Sunday, November 16, 2014

A Response to Ross Douthat

Dear Mr Douthat:

Your column today focuses on the ‘betrayal” of President Obama, and you cite the departure of his (expected) action on immigration from “precedent or proportion or political normality.” You acknowledge the “precedent” of President Bush’s signing statements, which were methods of simultaneously making law while asserting his unwillingness to enforce the same law. You might have added the “non-precedential” ruling of the Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore, in which one branch of the government overrode both precedent and the Constitution, not for some putatively greater good, but explicitly to benefit one party and one individual.

How about the “proportion” involved where one house of Congress votes over 50 times to repeal a law that the same house passed less than 5 years earlier? Or, to take that example, the “proportion” involved in one party refusing to engage at all in crafting a piece of legislation that both candidates in the then-recent presidential election had espoused and made a centerpiece of the campaign, because that party’s guy lost? That refusal to participate is then compounded by incessant attempts to sabotage the same law.

“Political normality?” Are you referring to the political climate in which several Republican senators, including the majority leader, voted against the bill they had sponsored, after hearing the President say that he thought it was a good idea? Or perhaps the “political normality” of the majority leader announcing that his primary objective for the new Congress would be to make sure that the President serves only one term?

Well, surely, having captured the Senate earlier this month, Mr. McConnell will make his first order of business the restoration of the previous Senate rules concerning the filibuster –anti-democratic in the extreme, by the way—that the treacherous Democrats had done away with? Well, not exactly: overturning Obamacare appears to be the first, futile matter for business in the Senate.

The Right warns Obama that any action he takes on immigration will “poison the well” for any subsequent “politically normal” compromise legislation. That is, the threat is that, having failed to negotiate with the President on virtually anything for the past 5 years, the Republicans really mean it, this time.

The popular will was enunciated in this election; sure. Fifty-one percent of thirty-six percent of the voting public, after years of actions aimed by the Republicans at depriving people of the right to vote, expressed the overwhelming popular will. How about the popular will on gun control? Environmental regulation? I could go on, but never mind.

The “political normality” you long for is one in which it has become an article of faith for members of one party to refer to a Democratic congressman as a “Democrat” congressman, a coinage developed specifically as an attempt to belittle by Bob Dole, who is what passes for an elder statesman in the Republican Party. You should acknowledge that, for much of the Right, any Democratic President –heck, any Democrat at all-- is, essentially (and, in the case of some celebrated Right spokespersons, explicitly) a traitor. If the Democrat is also black … well, that speaks for itself.

You invite the President to avoid the immigration “power grab,” ignoring the fact that, no matter what this President does, he will be vilified for having done it, or for not having done it; and this demonization will include simple lying –about him personally (his origins, religion, and the notion that he “hates America,” all endorsed implicitly and in some cases explicitly by members of Congress), or his policies (he’s a socialist who refused to nationalize the banks when a lot of non-socialists were recommending it), or his actions (he bailed out the banks, although this took place during the Bush Administration) as well as dire threats and hollow predictions. Faced with the unrelenting hostility of the Republican Party, why should he care about some additional, theoretical “disgrace?” 

Read what the Europeans are saying: Obama is popular, but America is exceptional –exceptionally dysfunctional, with corrupt politics--, and so cannot be relied upon to do even what is in its own interests.


The democracy is poisoned, all right. It is poisoned by animus, by money, and by the rage of those whose way of life seems threatened. But most of all it is poisoned by the attitudes of those in power, whose goal is not the betterment of the country, but the possession of the power itself. You are right about the “will to power.” The only question is, power to be used for whose benefit? In this regard, I think the score is 99 to 1, and the Republican “1” is the 1 percent.