Thursday, May 24, 2007

The Capitulation Bill: "Obviously it's a good move"

The crazy thing about the fight is that Democratic insiders are convinced that capitulation is the right strategy. They actually believe that this will put pressure on the Republicans in the fall, and that standing up to Bush is a bad idea. For instance, there's this.

Democrats said this week they would have jeopardized their fall bargaining position if they had insisted on keeping withdrawal timelines in the current supplemental spending bill (HR 2206). Persisting now would likely have resulted in another veto and would have handed Republicans talking points for the Memorial Day recess about which party supports the troops in the field.

Democrats were particularly worried about the prospect of Bush declaring at wreath-laying ceremonies that "Democrats have stopped resources for the troops," said Rep. Artur Davis, D-Ala.

"The problem is that we have to provide money for the troops, and if we don't, the Democrats will be blamed," added Rep. James P. Moran, D-Va., a war opponent. "Bush has the bully pulpit, so he will define who is responsible."

"Obviously it's a good move," said Democratic pollster Fred Yang. "It gives President Bush and Republicans one less thing to shoot at" during the upcoming recess week.


Bush has the bully pulpit. Obviously it's a good move.

These are the attitudes of Democratic members and pollsters. There's no evidence that Bush moves numbers anymore. In fact, when he talks he becomes less popular. He has no credibility, which means that his access to the bully pulpit is severely diminished. Yet Democrats are afraid of him. More than that, Democratic members think that by capitulating to him that Republicans will stop saying that Democrats won't fund the troops. It's crazy.

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The only ones I saw on the Democratic debates last night who seemed in any way genuine were Mike Gravel and Dennis Kucinich. I wouldn't give you two cents for the rest of them put together.

4:04 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The problem in American politics is that it is nothing but a power struggle between two slightly-different factions of the bourgeoisie: The Fascist faction (Republicans) and the Fascist-Lite faction (Democrats). Real change won't come until the American proletariat becomes conscious both of its plight within the capitalist economic system, and of its power to tear that system apart and emplace a new one, one that is based upon what's best for the vast majority, working people.

4:11 PM  

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