in history. I posted this this a.m., and think it's spot-on.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=433x219336snip//
Here's the situation. Everyone knows that if reform passes, it's a historic accomplishment for the party and the president. Yes, Republicans will attack it as a government takeover of the health sector. But at least Democrats will be able to say that on the matter on which they spent months and months, they finally won. And – this part is more important – everyone knows that if it fails, it's a historic setback for the party and the president. This fall's elections could be a total wipeout for Democrats.
Everyone knows this. And yet, some Democrats will still oppose it. Why? For two reasons. First, some, especially among those aforementioned 49, will face well-financed Grand Old Party opponents and lose. In fairness to them, that's actually a somewhat logical analysis.
But second, we move from logic to the realm of psychology. Passage of a big health reform bill is a classic Rumsfeldian "unknown unknown". Congress hasn't passed a bill like this in, as I said, four decades. What will happen? What spites and furies will be unleashed? It will alter the political landscape for years to come. But how?
Politicians dread these questions. So, far better that there's no vote at all. That's a known. They can go back to their districts and say: "Well, we moved too fast, Obama overreached, and now we'll start again at square one." That, of course, won't happen. Reform will die. But that's what they'll say.
And they'll return to their collective 13% (you read that right) job approval rating and their nice important jobs in a body that is a national laughing stock and is institutionally incapable of taking actual steps to fix actual problems in American society.
Or they can take a little risk on what will be for most of them the single most substantively consequential vote of their entire careers, even understanding (horror) that some of them might lose in the election. We can't have that, right? God forbid someone lose a seat in Congress. Life itself will end. I mean, what an unimaginable existence: getting a well-paying job as a lobbyist or corporate rainmaker, being called "congressman" for the rest of your life, drawing a congressional pension – and, by the way, congressional healthcare … Dante himself couldn't have imagined such a savage circle of hell.