Republican point of view Obama’s policies must be “job-killing” because, well, he’s Obama!”

I’m not as generous as Andrew Leonard. The POTUS owns the economy, for good (Clinton) or ill (Carter, W). If GOP policies were to bear any economic fruit, well, that’s a nuance voters won’t process. At the most, they’ll say it’s an argument for continuing divided government.

I firmly believe that Mitch McConnell is as good as his word. I think the Koch Brothers, Karl Rove and the rest of the Republican  machine will stop at nothing to destroy Barack Obama. I think they’re perfectly capable of taking the American people down, just to return to power and enforce their ideological goals.

Double-digit unemployment—and a double-dip recession would be nice.

And, yes, they’d like fries with that, please. Just to stick it to Michelle Obama.

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I’m torn by President Obama’s tax cut compromise. Of course  the giveaway to the rich is horrifying on many levels. But because of the GOP‘s crass intransigence on taxes is it the best deal POTUS can get, or just about? Would many middle- and low-income folks get hurt if it doesn’t go through before 2011—would the good parts of the deal be lost, leaving us at the mercy of  Mitch McConnell, John Boehner and a GOP that doesn’t give a rat’s ass about the “real Americans” they pander to—many of whom elect them time and again while voting blindly and naively against their own interests?

So much has been written about this compromise, pro and con that it’s dizzying. Is it a matter of core principles, or a matter of achieving the “possible?” That is, given the machinations of a Republican party so inhumanly vicious, brazenly hypocritical and frankly anti-American that it would put tax cuts for the rich, and the desire to crush President Obama, ahead of everything else—from national security to the middle class, to the poor and unemployed, even to the care of the American heroes who risked their lives and damaged their health as first responders on 9/11, the date Republicans have wielded as a partisan weapon for almost a decade?

There are many kinds of hero. One of them is a 69-year-old man who for six hours, seven hours and more will stand and speak truth to power, and rail and cry out for justice on behalf of the American people. Who is fighting class warfare, yes, but on the right side of history and morality. A pure idealist excoriating the most obscene chasm between rich and poor in modern memory, if not beyond.

I don’t know if Bernie Sanders, my favorite Senator, is doing the politically prudent or expedient thing—I don’t know if allowing these tax cuts to expire and trying to force a fairer, more progressive deal is good for Democrats. Or whether it will gain or lose President Obama the crucial independent voters he needs to get reelected in 2012.

But Sen. Sanders is right about this country. His filibuster may be the most stirring exhibition of legislative passion and courage I have seen in my lifetime.

Bernie Sanders is a mensch, a champion, a hero and every liberal/progressive, every working stiff, every American, should stand in awe, applaud and thank God that he’s on our side.

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Here are the names and contact numbers of the 42 Republican senators—the phony patriots, the crassly brazen hypocrites—who yesterday shamefully blocked legislation to monitor and treat first responders and emergency workers who suffered illnesses related to 9/11. The bill would have provided funding for a health program to treat first responders, construction and cleanup workers and residents who inhaled toxic particles after the collapse of the World Trade Center towers.

These “Country First” partisans have perpetrated this atrocity solely to keep their blackmailing pledge to block all legislation until the Senate passes their beloved tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires, which could cost the nation some $700 billion, with little or no return. By contrast, the $7.4 billion cost of the 9/11 legislation over 10 years is paid for by a provision that would prevent foreign multinational corporations from using tax havens to avoid taxes on U.S. income.

Here then are the offending senators. Call them. Write them. Shame them.

And the next time any of them evokes the memory of 9/11, demagogues against the “Ground Zero” mosque or spews out any other fake-patriotic nonsense, remember this vote.

1. Alexander, Lamar – (R – TN)

455 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4944

Web Form: alexander.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email

2. Barrasso, John – (R – WY)

307 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-6441

Web Form: barrasso.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContactUs…

3. Bennett, Robert F. – (R – UT)

431 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5444

Web Form: bennett.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email

4. Bond, Christopher S. – (R – MO)

274 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5721

Web Form: bond.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContactUs.Con…

5. Brown, Scott P. – (R – MA)

317 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4543

Web Form: scottbrown.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/emailscottbrown

6. Brownback, Sam – (R – KS)

303 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-6521

Web Form: brownback.senate.gov/public/contact/emailsam.cfm

7. Bunning, Jim – (R – KY)

316 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4343

Web Form: bunning.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Co…

8. Burr, Richard

217 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3154

Web Form: burr.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Conta…

9. Chambliss, Saxby – (R – GA)

416 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3521

Web Form: chambliss.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email

10. Coburn, Tom – (R – OK)

172 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5754

Web Form: coburn.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contactsenatorcoburn?p…

11. Cochran, Thad – (R – MS)

113 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5054

Web Form: cochran.senate.gov/email.html

12. Collins, Susan M. – (R – ME)

413 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-2523

Web Form: collins.senate.gov/public/continue.cfm?FuseAction=Contact…

13, Corker, Bob – (R – TN)

185 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3344

Web Form: corker.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactMe

14. Cornyn, John – (R – TX)

517 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-2934

Web Form: cornyn.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactForm

15. Crapo, Mike – (R – ID)

239 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-6142

Web Form: crapo.senate.gov/contact/email.cfm

16. DeMint, Jim – (R – SC)

340 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-6121

Web Form: demint.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactInformation

17. Ensign, John – (R – NV)

119 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-6244

Web Form: ensign.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Con…

18. Enzi, Michael B. – (R – WY)

379A RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3424

Web Form: enzi.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContactInform…

19. Graham, Lindsey – (R – SC)

290 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5972

Web Form: lgraham.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Em…

20. Grassley, Chuck – (R – IA)

135 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3744

Web Form: grassley.senate.gov/contact.cfm

21. Gregg, Judd – (R – NH)

201 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3324

Web Form: gregg.senate.gov/contact/

22. Hatch, Orrin G. – (R – UT)

104 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5251

Web Form: hatch.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Offices.Cont…

23. Hutchison, Kay Bailey – (R – TX)

284 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-5922

Web Form: hutchison.senate.gov/contact.cfm

24. Inhofe, James M. – (R – OK)

453 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4721

Web Form: inhofe.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Con…

25. Isakson, Johnny – (R – GA)

120 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3643

Web Form: isakson.senate.gov/contact.cfm

26. Johanns, Mike – (R – NE)

404 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4224

Web Form: johanns.senate.gov/public/?p=ContactSenatorJohanns

27. Kirk, Mark – (R – IL)

387 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-2854

28. Kyl, Jon – (R – AZ)

730 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4521

Web Form: kyl.senate.gov/contact.cfm

29. LeMieux, George S. – (R – FL)

356 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-3041

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30. Lugar, Richard G. – (R – IN)

306 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4814

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31. McCain, John – (R – AZ)

241 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-2235

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32. McConnell, Mitch – (R – KY)

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33. Murkowski, Lisa – (R – AK)

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34. Risch, James E. – (R – ID)

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(202) 224-2752

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35. Roberts, Pat – (R – KS)

109 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-4774

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36. Sessions, Jeff – (R – AL)

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(202) 224-4124

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37. Shelby, Richard C. – (R – AL)

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38. Snowe, Olympia J. – (R – ME)

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39. Thune, John – (R – SD)

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40. Vitter, David – (R – LA)

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41. Voinovich, George V. – (R – OH)

524 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

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42. Wicker, Roger F. – (R – MS)

555 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510

(202) 224-6253

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Yesterday President Obama emerged from his meeting with the GOP leaders who have vowed to destroy him and once again played the reasoned consensus-builder—much to the dismay of his eyerolling center-left base. The analogies flew; Rachel Maddow likened the President to Charlie Brown, eternally trying to kick the football only to have Lucy snatch it away.

Today, within a mere 24 hours of that “let’s all get along” meeting, Mitch McConnell and his GOP senators came out with a signed letter vowing to block every single piece of legislation—the extension of jobless benefits, the START treaty, DADT, the DREAM act—until they get their tax cuts for the gazillionaires who bought them by bankrolling their campaigns. Even if they throw the rest of us under the bus. Even if their extension of the Bush tax cuts explodes the deficit by another $700 billion.

What, them worry? Republicans have made it clear their one objective is to destroy President Obama. They have absolutely no incentive to improve the economy or move the country forward in the next two years. The President owns the economy. If it improves, if unemployment drops, he gets credit at the ballot box. If it doesn’t, he’s toast. Simple as that.

The President’s response to this GOP slapdown? More talk of “people of good will working together.”

So to many in his base it seems Charlie Obama is at it again; the President appears hopelessly naive. In fact he’s still the smartest guy in the room, and he knows exactly what he’s dealing with. He knows the GOP wants to crush him, but his polling tells him most Americans do want to see the sides work together. As the Right paints him a socialist islamofascist, the only way he can reclaim Independents and have a chance at victory in 2012–is to appear judicious and Presidential. Indeed, that’s his nature.

His failure is in not, as Robert Reich says, “sending a message” to make clear whose side he’s on and whose side GOP obstructionists are on. In communicating passionately that he stands with “the small people,” with ordinary Americans, in seeming aloof, diffident and detached—and when you’re a professorial Ivy League black guy, it’s no way to win over the crucial white working and middle class.

His failure is in not expressing a bit more fury at the GOP’s criminal repudiation of the jobless, and in the cynical manner the “party of national security” is holding hostage the vital START treaty. As Iowa Senator Tom Harkin said today the GOP has “no sense of what’s right or wrong.” He needs to seem presidential, and forcefully principled. It’s a delicate balance

In any event, the POTUS isn’t the naive one here. It’s the American voter, at least those who elected Republicans in 2010—or stayed home out of indifference—believing the GOP has the interests of the country in mind.

Another analogy Rachel Maddow drew was to liken President Obama to the earthlings in the classic Twilight Zone episode “To Serve Man.” That’s the one in which aliens visit Earth professing to be benign benefactors; then we learn at the last minute, as humans board the visitors’ space ship on what they believe will be a goodwill voyage, that the aliens’ written manifesto “To Serve Man” is actually cookbook. They mean to convert mankind into food for their planet. The earthlings are literally walking like lambs to the slaughter.

Rachel’s Twilight Zone analogy applies more to the nation as a whole than to the President. The Republicans have nothing to lose and everything to gain if the middle and working class go down.

American voters: What part of that do you not understand?

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Recognize the gentleman on the left? It’s Nicholas Longworth (1869-1931) the dapper Republican best known as the man who married Teddy Roosevelt’s quotable daughter, Alice. He was also Speaker of the House of Representatives when the stock market crashed in 1929, and served for two years thereafter.

And on the right? That’s Joseph T. Robinson (1872-1937)  Democrat from Arkansas. He was Senate Minority Leader in ‘29—and after Dem victories, he served as Majority Leader through FDR’s first term.

After the Crash, were homeless encampments called Hoover-Longworthvilles? Do we now refer to the Roosevelt-Robinson New Deal? How many non-history buffs don’t have to Google these guys?

To voters, the President owns the economy; indeed, the buck stops at the Oval Office in just about every other circumstance—for all our libertarian pretensions, many Americans–on both sides of the spectrum–are closet royalists. When the going gets tough, we think, well, why can’t the POTUS just do something—repeal DADT, pass health care reform, create some jobs, keep the Kardashians off TV?

It’s the occupant of 1600 Pennsy who gets credit for good (Reagan ended the Cold War all by himself; Clinton equals prosperity) and gets blamed for suckiness (see Carter, Jimmy and Bush, George Dubya).

That’s why any notion that  Mitch McConnell and  John Boehner–for all his tears–have any interest in putting Americans back to work before 2013 is delusional.

And bipartisanship? We hear stories of how Reagan worked with Tip O’Neill, sharing beers and tall tales after hours and think, well, gosh, we’re all in this together, right? The Republicans took the House, so they have to govern, right?

Well, no. McConnell tipped his hand when he brayed to The Heritage foundation that the GOP’s top priority is making Obama a one-termer. Rush Limbaugh’s “Obama must fail” declaration, and Jim DeMint’s “Waterloo” battle cry made clear that the Party of No Fucking Way has but one goal—the Kenyan Muslim Socialist must be destroyed.

Sure, Chris Matthews can reminisce about how his old boss Tip bridged the partisan divide with Ronnie. But in this polarized environment–Tucson be damned–bipartisanship for the common good is as nostalgic as an old Joe Franklin Show episode (Google that, too, all you non-New Yorkers under 35). Lest we forget, the Koch Brothers and Chamber of Commerce paid good money for those GOP seats. And then there are all those Tea Party zealots out to disembowel the government.

And if the GOP’s goal is to take down Obama, what motivation does the party have to improve the lives of us working —and nonworking—stiffs? If unemployment dips to 7 or 6 or 5 percent, regardless of any Republican input Obama will get credit and Democratic Congressional candidates will feel the halo effect; at best, the nation would vote for continued divided government and return the Republicans to Congress. But Obama would win in a landslide, especially against a  field of GOP contenders ranging from bland, to dislikable to, well, clinically insane.

If things stay the same—or get worse? Obama wil take the fall and so will his party (again).  Doing nothing reaped great rewards for Republicans in 2010. It could get them the big Cahuna in 2012.

Cable news shows have 24 hours to fill, and hot stove league speculation is their business.

But bipartisanship? Seriously? Remember back in late 2008, when some pundits opined that John McCain might be Obama’s go-to Republican in the Senate?

How’s that working for you?

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