General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA message for the President
Do it, Mr. President.
Take the executive action on immigration today, when you have your press gaggle this afternoon. Make it big. Make it loud. And, yes, make them squeal. There is nothing else you could do that so effectively could force the carefully camouflaged extremism that won last night out into the open. There is nothing else you could do that so effectively could energize the fault lines underlying the Republican position on this issue. There is nothing else you could do that so effectively could call the bluffs of all those anonymous Republicans who are whispering to Luke Russert that they know they have to "govern" over the next two years. (Look at the new House over which John Boehner has to be the hall monitor. Ken Buck from Colorado, who was too extreme to elect in the previous Republican wave year, got elected. Jody Hice got elected in Georgia with 67 percent of the vote. There are other land mines out there, too. There's no governing his caucus, let alone the country.) There is nothing else you could do that so effectively could force the issue, change the narrative, charge up your stunned party, and reassert what's left of the power of your office. There is nothing else you can do.
Last night was a defeat for the idea that circumspection ever leads to anything except timidity. The president delayed taking executive action on immigration to help out Kay Hagan, Mark Pryor, and Mary Landrieu. Hagan and Pryor are out, and Landrieu is on borrowed time. Harry Reid's actual contribution to the dysfunction was to keep those same Democratic senators from having to take tough votes that might hurt them on the campaign trail. It didn't work. They all got hung with the votes they didn't take. Alison Lundergan Grimes wouldn't even say whether she'd ever voted for the president. (Kudos to whoever thought to plant that question.) Nobody was fooled. The president's party proved itself utterly unwilling to stand behind the president's policies and, therefore, the president's very real achievements. This was not clever. It was suicidal.
The rest: http://www.esquire.com/blogs/politics/The_Only_Thing_Thats_Left
Charlie Pierce, folks. The man is on fire today. If you haven't read his blog yet, do so with dispatch.
Paladin
(28,243 posts)totodeinhere
(13,056 posts)on any executive orders because he cant risk infuriating the Republicans now that they control all of Congress.
Myself, I reject that advice. I want to see the president infuriate them over and over again for the next two years. What has he got to lose?
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)I hope he's right, but I very much doubt he is. What on earth would lead him to believe the President will ever stand up to Republicans?
napkinz
(17,199 posts)yes!