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NYT: "Bipartisanship" shifts to "discrete areas w/ temporary coalitions based on regional interests"

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Amerigo Vespucci Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-14-09 03:03 PM
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NYT: "Bipartisanship" shifts to "discrete areas w/ temporary coalitions based on regional interests"
Bipartisanship isn’t so easy, Obama discovers
Party-line schism in stimulus vote showed difficulty of changing D.C.'s ways

By Peter Baker
updated 1:11 a.m. PT, Sat., Feb. 14, 2009



http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29192664/

Whatever it will do for the economy, the legislation that passed Friday will clearly not do anything to create long-term, sustained bipartisan reconciliation. Not one Republican voted for Mr. Obama’s plan in the House and just three voted for it in the Senate as it headed to final passage on Friday night. The party-line schism, coupled with the withdrawal on Thursday of a Republican senator, Judd Gregg, as a nominee to Mr. Obama’s cabinet, made clear the futility so far of the president’s effort to move Washington toward post-partisanship.

Their unrequited overtures to Republicans over the past several weeks taught Mr. Obama and his aides some hard lessons. Advisers concluded that they allowed the measure of bipartisanship to be defined as winning Republican votes rather than bringing civility to the debate, distracting attention from what have otherwise been major legislative victories. Although Mr. Obama vowed to keep reaching out to Republicans, advisers now believe the environment will probably not change in coming months.

Rather than forging broad consensus with Republicans, the Obama advisers said they would have to narrow their ambitions and look for discrete areas where they might build temporary coalitions based on regional interests rather than party, as on energy legislation. They said they would also turn to Republican governors for support — a tactic that showed promise during the debate over the economic package — even if they found few Republican allies in Washington.

And they laid out plans to get Mr. Obama out of Washington more so he could preserve his image as a reformer and use his popularity to rally public pressure on lawmakers to go along with his program. After spending his first three weeks as president in Washington, Mr. Obama hit the road this week with stops in Indiana, Florida and Illinois. Next week he will travel to Colorado and Arizona.
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-14-09 03:24 PM
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1. A VERY good article worth reading. nt
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