Ron Fournier is the most self-refuting pundit in America. He never quite realizes that the Republicans are able to accomplish one thing, and one thing only. Through their total obstruction, they make it impossible for the president to lead, which then makes the public doubt the president’s leadership qualities. Mr. Fournier is fully capable of documenting the myriad ways that the Republicans are obstructing, failing to offer plausible alternatives or compromises, all the while making insincere and often ludicrous arguments in their own defense. But this never stops him from faulting the president equally, or near-equally, for being unable to overcome this Republican behavior.
This is why Mr. Fournier’s name has become a punch-line. He’s turned himself into a joke. The most glaring example of his both-sides-do-it fallacy in this particular article is his treatment of the Republicans’ decision to filibuster three straight nominees to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
A small but recent example of Republican obstinacy came Monday when Senate Republicans blocked Obama’s third consecutive nominee to the country’s most important Appeals Court. Their argument is ludicrous: The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit does not have a caseload to merit filling the vacancies, Republicans claim. They failed to shrink the court by three seats, so they are blocking the president’s nominees.
This is not about caseloads. Republicans had no trouble with the size of the court under President Bush. The data contradict the case for fewer seats. And all three of Obama’s nominees are qualified for the job. This is pure politics of obstruction.
It brings to mind what House Majority Leader Eric Cantor offered as an excuse for blocking a vote on the Senate’s immigration bill, or even a debate on the subject. “We don’t want a repeat of what’s going on now with Obamacare,” he said.
That’s the GOP motto: If Obama is for it, we’re against it. That may be enough to appease Obama haters who make up a considerable core of the Republican midterm voting bloc. It may be a strategy that works in the short term, given the president’s management failures and deception. But this is the exact wrong way for Republicans to win the emerging generation of voters, the millennials, whom polls show are far more tolerant and practical than GOP leaders in Washington.
In fairness, Democrats encourage bad behavior. For example, Senate Democrats in 2003 blocked President Bush’s nominee to the same District of Columbia Circuit that Obama is now trying to fill. Democrats were in the minority then, and no less narrow-minded or political as Senate Republicans today.
While the Democrats resisted, to one degree or another, many of George W. Bush’s judicial nominees, the only nomination to the DC Circuit who was ultimately blocked was Miguel Estrada. And, while Mr. Estrada was in many ways well-qualified for the job, the Democrats had real concerns about his partisanship because he had refused to hire liberal clerks when he had the job of reviewing them for Justice Anthony Kennedy. In other words, they had an actual reason for opposing Estrada, while the Republicans have no reason for blocking Obama’s picks other than their determination to prevent the seats from being filled. When Estrada removed his name from consideration, the Democrats confirmed his replacement as part of the Gang of 14 deal.
What we are witnessing now is a significant escalation of the obstruction of judicial appointments. It’s not enough to argue that the Democrats started it. The two situations are not equivalent. The Democrats rejected one nominee for cause, the Republicans are rejecting all nominees without cause.
I loathe Ron Fournier to the extent that I can’t even bring myself to read your block quote.
My mom used to say that if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all. So I will say this: thank god Ron Fournier is no longer with AP, where what he wrote was clearly not neutral but AP was still supplying publications all over the country.
Likewise. I refuse to click on stories that have his byline. Often I see his name on stories most read at NJ, so it’s pretty clear who their intended audience is.
Notice how Fournier doesn’t quote any of the present Republican leadership in connecting today’s obstructionism to 2003’s blocking of one highly questionable nominee. No, Fournier himself goes digging through history to mine the nugget that proves his “both sides do it.” Also, in the block quote, the only actual Republican quoted by Fournier is in the House, not the Senate.
The Republicans not only don’t have to do squat-ah, they don’t even have to come up with their own phoney baloney rationale for their behavior; Fournier is their one-stop shop for tactics, excuses, rationale, and ultimate justification. For free!
Actually who starts things off does matter. In fact it matters vastly more than who uses the most force.
If I go verbally assault someone and start shoving them it’s my own damn fault if they beat me into a bloody pulp. Once you start an confrontation it’s your fault even if the other side retaliates with vastly more force and gusto.
And this isn’t just some sort of unwritten society rule, it’s the law as well. You can complain to the cops all you want that the other guy is to blame because he kicked your ass, but if you started the fight it’s still your own damn fault. Thus you get to go to jail all beat up and looking like the idiot you are.
Yes the congressional Democrats started it, yes they deserve the blame for starting it. We shouldn’t be screaming “but he hits harder, so it’s not the same/fair” now that they are hitting back. What you do is you fight twice as dirty and then go for the balls and the eyes. Escalate again, double down, and make them suffer.
It’s this sort of “but, he hits harder. Sure I hit him first but he gave me a black eye” that makes Democrats come off as the wimpy party. You don’t cry to the teacher. You wait till school is out find the bastard off school grounds and their guard is down, and then beat them within an inch of their life.
“If I go verbally assault someone and start shoving them it’s my own damn fault if they beat me into a bloody pulp. Once you start an confrontation it’s your fault even if the other side retaliates with vastly more force and gusto.”
Umm…no it isn’t. Not even legally.
SiDC thinks that libruuuls are dumb because they don’t hate the poors as much as the super elite Awesomes who live in NOVA and DC.
I wouldn’t get too caught up in his legal analysis.
In other words, they had an actual reason for opposing Estrada, while the Republicans have no reason for blocking Obama’s picks other than their determination to prevent the seats from being filled.
And none of Obama’s nominees have been as extreme as Estrada or Janice Rogers Brown(who was confirmed) among others.
This has nothing to do with the topic, but I just saw this summary of World War II that is unlike any other summary that I’ve seen.
I’m going to follow you with this OT – but it’s timely for today;
Peter Norvig’s powerpoint of
The Gettysburg Address
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/11/the-gettysburg-address-as-a-powerpoint/281636/
[can’t do powerpoint on this computer so I’m using the Atlantic’s screenshots of it]
Ron Fournier is to punditry as Dean “Unskewed” Chambers is to statistics. Consider his recent piece, “How Crazies Are Destroying Your Party: New poll underscores public’s mad-as-hell attitude toward Republicans and Democrats”.
Ron Fournier digested a WSJ/NBC poll that showed a net -31 point favorability for the Republican party (53% negative, 22% positive) and -3 point favorability for the Democratic party (40% negative, 37% positive). His conclusion? “The public is putting a pox on both houses.”
28 point favorability gap between the parties and it’s all a wash?
An error of this magnitude is too big to be explained by simple stupidity. Fournier is trying to “unskew” the narrative. He’s no pundit: He’s a propagandist.
voted for the AUMF again?
Sorry for the irrelevent example of Democratic obstruction…..
Yes this is snark