Unstimulated
Since a majority of the people do not support this legislation, Republicans find themselves on the side of the people and should be positioning themselves to get enough new members to roll back some of the long term aspects of this bill after 2010.Very few people are left in Washington, D.C. who believe the "stimulus" bill is anything like a genuine stimulus bill.
People aren't debating whether or not it will work to quickly inject energy into the lethargic economy. They know it won't.
People aren't debating the priority of the public works the bill proposes, because there are very, very few public works proposed.
And the United States Senate isn't fulfilling its reputation as the "greatest deliberative body in the world," because the Senate isn't deliberating.
"More than 300 amendments have been offered, but only 20 were debated. No hearings were held, no expert testimony heard," the D.C. Examiner observed.
“When the American people learn what this bill contains they will reject it," Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn proclaimed, but the truth is, the public already has rejected it. Opinion polling shows support for the porkapalooza dropping fast. Thus the Senate's rush to push it through.
"[T]he process stinks, and the substance of the bill sucks," Senator Lindsey Graham bluntly declared in an interview on my radio show. Graham and his colleagues were speaking freely against a very popular and newly elected president because the bill he has demanded is so deeply flawed that there is no choice but to speak against it. A dozen Democrats in the House rebelled when Nancy Pelosi first kidnapped the idea of a stimulus and used it as a Trojan Horse for every program and wish list denied the Democrats through the Bush Years. The Bush Years were hardly those of fiscal discipline, but they look like models of sobriety compared to the first fortnight of Obama. A pack of House Blue Dogs bolted, but not enough to force real change on the "real change." It would be up to the Senate, and no doubt more than a few House Democrats who know this bill is the legislative equivalent of bleeding the patient hoped that the Senate would recast the "stimulus" into, well, a stimulus.
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How bad is the bill? The Congressional Budget Office --run by the Democratic majority and staffed by appointees of the Democratic majority, but nevertheless professional economists of the sort who don't want their reputations forever impaired-- announced on Wednesday that the bill as proposed would actually harm the economy, causing the Gross Domestic Product to actually shrink over the next decade.
That's why Senate Democrats are trying to rush through a cloture vote --the evidence is piling up that President Obama's first big bill is a massive mistake....
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Who do you think you can fool, 'Merv'? The public has reached no consensus.
ReplyDeleteOn the contrary: the public is getting fed up with the Republicans standing firmly in the way between us and economic recovery.
As Economic Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman put it, we are already standing at the edge of a precipice, and it is the Republicans who are trying to push us over into it!
I am not making this up. Read his Op Ed at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/06/opinion/06krugman.html?_r=1&em to see for yourselves.