CNN: Do congressional Dems need intervention?
By Gloria Borger
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Yes, it's early. Very early. Barack Obama hasn't even moved into Blair House yet. But it's time -- for an intervention.
How else to confront the oddly self-destructive behavior of congressional Democrats? How else to figure out why they seem intent on depriving their new president of a swift -- and truly bipartisan -- victory on his all-important economic stimulus package? It's as if they haven't quite figured out what the public meant when it voted to change business as usual. Or that sometimes, in order to get something done, the perfect is the enemy of the good, as the cliché goes. Or to effectively cripple the Obama presidency in its infancy would be, er, bad for them.
Sure, the griping Democrats are having visions of President Bill Clinton's early deficit reduction plan which -- while a success -- made lots of them feel like Republicans. And they don't want to repeat the Republican rubber-stamp mind-set of blindly following a president for the last eight years -- into an unpopular war, an economic crisis, and finally, over the cliff. What else could possibly have prompted Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to make the point that, "I do not work for Barack Obama. I work with him." Or, as my kids used to say, "You're not the boss of me." (Reid is wrong; my kids were right.)
This is not to say that some of the Democratic complaints may not be perfectly well-founded and justified. Maybe corporate tax breaks for companies hiring new employees isn't the best of ideas, as Sen. John Kerry suggests, because these companies might hire new people anyway. And there are bound to be differences over the best ways to spend the huge federal pot of $775 billion or so over two years, or how to cut taxes as part of the plan.
But here's the important part: Both spending and tax cuts have to be part of any stimulus package. As one top transition aide explains to me, "It's hard to spend that much money over two years effectively without doing both." If there were eight years in which to spend the money, it might be different. But the new administration is looking for what he describes as "a very quick jolt -- and that's hard to do without a combination of things."
Do the corporate tax cuts help to bring in some GOP votes? Sure. But please explain why there is something wrong with that....
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It may be hard for Democrats to move smoothly into a world in which they are in charge and responsible, but that's their new normal. Opposition requires keeping score; leadership requires action. And Democrats need an attitude adjustment.
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/09/borger.democrats/index.html