A glaring example of why Congress doesn’t work

Ya gotta love Republican Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell.

English: Official photo cropped of United Stat...
English: Official photo cropped of United States Senator and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

McConnell appears to have made some history in the U.S. Senate Thursday.  In a Senate where minority party filibustering has become the name of the game, McConnell filibustered himself.

The Christian Science Monitor explained it very well …

Just in case the pending political apocalypse of the “fiscal cliff” wasn’t enough to satisfy America’s attention span, the US Senate on Thursday conspired to remind voters that another equally apocalyptic fiscal issue is looming out there on the horizon.

Yes, the debt ceiling will be making a comeback no later than early 2013, and senators decided to talk about it Thursday.

Not surprisingly, it illuminated the complicated politics and policy that go along with raising the national borrowing limit these days. And also not surprisingly, perhaps, it went nowhere, concluding with the somewhat comical scene of Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R) of Kentucky filibustering his own proposal.

Welcome to Capitol Hill.

The story begins with President Obama’s own debt-ceiling proposal. Essentially, on Wednesday, his Treasury Department asked Congress to cede its power over the debt ceiling to him.

This is how it would work: The president would ask to raise the debt limit and Congress would have 15 days to pass a joint resolution of disapproval. The president could then veto their disapproval and require Congress to override his veto with 60 percent majorities in both bodies.

The proposal was important for two reasons.

First, it mirrored a plan originally proposed by Senator McConnell back in 2011 for raising the debt ceiling, giving Democrats the slim political cover to call it the “McConnell Provision.”

Second, it would shift effective control of the debt-ceiling debate from Capitol Hill to the White House – and would give Congress a very high vote threshold to block the measure, to boot.

Democrats – and some in the business community – like this approach because it would almost certainly prevent political confrontation from pushing the US into a default on its debts. When Congress and the White House tip-toed up to that possibility last summer, stock markets, consumer confidence, and business investment tanked. Actually defaulting could be catastrophic, economists warn.

But there’s another view on the debt ceiling.

On Wednesday night, Sen. Rob Portman (R) of Ohio sent a letter to the White House cosigned by 43 GOP Senators (enough to sustain a filibuster and block the legislation) telling the president, in short, to forget about his debt ceiling dream.

Senator Portman and his colleagues argue that the debt limit has helped focus Washington’s attention on the issue of debt and deficits, and that significant debt-reduction deals in the past have been attached to hikes in the debt ceiling.

“In short, nearly every significant deficit reduction law of the past 27 years has been linked to a debt limit debate,” the letter said. “For Congress to surrender its control over the debt limit would be to permanently surrender what has long provided the best opportunity to enact bipartisan deficit reduction legislation.”

But never underestimate the congressional urge to make your opponents look silly.

Out of the blue, McConnell came to the floor Thursday and asked for a vote on the president’s proposal.

McConnell was hoping to put Democrats in the awkward position of having to vote for ceding Congress’s authority over the debt ceiling to the president. As he put it in his morning remarks, “by demanding the power to raise the debt limit whenever he wants by as much as he wants, he showed what he’s really after is assuming unprecedented power to spend taxpayer dollars without any limit.”

Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D) of Nevada objected, putting Democrats in the position of blocking a vote on their president’s proposal. Yet within hours, Democrats sensed a way to turn the tables – and were ready to call McConnell’s bluff.

They returned to the floor and offered to bring the matter up for a vote immediately, concluding that, politically speaking, they would be happy to argue that fixing the debt ceiling permanently was the fiscally responsible thing to do – even at the cost of congressional authority.

“Our downgrade of America’s credit rating was not based on the state of our economy but the debt-ceiling debate,” said Sen. Dick Durbin (D) of Illinois to reporters after the affair. “We are paying dearly for that already. So the Republicans are creating a situation which makes reducing the debt and deficit extremely difficult by creating this uncertainty about the debt ceiling.”

So what did Mitch McConnell do, facing a vote on his own suggestion from just hours before?

He offered two magic words – “I object” – and filibustered his own suggestion.

With that move, the threshold to pass the bill jumped from a simple majority to 60 votes and the vote was abandoned, though Senator Reid promised to push for a vote on the matter in the weeks to come.

The result? The entire debt-ceiling debate had gone no further than it started the day.

Here, watch a bit of the action for yourself.

There’s a reason why Mitch McConnell is often referred to in terms more like a cartoon character out of “Looney Toons.”  It’s because he acts like one.

Counting down to Labor Day: Five days to go

It was a pretty full day again at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday, and that was all before vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan even took to the stage at the taxpayer-funded arena to give the main speech of the day.

Mitt Romney’s bunch reportedly threw a big party for big campaign donors in Tampa aboard the presidential nominee’s spacious yacht, complete with the flag of the Cayman Islands flying from it.  You’ve got to know that if it had been Barack Obama doing the same thing, his loyalty to America — if not his citizenship — would have been questioned.

But, never fear, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell came along in his speech to stop just short of coming out as a “birther” anyway with the line, “It just doesn’t occur to an American that someone else will solve their problems.”

US-POWELL-RICE
Colin Powell and Condoleeza Rice (Photo credit: Jackson West)

Former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice talked about what she saw as shortcomings for the President on the foreign policy front.  To balance it all out, former Secretary of State Colin Powell — Rice’s predecessor — has praised the Obama administration just recently for its foreign policy initiatives.  To each, their own.

And now that Paul Ryan is speaking, I’m waiting for him to speak in detail about how a Romney-Ryan ticket would push or give some incentive to businesses to create jobs, or create jobs itself by pushing for attention to our deteriorating infrastructure.  I’m waiting for him to explain how Republicans can block efforts to keep more jobs in America rather than shipping them overseas.  Instead, what I’m hearing more of so far is this …

Jobs … Obamacare … bad.

Jobs … Obamacare … bad.

Jobs … Obamacare … bad.

Romney Ryan Plan Birth Control
Romney Ryan Plan (Photo credit: DonkeyHotey)

And what about that American Jobs Act initiative that’s sat there, stalled out in Congress, for almost a year?  Waiting for mention of that as well.

Waiting …

Waiting …

Waiting …

Instead, it’s “regulatory reform.”  Actions that might help the jobs situation by fractions at best.

Waiting …

Waiting …

Waiting …

Continuing to misquote the “you didn’t build that” statement.  Ryan says they’ll create 12 million new jobs over the next four years.  How?

Waiting …

Waiting …

Waiting …

“Let’s get this country working again.”  How do you do that with a “jobs barracuda” in the White House?  How are you going to create 12 million jobs in four years, as Ryan just promised?

The Ryan speech is over.  I still have questions.

Waiting …

Waiting …

Waiting …

Counting down to Labor Day: Six days to go

I worked on “selling myself” today.  Before the day is done, I will have spent time doing a bit of research on getting a money-making plan of my own going, one that utilizes my talents and passions and tries to help others become better known themselves by highlighting their own talents and passions.

I also went through the usual job-searching process, including hitting the streets with resume in hand to go after a technical writer’s job with a smile, an introduction, and a firm handshake to follow up on an online application.  Yes, I worked on “selling myself” with the goal of going for a job that might pay two-thirds of what I was making before.

But a job is a job, and I’m looking at ALL options.  I’m looking for whatever I feel that I can do.  I want to work.  I want to pull my own weight, do my share.  Even if it means starting something from scratch myself while hoping I can keep a roof over our heads in the process.

U.S. House candidate Mia Love, R-Utah, speaks Tuesday at the Republican National Convention in Tampa. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

I also started watching and listening to Utah’s own Mia Love giving a speech during the Republican National Convention in Tampa as she runs for the U.S. House of Representatives, trying to become the first black Republican woman ever to win a seat in the House.

Love certainly said things I can agree with.  I’m all for people trying to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps.  It’s the fact that there was no mention about how the cards are stacked against so many people wanting to do that and the GOP rhetoric and talking points she seemed so comfortable repeating that made me want to change the channel about 10 minutes into it.

How many people out there remember the American Jobs Act?  I remember when that was proposed in a speech by President Obama before a joint session of Congress on September 8 of last year.  I watched that speech.  A fair amount of what was being proposed had been proposed before by Republicans themselves.

It contained bills that would have focused on much-needed infrastructure work — roads, bridges, and buildings.  It would have put Americans back to work who want to work.  It would have boosted the economy, because until the jobless situation is reversed the economy will continue to sag.  It comes down to common sense.

That’s the problem.  The words “common sense” and “Congress” have become mutually exclusive.  Even though Republicans came up with part of what’s in the American Jobs Act, they’ve also led the charge to stall any progress on it ever since.

Hence my question from before:  How many people out there remember the American Jobs Act?  As a follow-up question, how many times have we heard Republicans say Obama has no plan on how to create jobs?

Why would they say such a thing when it’s not true?  There’s a simple answer to that, from the mouths of Republicans themselves.

Baloney.  It’s tough to run on a record of massive creation of jobs when more efforts are made by the opposition party to hold them back.  After all, the Republicans have admitted that their goal has been to defeat Obama in 2012.  More jobs would mean an improved economy, which would mean an Obama win in 2012.  They can’t have that.

That’s politics.  That’s the tightrope we’re walking these days.

Copyright 2012, Daddysangbassdude Media

Reasons to scratch my head over Republican lawmakers’ (non)sense (July 1, 2012 edition)

So, let me get this straight — Mitt Romney is for health care in his state with an individual mandate as governor of Massachusetts but he’s against it on a national level as a Presidential candidate, Republican House Speaker John Boehner says getting rid of health care coverage that penalizes pre-existing conditions and allowing people up to age 26 to be on their parents’ coverage is all fine and good but the law that does those things needs to be gutted, and Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell says having 30 million Americans going without health coverage is not an issue?

English: U.S. President is greeted by Speaker ...
English: U.S. President is greeted by Speaker of the House before delivering the State of the Union address before Congress. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Yes, those are just more reasons for me to scratch my head over the things that Republican lawmakers say … and much of this is all a result of things that were said on the Sunday morning news shows.

It’s amazing how Boehner can sit on CBS’ “Face The Nation” and say that Republicans are open to the “popular — many of them sound” provisions in the Affordable Care Act such as pre-existing conditions and coverage up to age 26 on parents’ plans, but that repealing the entire bill is preferable to working within it.  It’s amazing to see and hear him say it, with such extreme prejudice.

“No, this has to be, this has to be ripped out by its roots. This is government taking over the entire health insurance industry. The American people do not want to go down this path,” Boehner said.  “They do not want the government telling them what kind of insurance policy they have to buy, and how much they have to pay for it, and if you don’t like it, we’re going to tax you. It has to be ripped out and we need to start over. One step at a time.”

So, the man is willing to take any good parts he sees in the law and rip them out “by the roots” and starting over from scratch, not even using the good parts that he does see to build upon?  That’s supposed to make sense?  And people wonder why so little gets done in the halls of Congress?

Then there’s the head-scratching material McConnell provided on “Fox News Sunday,” talking about the ACA, and when he was asked how Republicans would provide health care coverage to 30 million uninsured Americans his answer was, “That is not the issue.  The question is how to go step by step to improve the American health care system.  It is already the finest health care system in the world.”

In other words, it would appear, they would do nothing.  They’ve got nothing.

As for the matter of pre-existing conditions and how to cover them, McConnell said, “Over half of the states have high-risk pools that deal with that issue,” not adding that those policies often come with high premiums, waiting periods, and coverage exclusions for certain conditions.

Common sense is getting thrown out the window, again, for the sake of political argument.

All the more reasons to scratch my head.