Friday, December 18, 2009
Every now and then, an insider inadvertently exposes the hideous rationalizations that run the American political grotesquerie. The best known of these statements are memorialized on TV as "gaffes." But the ones that never become famous tend to reveal the ugliest assumptions of all.
Case in point is the comment the pharmaceutical industry recently let fly in the Washington Post. The newspaper this week examined how the Obama administration crushed legislation that would have allowed Americans to purchase lower-priced FDA-approved medicines from abroad - legislation that President Obama promised to support as a presidential candidate; legislation that would have reduced drug profiteering and saved the government and consumers $100 billion.
"It's about being a candidate as opposed to being president," said the drug industry's top lobbyist in defense of Obama's flip-flop.
This explanation is common among politicos - we last heard it when the New York Times' John Harwood quoted an administration aide attacking those demanding Obama fulfill his campaign pledges. Disenchanted activists, said the White House, "need to take off (their) pajamas, get dressed and realize that governing a closely divided country is complicated."
These "candidate versus president" idioms are standard among Beltway elites who belong to what New York University's Jay Rosen calls "The Church of the Savvy." Their catechism says that anyone demanding a president deliver on campaign promises is naive because, allegedly, there is an inherent difference between what a candidate can tell voters and what that candidate can support as president. Those rejecting this "savvy" interpretation are therefore lambasted as petulant children who refuse to "take off their pajamas" and "get dressed."
More:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/12/18/EDBO1B5SGT.DTL