Wednesday, February 3, 2010

GOP House Issues Conference: Obama's Back!


Three days after the State of the Union Address, President Obama accepted an invitation to have a Q&A session with the GOP. Like the beginning of America's love affair with Barack, it all started with a speech.

Many topics were discussed, but the theme of the night was bi-partisanship. The speech had a tone of firm necessity, but a sub-text of pleading desperation. To properly address health care, jobs, the economy/financial regulation and the $1.3 trillion deficit, voting that is stubbornly and forever split down the aisle has got to go. Period.

Two Republican Responses

Once the Q&A session began, I hoped that some of the Republicans might take Obama's pleads to heart and ask thoughtful, or at least legitimate questions. Congressman Peter Roskam (IL), did such a thing. He asked critical questions, but in a fair and amiable way. He recalled how State Senator Obama had worked effectively with Republicans to get things done in Illinois, but remarked that, "over the past year, in my view, that attribute hasn't been in full bloom." He went on to specifically ask about the Free Trade Agreements mentioned in the State of the Union Address and how to walk the line between protecting jobs and protectionism.

Unfortunately, he was the lone collection of rational thought and productive dialogue who spoke that night to represent the elephant in the room (pun intended).

On the opposite end of the spectrum was the distinguished (if only by her impressive collection of empty sound bites) Congresswoman from Tennessee, Marsha Blackburn. If anyone has ever heard a congressional hearing or anything of the C-SPAN variety, they know that politicians can talk for hours without saying anything. True to form, Marsha Blackburn gave it 110% and, in my humble opinion, should get some sort of Congressional Special Olympics medal for the performance she put on during her speech. It was so devoid of any trace of cogent thinking beyond the obligatory "Thank you, Mr. President," that is was kind of cute (Think of a parent watching his/her child in the school play, 'aww, look at her, she's doing such a good job remembering all of her lines!'):

(skip to 0:48:20)



Thank you for acknowledging that we have ideas on health care because, indeed, we do have ideas. We have plans, we have over 50 bills, we have lots of amendments that would bring health care ideas to the forefront...

[This is where it gets good! ]

...We would -- we've got plans to lower cost, to change purchasing models, address medical liability, insurance accountability, chronic and preexisting conditions, and access to affordable care for those with those conditions, insurance portability, expanded access -- but not doing it with creating more government, more bureaucracy, and more cost for the American taxpayer.

Let's examine her second paragraph. She starts her sentence, "We would," but then quickly and correctly stops herself from making empty promises, because using the word "would" creates a loose form of accountability. "We've got plans," on the other hand, carries with it no claims of accountability.

Well-played, Congresswoman.

This slight stumble begins a barrage of health care buzz words that, when put together as Congresswoman Blackburn does, have as little value as a whole as their degree of specificity when separate. To wrap up her free-form stanza, she seamlessly slips in the conservative playbook's central tenant: the illogical, yet exceedingly popular claim that we can solve, and somehow pay for, all of our country's problems with small government and less taxes ("but not doing it with creating more government, more bureaucracy, and more cost for the American taxpayer").

Republicans like Congressman Peter Roskam show us how bi-partisanship can work, Marsha Blackburn shows us how to be a jackass, albeit a simple-mindedly cute one.

The Last Question of the Night

I recently wrote about how, after a year in office, Obama has let me down. He has not been able to move forward with many policy decisions, due partly to his own fault, but due primarily to the sorry state of Washington. The power of money to win elections and influence the legislative process when we need it most has turned both parties into money grubbing tools. I hate to seem biased toward the Republicans, but it is quite clear that the Republican party has, in the last year, morphed into an obstructionist entity hell bent on Democratic failure to help the GOP come election time in November 2010 and 2012.

Obama's speech seemed almost like a direct response to my concerns. I do not think Obama reads my blog, but I think that my ideas are shared by many concerned citizens, by anyone who has looked into our pseudo-Democracy close enough to realize how broken the system really is. It was ethereally calming to hear Obama specifically addressing everything I wanted to hear and, while I couldn't help but think that I'd been wooed by him before, I still could not help but feel the sincerity in his voice, the common sense of his arguments, and the validity of his laundry list of ailments in Washington.

This all crystallized in the final question of the night from Congressman Jeb Hensarling from Texas. If you have the desire, I recommend watching the entire speech, but if you choose just one part to look at, this question and Obama's response is the part to check out.

Jeb starts out with a congenial mention of the fact that both Obama and himself are parents (yes, Jeb is human, contradictory to his robotic demeanor and talking points) and then jumps right into his own mini-speech/question. As he begins, he, unlike his peer from Tennessee, puts together words that form coherent sentences. Step 1, check. Like Blackburn though, he goes straight to party line arguments, claiming that if Obama would have looked at the Republican budget proposal at the beginning of 2009, that we could have avoided all the economic pitfalls of the year. He goes on, "since the [Republican] budget was ignored, what were the old annual deficits under Republicans have now become the monthly deficits under Democrats." It's the oldest form of propping up shaky arguments: baseless statistics.

(Note: Obama inherited a $1.3 trillion deficit, Bush inherited a $200 billion budget surplus
)

After a couple minutes of talking, Jeb finally gets to his question, which is a subtly fear-inducing play to the teabaggers all across the country, "Will that new budget, like your old budget, triple the national debt and continue to take us down the path of increasing the cost of government to almost 25 percent of our economy?"

No, this isn't the typical death camp, Hitler comparison teabagger vernacular, but it sure is teabagger rhetoric. They want to focus on scary spending, on 'the path' we are marching down (toward socialism of course), but they do not want to address why there is a necessity to spend at this unprecedented moment in American economic history. These people have their priorities twisted; they feel that regaining power comes before solving problems, they put their efforts into House and Senate majorities
, not jobs, health care, or the economy. They are bullshit wonks.

Obama's Response

(skip to 1:14:00 for Jeb's question and Obama's response)




Jeb, with all due respect, I've just got to take this last question as an example of how it's very hard to have the kind of bipartisan work that we're going to do, because [your] whole question was structured as a talking point for running a campaign...So when you say that suddenly I've got...a monthly deficit that's higher than the annual deficit left by the Republicans, that's factually just not true, and you know it's not true.

After dealing with Mr. Hensarling, Obama
details the political process Jeb's comments represent:

(01:24:01)

That's why I say if we're going to frame these debates in ways that allow us to solve them, then we can't start off by figuring out, A, who's to blame; B, how can we make the American people afraid of the other side. And unfortunately, that's how our politics works right now. And that's how a lot of our discussion works. That's how we start off -- every time somebody speaks in Congress, the first thing they do, they stand up and all the talking points -- I see Frank Luntz up here sitting in the front. He's already polled it, and he said, you know, the way you're really going to -- I've done a focus group and the way we're going to really box in Obama on this one or make Pelosi look bad on that one -- I know, I like Frank, we've had conversations between Frank and I. But that's how we operate. It's all tactics, and it's not solving problems.
And so the question is, at what point can we have a serious conversation about Medicare and its long-term liability, or a serious question about -- a serious conversation about Social Security, or a serious conversation about budget and debt in which we're not simply trying to position ourselves politically.

I know talk is cheap, but goddamn that's good stuff! It's rare these days to hear a politician, let alone the President, simply tell it like it is. The first step to solving a problem is identifying it and, after this speech, there is no denying that Obama knows what's wrong and it seems like he wants to fix it.

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