President Obama statement on net neutrality and
climate change agreement with China are two strong signals that the
president is building a unified front with congressional Democrats that
will be a nightmare for the new repugican majority.
Obama has sent repugicans two messages that go hand
in hand together. The first message he delivered was at his
post-election press conference. The president made it clear that he
remains willing to work with repugicans but that the Boehner and McConnell are responsible for passing legislation. Obama put pressure on congress to get things done.
The president’s second message has unfolded over the past week. Obama has moved to the left, and taken very public positions on climate change and net neutrality.
The president took these steps not only to boost the morale of his
party, but to get the White House and congressional Democrats on the
same page. The House and Senate Democratic caucuses will not only be
smaller. They will also be more liberal. One of the consequences of
losing elections in mostly red states is that the Democrats that remain
in congress are much more liberal than the red staters who were
defeated.
The shift to the left is one of the reasons why Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) is looking to create a special Democratic leadership position for Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). When all of these pieces are put together, they reveal a picture of Democratic Party that is
Boehner and McConnell have so far shown no desire to move to the center. In fact, repugicans have expressed shock that President Obama and the Democrats aren’t about to immediately give them everything that they want.
Obama and the Democrats are setting up a nightmare scenario for Boehner
and McConnell. The repugicans won’t have enough Senate votes to pass
legislation without Democratic support. If Democrats form a united
front, McConnell won’t be able to pass anything that Democrats don’t
want.
Senate repugicans will have a choice. They can
either move to the middle and enrage their base, which is unlikely or
they can be stuck with a majority that is incapable of getting anything
done. Harry Reid said that he was not interested in obstructing the repugicans, but he may not have to obstruct them. If Democrats stick
together, repugicans won’t be able to do anything in the Senate.
The repugicans will find themselves caught between an
emboldened president who is using his constitutional powers to act on
his own, and Democratic Senate minority that is unified against
McConnell’s agenda. The president’s actions this week are only the
beginning of the Democratic strategy to keep the White House and retake
the Congress in 2016.
Democrats have been revived and energized by the
president’s actions, and it looks like Boehner and McConnell could have a
very long two years ahead of them.
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