On
August 11, 2011 the Republican candidates for President, eight at the time, met
in Iowa for one of the early debates. Notable
in that debate was a question given to all eight to be answered by the simple
raising of hands.
The
question was: with Democrats insisting on tax increases to go along with any
spending cuts, would you (candidates) “walk away from a 10 to 1 deal”, ten
dollars in spending cuts for every one dollar of tax increases. They all raised their hands without question
or qualification. A Politburo couldn’t
want for a better response.
Jon
Huntsman, arguably the most moderate candidate in race that year, would much
later lament that the choice to raise his hand was the major mistake of his
brief campaign. But why should he regret
his choice? It was Republican solidarity, right? Moreover, why should he
consider it a mistake?
Huntsman
insists his response was a knee-jerk salute to the Republican mantra of “no
taxes”, consistent with Republican mania in the era of Tea-Party politics. He felt it was not a reflection of him, what
he would do, and therefore something less than honest.
The
fact that the group response was ridiculous on its face didn’t seem to be part
of his regret. It should have. He, along with any other candidate, had been
given a unique opportunity. He had the
chance to separate himself from the crowd on a point which would have made the
rest of the field look like lemmings.
I
say that because it would have taken
just one candidate to provide contrast and make the question stand out as
absurd. He could have simply pointed to
the rest of them and said ‘these people
are nuts…I’m running to govern’ and he would have been off to the
races…literally.
Now
the Republicans are doing it again, at least by their individual
responses. I suspect we may have a
similar moment in their first debate as well.
This
week the Supreme Court threw out the last challenge to the Affordable Health
Care Act (AHCA) on the grounds that a single uncorrected line couldn’t change
the obvious intent of the law. There is nothing left to prevent the AHCA from
continuing, barring a Republican
President, a super Republican majority in the Senate, a Republican majority in
the House, and probably a Scalia led decision in the Supreme Court.
Before
those stars line up, the AHCA will be part of the American fabric, unable to be
removed without causing an ugly tear in our social structure. The same was true for those dreaded Democrat
boogie-plans of Social Security and Medicare. So how is the Republican
leadership reacting to this latest reality check?
Aside
from imitating the act of puking, they have all (all that were reported)
essentially called for a redoubling of efforts to have the AHCA repealed. After “repealed”, they often include the
words “and replaced”, but in a much, much smaller font size.
How
can they not see that the reality of the situation? How can they not do the
math? Isn’t there a smart one in the
bunch? One of them who might break away
and say ‘…it’s law; I’m going to work with what’s there and make it better’.
Sure,
he/she would probably lose the semi-lunatic fringe, but those tea-cozies would
have to be divided up by the rest. However, he/she would be out of the chorus
line and under the spotlight. A
spotlight viewed favorably by an expanding majority of Americans.
In an early debate this year I can almost expect the question: ‘If you as President could repeal Obamacare would you do it? Just raise your hands’. It is more likely than not that they would all go up. They won’t be able to perceive that it is a 10 for 1 question. They will again be so blindly stupid not to see that the need for healthcare is no less required than the need for taxes in a functioning society.
Maybe Chris Christie, who is both savvy and desperate, will dance to apron of the stage. However, will we see an actual contender take that brass ring on the carousel? Not likely. They’re simply no good at math… just good at going ‘round and ‘round.
In an early debate this year I can almost expect the question: ‘If you as President could repeal Obamacare would you do it? Just raise your hands’. It is more likely than not that they would all go up. They won’t be able to perceive that it is a 10 for 1 question. They will again be so blindly stupid not to see that the need for healthcare is no less required than the need for taxes in a functioning society.
Maybe Chris Christie, who is both savvy and desperate, will dance to apron of the stage. However, will we see an actual contender take that brass ring on the carousel? Not likely. They’re simply no good at math… just good at going ‘round and ‘round.
1 comment:
While I agree with your analysis of the Republican/affordable health care message, your introduction story was a weak analogy and took too long to explain. The last blog contained the Peter/Paul analogy which I also thought diverted energy from the argument. I like using personal stories to pull an audience in or a strong example from history. The lead and closing are the hardest part of composing. Come on you muscular liberal! Beef 'em up!
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