I feel like my blogging has gotten painfully repetitive, and I apologize for that. My compulsion to keep hitting many of the same themes like a dead horse is driven by the persistence and strength of narratives that I feel are dangerously wrong. Sometimes it’s easier to see something after the fact, and if you go back to what I wrote just prior to President Trump making a deal with Schumer and Pelosi, you’ll see that I was saying that the time had come for the right to be sidelined.
In that piece, I used the Heritage Foundation’s September action plan as a stand-in for “the right,” so I was focused on a broad array of policies. It wasn’t just the debt ceiling and a possible government shutdown, but also what to do with the FAA and CHIP and national flood insurance policy. The overall conclusion, though, was that the right was still making impossible demands on Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan. By extension, they were making impossible demands on Donald Trump, too. And it was getting late enough in the game that it just wasn’t going to be possible to humor the right anymore. It was time for the entire Republican leadership to pivot and start working with the Democrats.
When it actually happened, the next day, it was of course disguised and filled with sideshow narratives about Trump selling Ryan and McConnell out, but the truth was that Ryan and McConnell were every bit at the end of their ropes as the president was, and they all needed to pivot. To be honest, I had been thinking about that moment for almost a year. Back in October of 2016, when I still thought the Access Hollywood tape had destroyed any chance Trump had, I was already thinking about September 2017 and what it would do to the Republican Speaker when he or she had to raise the debt ceiling and avoid a shutdown for President Clinton.
My assumption at that point was that Ryan would not seek to be reelected Speaker if Trump lost and would not succeed if he tried.
Again, we’re assuming here that Clinton wins the presidency and the Republicans retain a narrower majority in the House.
The Republicans will search around for someone who is willing to take the job of passing spending bills that President Clinton won’t veto. But the standard they’ll set for their candidate is that they won’t pass spending bills that President Clinton will sign. Only a fool would volunteer for such an assignment, and only someone dishonest could fulfill both roles at once.
The House Republican caucus will struggle to find a candidate and they will struggle even more to unite around that candidate. It may very well prove impossible, but, if so, that won’t become clear immediately.
The first order of business will be pushing someone who is completely free of all accusations that they stabbed Trump in the back. Anyone else will be unacceptable to Trump and his Breitbart/Hannity driven fire- breathers.
If they succeed in uniting around someone, that candidate will have marching orders that make it clear that Clinton’s agenda and budget are dead on arrival. Paul Ryan couldn’t pass a budget this year and he and McConnell have not passed a single appropriations bill. The next Speaker will fare no better, and they’ll need to pass continuing resolutions to avoid a government shutdown. Before long, they’ll need to extend the debt ceiling again. They’ll fail at both unless they’re willing to rely on a minority of their own caucus going along with almost all Democrats.
Just as Boehner fell in the exact same situation, the new Speaker will fall.
Just as water will always find a way, the need to pay our bills on time will eventually force a “responsible” faction of House Republicans to conclude that, for the creditworthiness of the country and the health of the global economy, it is no longer possible to caucus with their intransigent brethren. This would have happened in 2015 if Boehner hadn’t agreed to step down in return for getting the votes to keep the government open and extend the debt ceiling. This may be the same exact price the next Speaker strikes on their way out the door.
Things obviously turned out differently is some key respects. Trump actually won, and Ryan remains the Speaker. But everything else in there was prescient in spite of the fact that Trump won. Ryan actually had to promise not “to rely on a minority of [the Republican] caucus going along with almost all Democrats,” in order to pass anything, let alone to extend the debt ceiling.
Wiggling out of that promise without having to resign was Ryan’s biggest challenge before Hurricane Harvey arrived and gave him a chance to win a majority of his caucus in support of raising the debt ceiling.
When you’ve seen the parameters in these terms for so long, it doesn’t surprise you when things basically follow the script. What’s surprising is all the weird ways other people come up with to describe what they’re seeing.
This is why I don’t place a lot of emphasis on trying to figure out what the different players are thinking (or not thinking). The basic dynamics have been driven by some larger forces that the individuals have to operate within. They may thrash about and strain against their constraints, but they’re still trying to do some very basic things: pass a budget, send the appropriations bills to the president, avoid defaulting on our debt. These are the key things that Congress must do, and the Republican Party could not do them when President Obama was president and they still cannot do them.
Would they be able to repeal Obamacare? Almost surely not.
Would they be able to pass a big tax reform? Not without a budget.
Would they be able to pass a budget? It’s hard to see how.
Would they be able to avoid a default? Yes, but it would break them.
At some point, the effort to govern with all Republican votes was going to fail. Trump just magnified that failure by signing onto a legislative strategy that depended upon it not just for health care and tax reform but also for everything else.
I always saw this September as the latest point in time when this would all come to a head and force both the president and the congressional leadership to pivot.
That they try to hide what they’re compelled to do is not surprising, but it also shouldn’t be believed.
None of them wanted this. They postponed it and postponed it. And now they have all these baffled people wondering what the hell is happening:
“Republicans have spent so much time and money targeting Nancy Pelosi as the enemy over the last few cycles, the idea that you’re now going do a deal with her has to rub people the wrong way,” said Russ Schriefer, a Republican consultant who has worked for George W. Bush and Mitt Romney. “Doesn’t it hurt all these Republican congressmen who want to use her as the liberal foil in their campaigns?”
“It is just confusing,” Mr. Schriefer added.
Imagine just how confused you have to be to think this is happening because any of the Republican leaders want to make deals with Nancy Pelosi. They demonized her for political advantage, and they let people (including, perhaps, themselves) believe that they wouldn’t need her votes because that helped them raise money on false promises.
But there was always going to be a time when the music stopped and they’d be left without chairs to sit in.
There are always details and surprises like Hurricane Harvey, but the basic outcome of this play was foreordained. The only thing that could have really changed it was preemptive action by actors who had the foresight, courage and leadership abilities to write a different ending. Trump has none of those qualities. Ryan and McConnell seem to read their lines scene by scene without a greater understanding of their meaning.
So, we’ve arrived now. And very few people understand how we got here.
Repetitiveness seems to work for the right-wing Wurlitzer, so I say go for it if that’s what you want to say.
Republicans are an army that has not had to act on defense for a long time. They don’t have the skills. They are in thrall to an ideology that is far past its sell-by date and now appeals to no one. They’ve lived on promises they knew full well they could not fulfill.
They are allied with a president too lazy and too stupid to understand policy. The best he can manage is a few blurted slogans generally followed by a walk-back, a denial from staff, or a contradictory presidential tweet.
Both the GOP and Trump have been demonizing political opponents while promising everyone free ponies. Both have pretended that the issues were easy. Both have vastly oversold their own competence.
You have not-very-bright people talking utter nonsense and promising everyone a spa day. Not working. Not going to work.
It is absolutely not the case that the far right’s “ideology” is “…far past its sell-by date and now appeals to no one”. It clearly appeals to a significant minority of the voting population that keeps voting these clowns back into office. The problem with your analysis is assuming that the far right/Tea Baggers have an actual ideology they are selling to their constituents. They don’t. What they have is a pastiche of anti-government policies, white resentment, xenophobia, misogyny and anti-taxation urges overlain with a veneer of Christianist fanaticism. If they somehow became a majority in both houses with someone like Pence as President they could indeed break the federal government and create total chaos as well as create an international economic and financial crisis like nothing since the Great Depression. But the majority of voters don’t want anything like this to happen and even the far right voters wouldn’t choose those consequences if they had enough brain cells to envision what would happen. What is more likely to happen is that far right voters will become increasingly frustrated and discouraged and so, over time, their turnout might go down enough to let “normal” candidates to win. But this will take some time. Maybe that will happen in 2018 maybe not.
Water will always find a way, and in the words of the immortal bard, “The truth will out.” It sounds funny to even have to say this, but reality, which is another word for nature, is the strongest force in the universe.
Meanwhile my local community health center will close its doors on October 1st because the Health Center Funding Cliff expires on September 30th. What are the chances Congress fixes the cliff in time? Or reauthorizes CHIP, and the FAA?
How dysfunctional have they become?
What the Republicans have not grasped yet is that they have total control of the branches of government (just note the Texas gerrymander stay) but they have not sense of governance. Like Trump or the dog that bites down into the tire, the got the car; they do not know what to do with a government that by their own rhetoric they disrespect. But they do not want the blame for the destruction. They’ve been able to pass that off on Democrats for three decades. They now have no excuses. And they are divided into three factions that mutually hate each other because they are the primary competitor benches. They cannot get their act together to put forward a real alternative to the status quo.
And tying them down is the fact that Reagan-Thatcherism failed to do anything that it claimed it would do.
From philosophy to policy to politics to procedure, it has all become a shit sandwich for Congressional Republicans. And now, their KKK robes in the closet have been exposed, despite their trying to fog up their image again with sense of the Congress resolutions.
Realignment is judgement time. Bigtime.
But GOP troubles do not mean Democratic victories. This muddle could go on for quite a long time at near stalemate unless there are some political smarts and courage real soon.
By the way Martin, if you STOP “repeating myself” when it’s pretty frustrating how few news sources are reporting sensibly on Congress at this point, I’d have to stop reading your blog. I have to have somewhere people make sense and I can’t just keep reading 6,000 word essays in the WashPost where they never bother to mention – “the GOP MUST first pass a ‘budget vehicle’ before they can use reconciliation.
The reason this was so easy to predict is that only inside the Beltway pundits thought that the GOP could keep defying gravity forever. They managed to win the 2016 election, which the pundits took to mean they have some special reality defying magic, instead of impenetrable stupidity. Stupidity can only take you so far. Then something happens that requires brains, only they haven’t got any and their cretinous base has none either.
Thus, they can’t explain “How Congress Works” to their voters. It’s far more interesting to focus on what happens now.
Either they find a way to do tax reform by passing a budget vehicle, or they don’t. 10-1 odds they don’t because nobody can explain anything to the Freedumb Caucus.
Remember that idiot who said when Trump tried to pressure him “the last person who told me I had to do something was my daddy. I was 18 and I didn’t listen to him either.” They don’t listen and they don’t learn, ever.
So much ink wasted on analysis when the outcome is as clear as a Greek tragedy. IF they can’t govern, and they can’t govern, they will be voted out of office in 2018. If this was a year where there were an even # of Senate seats in play for both parties, they would lose control of both houses. As it stands they are only in danger of losing the House. Which I think they will do because a LOT more Republicans are going to announce their retirement come January.
There will be a lot more angst among the opportunists who jumped on the Tea Bagger Bandwagon when the going was good in 2010, and now will jump off when it’s not. Especially in this hot market for grifters.
They can make a TON more money lobbying before the party’s over and Trump slinks out of town, but they better start now and not wait until 2020 when being a tea-bagging ex-Congressman might not be such a hot job prospect.
That seems to be a fair assessment. I’m doubting that the GOP will capitalize on their insanely favorable map for Senate and will not significantly expand their majority in that chamber, but that there is highly unlikely the Democratic Party flips the Senate. The House seems a better bet in part because of the reasons you’ve outlined. The GOP has looked like a bunch of f***ing amateurs. They have little to show for their time and are unlikely to have much to show for their time as election day nears. The White House occupant is at historically low favorability for someone who is barely into his term, and that is a drag on GOP reelection prospects in the House. The Democratic Party is polling more favorably than the GOP to a degree that would mark a wave election (although given gerrymandering, less of a wave than in years past). There are enough headwinds to where incumbent Representatives are questioning if it is even worth it to run again, hence the retirements. This will put more seats in play, and improve our prospects. Flipping the House is still going to be a heavy lift due to gerrymandering, but it is looking considerably more doable than it would have appeared a few months ago. I’ll also be curious to see what happens with Governorships and state legislatures.
Yes, this very well might happen.
But I think you are underestimating one incredibly important thing. Analysis of videos has shown that Clinton was in no way ‘stalked’ by Trump during the debate. It was all a myth created by the media, and Clinton supporters. Once the American public is made aware of this analysis, the Democrats have no chance at all to recover either the Senate or the House. Any unbiased, honest, ethical, and intelligent look at the facts will show this to be irrefutable.
Any similarity between this analysis and what the Kremlin wants the American public to believe is purely coincidental.
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Well, of course. Any clear-eyed, unbiased, keenly analytic observer who refuses to run with the blinkered herd and whose iconoclastic judgment far surpasses the dullards all around, who frequently perceives the Real Truth when everyone else is swallowing MSM lies and obfuscation, can see that!
I have to say, that was the wildest gaslighting I’ve ever read.
Mr. Longman needs to develop a stronger sense of his uniqueness. Apart from Stan Colander, there’s just no one — including the very well paid pundits at major press outlets and on television — who is doing his kind of work. And that work is more important than almost anything, because it makes the operations of government understandable to the people. One of the major reasons people have lost confidence in our governance is that it has become incomprehensible to most of the citizenry, and people aren’t going to have confidence in things they don’t understand. That has left the door open for all sorts of delusional explainers — mainly but not wholly on the right — who mainly trade in lies but at least are involved in trying to show why things happen the way they do. We badly need instead the kind of truth-based, level-headed work that Mr. Longman is doing.
And I entirely agree that he must not get bored with repetition. Repeating oneself over and over has been one of the main elements of political success since forever; Lincoln, for example, certainly did it in one speech after another. Mr. Longman has to just keep hammering away — even if doing so seems to be against the sacred dedication of punditry to constant novelty.
Stan Collender, that is (miserable autocorrect).
And please, please Mr. Longman — no more apologies, ever. You have less to apologize for than practically anyone else I read.
I know how we got here. America is a very stupid country these days.
Trump is trying for a win on something, anything. I don’t think he care what it is. A few more months and we’ll be in an election year. Then things are going to get really interesting, I think. What are the teabaggers going to do if Trump keeps reaching around them to do deals with the dems on infrastructure, DACA, taxes, healthcare, etc? Do they bend toward reality with him and get primaried on the right by the crazies? Or do they revolt against him, he who is still super-popular with the fruitcakes they need to be reelected in their gerrymandered hellholes?
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Don’t worry about being repetitive. Think about how much less repetitive you are, compared to the politicians you analyse. Huuuge difference.
One question that has been nagging me:
If all the world’s a stage and the men and women are merely players, why can’t the republicans unite around passing tax cuts? After all, their backers wants tax cuts and the republicans wants tax cuts.
So, I’ve come up with a couple of alternatives:
A) It is a faction fight in the party, and preventing the other faction from winning is more important than the own faction winning, preventing a win/win.
B) The Freedom Caucus really is dumb. Recruited stupid candidates (people like Jonah Ryan, for those who watch Veep) or they are to captured by their own ideology.
C) Faction fight between oligarchs owing different factions. The presidential primaries on the republican side was marked by a candidate for every oligarch. Are the Congress split in a similar fashion? The difference from A could be that the oligarchs differ in what tax cuts they want to see. (Also depending on what they are invested in, some might also stand to gain from economic chaos caused by going over the debt limit, but that is a bit different from the taxes).
D) The republican primary electorate is ideologically captured and will punish compromises more then lack of tax cuts.
E) All of the above.
F) Something else.
I don’t think mind reading is necessary. If for example someone plays dumb, it usually shows when they discuss something else. If a few oligarchs own different factions, it should show in donations. And so one.
I don’t demand everyone should be able to prove their current gut feeling, but it would be interesting to hear what you think is going on.
Boo, can you really say you are surprised at how Trump has signed the resolution condemning white-supremacy and at the same time reinforced his opinion that both sides are to blame?
He feels no shame or compulsion from Congress, and he knows how quickly he can shift media focus about “walking back” comments – simply say them again!
I’m disgusted all over again that he got elected, but no longer surprised by this.
Heh, no. Not surprised at all.
I’ve never seen a president get trolled this hard, though. And it was unanimous.
I guess I’m just curious how much you think he even felt slighted by this?
I do think the Russia sanctions bill probably made him blow his lid, since (as president) he has full dictatorial powers.