Kingfish Wrote:
nobody Wrote:
It is sadly predictable that this legislation will be so watered down as to be unrecognizable in terms of what people who really want reform wanted to see. It's even more sad that a candidate finally captures the imagination of the public, wins in a landslide, controls the congress and senate, and still can't get a major platform plank passed without this big of a fight and this much watering down. Doesn't seem to speak well of the political process in my mind...or maybe it just shows the lack of unity in the Democratic Party. Hell, really it probably just shows yet again how much pull the pharmaceutical and insurance lobbies have.
But yeah, the problem with the senate is exactly that, everyone hates the senate...except for their senator. Those guys get entrenched back home. Replacing the more conservative Dems who won't help with this is not at all an easy proposition, especially considering the districts they are coming out of. They've got teams of Loogars back home making sure their boy stays in power and that potential challengers decide to back off and toe the party line. And just like Jesus freaks are gonna keep voting Republican regardless, the liberals are still gonna vote for even conservative Democrats over Republicans.
On some level I kind of agree with you. However, I think it might be too cynical. As Gar pointed out, this has been a potentital political landmine for a long time. Moreover, a lot has happened in the Obama administration already in a very short time. I think we might be in the midst of a "change fatigue."
I always thought the smart play was to take out some low hanging fruit in the first term. Expand S-Chip because everyone loves kids, and nobody would oppose it. Expand Medicare because the Elderly are a political 800 pound guerilla with rocket launchers. This narrows the uninsured and undercovered gap. Comeback later and build on that success to overhaul the system.
Nobody does have a point in Dem unity being non-existent, though. Whereas, in the throes of the GOP ascendence -- Bush in the White House, majorities in each legi house -- the party coalesced around the tax cut, NCLB, Medicare 'Script Drug, even the New England wing of the party (Shays, Chaffee, the Maine Jewesses), the party in this case remains divided. The Blue Dogs have not been brought to heel, be it by Pelosi, Reid, Durbin, or Schumer (seriously, what the fuck, Chuck?), & they are steering this debate (off the cliff). It's not the GOP calling shots as Obama is pushing for a bipartisan solution -- it's the Blue Dogs (who are effectively the GOP opposition).
Delay would never have let that happen, never would have let Shays direct the course of events. But Reid? Jesus, he's a Blue Dog (at least with social policy, anyway) himself, so why does he want to see the lib Dems succeed?