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After Bayh, Less Bipartisanship Needed

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BR_Parkway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 10:29 AM
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After Bayh, Less Bipartisanship Needed
How sadly true

http://www.thenation.com/blogs/edcut/530821/after_bayh_less_bipartisanship_needed

So Evan Bayh, the Senate's poster boy for bipartisanship, is, in the immortal words of the Jackson 5, "goin' back to Indiana." The senator explains, "There is too much partisanship and not enough progress --too much narrow ideology and not enough practical problem-solving." Bayh is correct--there isn't enough practical problem-solving in Congress. But his brand of bipartisanship should not be mourned. In fact, the country would be better off with a lot less bipartisanship, in any form, right now.

Bayh traded on his nominal party affiliation and the gold-plated liberal legacy of his father (whose seat he has occupied for two terms) to promote, as The Nation's John Nichols writes, "unnecessary wars, free trade and misguided domestic economic policies." Bayh's idea of bipartisanship, it would seem, was to call oneself a Democrat in the caucus while promoting center-right policies in the chamber. He worked to turn the Democratic Party into a kinder, gentler version of the GOP. And although the conventional wisdom is that his departure is bad news for Democrats, the caucus arguably would be stronger with 54 or 55 senators who would get real aboutgoverning and work to reform the anti-democratic filibuster than with a supermajority dependent on "conservadems" such as Bayh.

There are other variations of bipartisanship in Washington--none of them having much to do with philosophical conviction. Bipartisanship, writes Nate Silver at fivethirtyeight.com, "has nothing to do with the philosophical orientation of a bill but instead simply who votes for it." The Atlantic's Derek Thompson writes that the "obsessive focus on bipartisanship for the purpose of bipartisanship only fetishizes something that Americans begin to value, and expect, and demand and neither party expects to work." It doesn't sign a worker's paychecks and it doesn't put food on the table.

Perhaps the latest, best example of the problem with bipartisanship is the Senate jobs bill. The $85 billion Baucus-Grassley version is seriously flawed. It would do little to create new jobs, yet it is larded with tax cuts and other extraneous incentives to get Republicans on board. What's the point? Well, as Politico noted, the release announcing the bill used the word "bipartisan" seven times. Meanwhile, apparently wanting to devise something more appealing to Democrats and yet to maintain the cover of bipartisanship, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has proposed a paltry $15 billion version of the bill that would be laughable if we weren't in a jobs crisis. A better template exists. The $154 billion House bill passed in December provides real aid to states and real investment in infrastructure and public jobs. But in the Senate, bipartisanship is the order of the day, which means job creation is secondary.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 10:44 AM
Response to Original message
1. Don't Let The Door Hit You On Your Way out, Ex-Senator!
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 11:48 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. I would prefer that it did hit him, preferably with the knob where it would do the most good
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BR_Parkway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 03:53 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. That's a great image
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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 03:23 PM
Response to Original message
3. Kicked and recommended.
Thanks for the thread, BR_Parkway.
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