The concept of governing through formal, orderly, and extended
expression of thought on a subject using fair interchange of ideas and
discussion according to rules of parliamentary procedure is regarded as
bipartisan governance. Even in government where one side’s voice carries
greater weight by virtue of a majority, there is still room for
discourse and debate to come to decisions benefiting all citizens and
give every opportunity to examine each possible opinion and prevent one
side from ruling by edict.
Up until January 2009, American government
operated according to so-called “majority rule” that still depended on
bipartisan agreements where all voices and positions were given equal
weight prior to deliberations and votes, but on inauguration night in
2009 when Washington celebrated a new President, repugicans met and
plotted to bring governance to a halt by opposing any and every agenda
put forth by the newly elected President and Democratic majority in both
houses of Congress. It is four-and-a-half years later, and despite
President Obama winning re-election and Democrats gaining seats to
bolster its majority in the Senate, repugicans are still opposing and
blocking any and every proposal put forward by the Democratic majority
and the African American President.
Over the past couple of days, there has been renewed talks of
changing Senate filibuster rules to deter repugicans from continuing to
bring governance to a standstill and stop their attempts to rule by
minority, but simply talking about a semblance of order to allow the
legislative bodies to operate evoked a claim by Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell that Democrats were “fostering a culture of intimidation.”
McConnell’s contention is more repugican projection of their tactics
on to Democrats, and an attempt to garner support to oppose reform and
continue obstructionism for the sole purpose of keeping government at
either a standstill, or under repugican rule despite their minority
position and losses in the recent election.
At the start of the 113th Congress, Senate Majority Leader Harry struck a deal with repugicans with the goal of “streamlining Senate floor business,”
and he failed to implement fair rule changes because Democrats were
terrified of poisoning the non-existent bipartisan relations during what
could have been a productive period for governance. The result has been
more filibuster and obstruction of President Obama’s nominees for
critical department positions as well as preventing legislation repugicans and their corporate masters refuse to tolerate, but it is
McConnell’s assertion that Democrats are fostering a culture of
intimidation that reeks of hypocrisy and informs the repugican’s
tactics throughout President Obama’s tenure in office. There are varying
opinions why repugicans brought normal governance to a whimpering end,
and whether it is racist opposition to an African American President or
their frenzied anti-government agenda, they have used intimidation,
economic terrorism, and outright obstructionism to ensure this
government cannot operate to serve the people.
Just in the past two weeks, Senate repugicans threatened to obstruct
the President’s nominees to head the Consumer Protection Bureau (CPB),
Department of Labor, Environmental Protection Agency, and three nominees
to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals even before the President
officially submits nominee’s names for confirmation. The repugicans claim
the court’s workload is too light for a full complement of judges, they
oppose CPB to protect bankers and leave consumers at the mercy of
predatory financial institutions, openly called for eliminating the EPA
to enrich the oil industry, and want to keep the Labor Department from
protecting the American labor force for their corporate donors’
benefit. For the past two months, repugicans reiterated their threats
to hold the debt ceiling increase hostage for more Draconian cuts to
safety nets and tax reform to enrich the wealthy in a repeat of 2011′s
hostage scenario that drove rating agency S&P to downgrade America’s
stellar credit rating for the first time in its history.
This week, Democrats and several groups have begun anew pushing for
reforms to give the government a chance to work for the people, and it
is about time since Senator Reid’s “expression of comity” for his “esteemed colleagues across the aisle”
at the start of the current session of Congress did absolutely nothing
to alleviate the gross level of repugican obstruction that has
continued unabated over the past five months. It is the push to stop repugican obstructionism, stop their economic terrorism, and install
leaders to run various protection agencies that precipitated Mitch
McConnell’s allegation that Democrats were fostering a culture of
intimidation, or as its definition informs; to compel or deter actions
with the use of threats. It is despicable that repugicans have used
threats against Democrats to enable them to rule from a minority
position, but their actions have gone beyond threats and their
obstruction is creating real harm to the people they were sent to
Washington to serve. The repugicans have taken filibusters and obstruction
to such an unprecedented degree that they have blocked discussion and
debate of their own ideas and policies that impact every man, woman, and
child in America, and they have convinced many Democrats that abridging
the obstructionist tactics is toxic to discourse and bi-partisanship
the repugican cabal is successfully blocking.
Republicans have played on Democrats, especially President Obama’s,
desire to govern in a bipartisan manner to such an extent that
Democratic inaction is part of why Washington is paralyzed and the
nation cannot progress beyond repugican limitations. There are a
substantial number of liberals and Democrats that are so terrified of
offending repugicans by calling out their obstruction or accurately
portraying their un-American and anti-government tactics that they
openly criticize any negative characterization of the repugican cabal as “prohibiting reasonable discourse and debate” and “threatening bipartisan solutions”
to America’s problems. Whether the left’s altruists are aware that
discourse and debate is not remotely possible with wingnuts, or
that repugican cabal intransigence drove them to reject their own solutions because
President Obama embraced them is questionable, but their naiveté and
ignorance of the current crop of repugicans and their opposition to
governance is absolutely stunning. It has gotten so perverse that
political commentators who use facts to expose repugican malfeasance are accused of prohibiting discourse, civil
debate, and discussion necessary to solve the nation’s problems, and it
is the same argument that drove Harry Reid to just “streamline Senate floor business” instead of bringing an end to repugican Senate rule from a minority position.
It is beyond time for Americans to stand up to repugican obstruction and demand reform to allow the government to
operate on behalf of the American people. That may require some
Democrat, any Democrat, to go in front of the American people and tell
them exactly why roads and bridges are crumbling, why wages are
declining, and why education, social programs, and consumer protections
face extinction. However, not only will that require telling people the
truth, it will mean hurting repugicans’ feelings and engender outrage,
cries of intimidation, and accusations of tyranny from wingnuts, as
well as incite many Democrats to decry truth as obstructing discourse,
debate and their precious bipartisanship that is as much a pipe-dream as
expecting repugicans to give up ruling from a minority position.
Regardless of what one thinks about Mitch McConnell and his
anti-government and un-American ideology, he is at least smart enough to
know all he had to do to intimidate Harry Reid and President Obama was
tell them attempting to govern through orderly discussion, discourse,
and debate is Democrat’s “culture of intimidation” that will
likely produce three-and-a-half more years of obstruction,
super-majorities for discussion, unwarranted filibusters, and of course
the requisite Democratic “we’re sorry; please forgive us.”
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