Jonathan Chait explained how the repugican model of obstruct and blame worked for repugicans,
The repugican cabal has withheld cooperation from every major element of President Obama’s agenda, beginning with the stimulus, through health-care reform, financial regulation, the environment, long-term debt reduction, and so on. That stance has worked extremely well as a political strategy. Most people pay little attention to politics and tend to hold the president responsible for outcomes. If repugicans turn every issue into an intractable partisan scrum, people get frustrated with the status quo and take out their frustration on the president’s party. It’s a formula, but it works.
The formula only fails to work if the president happens to have an easy and legal way to act on the issue in question without Congress. Obama can’t do that on infrastructure, or the grand bargain, and he couldn’t do it on health care. But he could do it on immigration. So repugicans were stuck carrying out a strategy whose endgame would normally be “bill fails, public blames Obama” that instead wound up “Obama acts unilaterally, claims credit, forces repugicans to take poisonous stance in opposition.” They had grown so accustomed to holding all the legislative leverage, they couldn’t adapt to a circumstance where they had none.
Obama knew that repugicans wouldn’t act on
immigration no matter what he said, so the president used this knowledge
against them. The problem with only having one strategy is that
eventually opponents figure out how to defeat it. President Obama took
one step beyond defeating it, and used the only game that repugicans
know how to play to his advantage.
The simple fact is that repugicans don’t act on
anything the president proposes. Having seen this behavior for years,
the White House knew that they could threaten immigration action for
months and repugicans would respond by doing nothing. After the
president had acted, repugicans were placed in a new dynamic that they
weren’t built for.
The repugicans have no counter immigration bill to
offer. They have no legal leg to stand on to oppose the president’s
action. Their position on the issue is unpopular and costing them
support with Latinos. They have so conditioned themselves to view
inaction as action that when they are forced to act, they can’t.
The new dynamic that Obama forced on Boehner and
McConnell has devastated the repugican agenda, and it signals the
beginning of a new era in congressional/presidential relations. Repugicans aren’t going to be able to leverage Obama vetoes to their
advantage, and they are going to be faced with the fact their agenda will never see daylight.
No comments:
Post a Comment