By Alan
Caruba
Oh, what a relief! Now we know that
the government will be funded through January 15 and that we can wait until
February 7 to fight the debt ceiling battle all over again. Three months to the
next potential shutdown and four until the Democrats and Republicans go to the
mattresses again like a scene from The Godfather.
Only idiots would run a government
with a $17 trillion debt this way.
Politico.com reported
that “President Barack Obama welcomed the end of the government shutdown and the
raising of the debt limit Thursday with a call for the end of crisis-to-crisis
governing and a new era of bipartisan cooperation.”
Does anyone still
believe anything Obama says?
The deal struck between Sens. Reid
(R-NV) and McConnell (D-KY) allowed the latter to secure $2 billion for a
project in Kentucky and no doubt there is plenty of pork in the bill to keep
everyone happy, except for those senators who weren’t able to get a piece of the
bribe money.
“There is no distinctly criminal
class,” said Mark Twain, “except Congress.”
What have we learned from the last
three weeks? We learned that President Obama has no intention to negotiate with
the Republicans and regards the Democrats in Congress as little more than rubber
stamps for whatever he wants. And they seem to agree. While the Democrats showed
considerable solidarity, the Republicans were tearing themselves to
tatters.
We learned that President Obama, with
an eye on the November 2014 midterm elections, is already in full battle mode as
he and his huge propaganda machine—the media and the former campaign
committee-turned-social-media-megaphone—ramp up the message that the Tea Party
is composed of rightwing fanatics and the Republicans are not much
better.
Given the great “success” of
Obamacare, can you imagine spending the last two years of Obama’s time in office
if he is able to so demonize the Republicans that they lose control of the House
and cannot gain control or at least a larger margin of members in the Senate?
I jest, of course. Obamacare
is the greatest gift ever handed to the Republicans.
As millions of Americans discover that
their health insurance premiums have increased 100% to 300%, they will be
howling for its repeal by November 2014. The younger, healthier members of
society will elect to pay the fine for not signing up. Some people will discover
they cannot be admitted to the hospital of their choice or that their personal
physician has retired or closed their practice. Others will find their fulltime
jobs reduced to part-time, if they haven’t already.
There are going to be a lot of very unhappy voters by the time the
midterms roll around and that, ladies and gents, is why the Republicans “caved”
this time and will likely do so again because I have a feeling that their
strategy will be to fight a lot of small, but losing battles around the various
deadlines required to fund the government and lift the debt ceiling. Each time
they do the latter, they will remind everyone that Obama keeps demanding more
money.
As for Rep. John Boehner, Speaker of
the House, he was greeted with a round of
applause by the Republican caucus when he announced the deal to end the
shutdown and raise the debt ceiling. It wasn’t that they hadn't lost, but that
they understood he had fought their battle with dignity and as far as he could,
given the lack of unity among GOP House members.
The memory of World War Two and
Vietnam veterans, as well as others from more recent conflicts being denied
access to their memorials on the National Mall or of the first closure of the
Lincoln Memorial ever is going to linger. Barricades have now been renamed
“Barrycades.”
The President has managed to offend
veterans, the elderly (who vote in larger numbers), the unions who hate
Obamacare, Catholics, and a younger generation already saddled with debt from
college who are being told they must dig deeper to pay for health insurance they
don’t want and probably don’t need.
Obamacare is profoundly
unconstitutional. Forget about the Supreme Court’s idiotic decision to call a
penalty a “tax” and ignore the other elements of the Constitution that forbid
the government from requiring people to pay for health insurance or pay a fine
if they do not. The Court has made similar bad decisions in the past and, as
some current scholars believe, has become so politicized that it has been
eviscerating the clear intent of the Constitution for
decades.
Only significant Republican victories
in the midterm elections will end the misery being inflicted on Americans. That
is likely to occur in spite of the GOP’s poor messaging and the hostility of the
nation’s mainstream media.
Taxpayers and voters are in for months
of gridlock on Capitol Hill. Get used to it.
© Alan Caruba, 2013
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