A Matter of When – A Lunchtime Musing

First: A disclaimer: In the 2008 election, I was an Obama supporter. I believed then that he was the stronger of the two candidates, which looking back, implied we really didn’t have much of choice by the time the field narrowed.

That said, I’m watching how things are shaping up with interest. None of the Republican candidates interest me, a moderate slightly over on the progressive side. They are either too tied to the Tea Party, or too tied to the religious right.

So this raises the interesting question: I saw, while looking at the LA Times over lunch, that Obama’s current numbers show a nationwide approval of 39%, and that historically, presidents don’t win re-election with that sort of approval rating. I can’t imagine the Democrats will be so tied to this course that they’ll stay on a sinking ship (but then again, we are talking the Democratic party here). So at what point do you think we might see challengers to President Obama emerge, and who might they be?

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Preparing for 2012

The American people, as a collective whole, are stupid.

As we’re gearing up to next year’s silly season, we’re all focusing on particular presidential candidates stand on some particular issue or another. Obama is trying to change his brand from “change”, attempting to argue he’s made tough decisions that will pay off. The Republicans are arguing that Obama has done nothing. They are arguing for all the things they will do, if only you put them in charge. Meanwhile, we focus our attention on whether Sarah Palin paid attention in history class or is just making it up as she goes along. Although that may be fun, it doesn’t make a difference. We’ve had stupid presidents before, and we’ll likely have them again.

We’re missing exploring how to resolve the most pressing issue facing this country. It’s not the debt limit. It’s not jobs. It’s not the economy. It’s congressional gridlock.

The President can have all the wonderful ideas he or she wants, but if they can’t get them through Congress, they’re out of luck. If Congress changes the President’s proposal from what the President thinks is right, he or she has no recourse other than the veto. Obama was barely effective when he had all of Congress from the party (thanks to the filibuster rule in the Senate, which gave the minority party far too much power). Nowadays, he’s completely ineffective because Congress is refusing to do anything.

Don’t believe me? Read this article from the LA Times on how Congressional gridlock may scuttle any effective action on the debt ceiling. Republicans, by not compromising on taxes, can continue to campaign on the no-new-taxes stance that is a cornerstone of their political strategy, while attacking Democrats and President Obama for their proposed tax increases on the wealthy. Democrats, whose political prospects have brightened since House Republicans proposed deep cuts in Medicare, have all but ruled out any deal that would relinquish the issue as a political weapon. Taking advantage of a pivotal moment to join together on landmark fiscal reforms would require both parties to yield on issues central to their ideology and reelection strategies. Translation: It ain’t gonna happen.

Now, I happen to be pro-Obama. But would it be any better under any of the Republican candidates? No. It is unlikely the Republicans would take control over both houses, given the love people have for congress. With Congress divided, nothing will get through. Even if the Republicans gain a majority in the Senate, they’ll be in the same position that the Democrats were in 2009: tied up by the filibuster rule giving the minority power.

We need to be asking our candidates how they are going to break this gridlock. We need to ask them how they are going to get Congress to move past their party ideology and work for the best of the country. This requires a politician with the political skill to work deals and create convincing arguments; it requires a politician with believable charisma and a strong control of the facts. It short, it requires attributes that none of our current or likely candidates have in abundance. The last candidates we had with this skill were LBJ, Reagan, and Clinton: they knew how to get people to put aside party and work together. I don’t believe Obama has this skill—he knows the facts, he knows what he wants, he even has the charisma, but he doesn’t appear to have the ability to convince people. Perhaps he would gain this in a second term; it’s amazing what being in your second and last term can do for blind alligience to party. As for the Republican candidates, most are too ideological rigid to be able to succeed at this. Most are lacking in charisma and persuasiveness; the only candidate with charisma is generally acknowledged to have only a passing familiarity with the facts. It might be interesting to see what happens if we have a repeat of Obama vs. McCain, with respect to this.

So, as we start silly season, keep this issue in mind. Does the candidate that you support have any viable abilities to get beyond the gridlock in Congress? Do they have the capability to convince the other party that at least a goodly portion of their position is correct?

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Politics as Usual

A number of political items in my lunchtime news reading over the week have been building up the head of steam, so it’s time to release some of the pressure.

I’ve been watching Sarah Palin’s bus trip with interest. I mentioned this earlier in the week, where I noted how she’s being true to her Fox exclusivity contract by talking to non-Fox media, and how she was encouraging Trump to run. Here are a few more items on the tour… on the tour’s recent visit to New York, she was spotted wearing a Magen David (Star of David), obstensibly in honor of Jerusalem Day, but some feel it might be pandering to Jewish voters. Odd vacation. She’s also been talking about Paul Revere… and getting it wrong (she thinks he did his warnings to preserve our rights to own guns … and were for the British). [ETA: Here are even more errors she has been making, courtesy of the Washington Post] But I think the biggest thing that has raised the steam was this article from the Washington Post about the Influence Industry. Who do you think is paying for Sarah Palin’s tour, which she claims is a personal vacation, not a campaign tour. Her PAC: SarahPAC. As she’s not a declared candidate, she can legally use the money for anything: paying her mortgage, personal vacations. And of course, this is just a vacation. To her kids it is; they are annoyed by the reporters. As for Palin herself? Her appearance in New Hampshire the day that Romney announced was just a coincidence. Well, my thought on this is: what she is doing may be legal, but it sure is not ethical, and it bothers me.

So far, I have yet to see the Republicans propose a viable candidate. Oh, sure, there are candidates that can appeal to the narrow conservative bases. But I don’t see one that can appeal to the independents and moderates sufficiently to win the election. USA Today has a nice editorial on that today, pointing out that the Republicans are shooting themselves in the foot by the rigorous adherence to the Tea Party and equivalent voices. There was another article I read (which, alas, I didn’t save) that indicated this is the same problem that doomed the Democrats in 1972—focusing far too much on adherence to the anti-Vietnam voices that they lost sight of the larger picture.

The Tea Party folks are hurting the country out of good intent, often because they either don’t understand how the system works (compromise), how the government is actually financed (which isnt’ like personal finances), or the need for some level of debt or spending to help during bad economic times. An example of this is their current push for a return to the gold standard, which almost all leading economists agree would be disasterous.

You combine this with the various economic news that has come out this week: both in terms of employment and housing. I’m wondering how this will play out in the election. Will Obama get the blame, even though he hasn’t been able to get any of his policies through Congress of late? Will the Republicans get the blame, for the glimmer of recovery turned back into a downturn after the Republicans took over the house and made progress difficult? There will be lots and lots of finger pointing to be sure.

I’m also annoyed by the folks who claim Obama is not supporting Israel. Just today, it was reported that conservative pro-Israel groups have launched TV ads and robo-calls attacking President Obama’s call for negotiations based on 1967 lines. Of course, they are misunderstanding the position: in particular, that it is the same position as President G. W. Bush had, and that it is not a return to the pre-“7 day war” borders, using those borders as a starting point for the negotiations, to be followed by mutually agreed land swaps (so that Israel can keep its settlements, east Jerusalem, and land required for strategic purposes, such as a connection to the Jordan River). Obama is also insisting on secure borders for Israel, and a non-militarized Palestinian state that recognizes Israel as Jewish. How that is lack of support for Israel is beyond me.

One last thing. The Birthers. I wish they would go away, and I wonder what their goal is? After 3 years, they aren’t going to invalidate the election. Even if their claims were true (which they are not), they would end up with Biden, who would endorse all of Obama’s actions. They would not end up with McCain, who did not win sufficient states. They can’t go back in time. To me, they are like the dog who is chasing the car… what does he think he will do if he catches it?

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Taking Matters Into My Own Hands

In recent years, I’ve been getting more and more fed up with the polarization of politics. Republicans won’t talk to the Democrats. Democrats won’t talk to the Republicans. Each side demonizes the other and paints them as 100% evil and the destroyer of society. The recent budget problems have made me think the future is bleaker and bleaker. Jerry Brown, who is one of the most skilled politicians and negotiators we’ve had in Sacramento, couldn’t get the sides to move together towards a deal. And don’t get me started on Congress: it appears the Republicans don’t even want to compromise, and instead get their jollies by floating political ideas that they know will never go anywhere. Talk about wasting money! Then they want to go and spend even more money on completely shutting down illegal immigration, which seems to go against their pledge to do anything to reduce the deficit.

Well I’ve had it. The only way to fix this is to take matters into my own hands and run for office. I’m not thinking Congress — I like our congresscritter, Henry Waxman, far too much. But perhaps at the state level — I haven’t been impressed by either of our state folk: Cameron Smyth or Sharon Runner (who just took over her husband’s seat). I think I could go in there and bring an engineer’s perspective to the State Assembly. Fix the budget with some compromise. Improve computer security. Fix the highways.

I just think it could work, if I could get some financial backing. If it doesn’t… well… there’s always being a producer on BroadwayCats Don’t Dance: A New Musical… it could work.

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