A group of congressional liberals being that include
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) teamed up with
President Obama to kill tax cut deal that would have given hundreds of
billions of dollars to the wealthy and corporations.
Politico reported,
“Everyone felt that Reid had suddenly given the store to repugicans and not gotten much in return,” said a Democratic House aide.The president, with liberal Democratic backing on the Hill, issued the veto threat and the plan imploded, making the tax deal the first major collateral damage of the White House’s immigration action.….
We should go back to the drawing board,” said Michigan Rep. Sander Levin, the top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee. Those concerns were echoed in public by Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), who sits on the tax-writing Finance Committee and Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee.A few hours after White House aides spoke with Senate Finance, Obama himself called Wyden to tell him he’d made a decision: He’d veto the deal.
Sens. Reid and Schumer tried to do an end run around
President Obama and congressional liberals and got caught. Sen. Bernie
Sanders called the plan to give corporations more tax breaks crazy,
“This tax cut agreement does exactly the wrong things. At a time of
massive wealth and income inequality, it extends huge tax cuts to the
rich and large corporations while threatening programs that help
low-income children. At a time when we need to reverse climate change
and aggressively move to sustainable energy, this agreement fails to
eliminate tax benefits for the fossil fuel industry but phases out tax
credits for wind and solar. This is pretty crazy stuff. I strongly
support the president’s decision to veto it.”
With the red state Democrats out of the Senate,
liberals are going to gain power and influence. The entire Senate
Democratic caucus doesn’t need to be unified to uphold a presidential
veto. It’s now clear that President Obama is working with the
congressional liberals to fence in what the repugican congressional
majority will be able to accomplish.
Obama won’t have much trouble gathering up votes to
sustain a veto as long as Republicans try to pass through wildly
unpopular legislation. A smaller Democratic caucus in both the House and
Senate does give the president more flexibility when it comes to
working with his fellow Democrats. The liberal Hell No caucus is already flexing their muscles. The blocking of the Keystone XL pipeline, and the killing of tax cuts for corporations were only the beginning.
The repugican fantasy of a congress that could
challenge Obama has gone up in smoke. If the White House continues to
work with congressional liberals, Boehner and McConnell will be pinched
in and complaining about their inability to get anything done in a
matter of weeks.
The shoe is sliding over to the other foot as Mitch McConnell is about to get a taste of his own medicine.
No comments:
Post a Comment