The Red Election

I can’t take credit for the comparison between this week’s U.S. Mid-Term elections and the disastrous wedding for the Starks in ‘Game of Thrones’ I spotted it on twitter, but the analogy is quite apt.

The Democratic Party, with a coalition that is better suited to presidential elections, found itself thoroughly routed electorally from the contest as the Republican Party, its ranks filled with people willing to crawl across broken glass to cast a vote against Obama and his allies, swept the national legislature.

I would have written about this yesterday but I have taken ill and on Wednesday I was unable to craft sentences beyond ‘tree good fire bad.’

Now that the House and the Senate at firmly under Republican control, but short of veto proof levels, it shall be interesting to see which track the Conservative trains depart along.

When the Democrats held the senate the Speak of the House had no pressure keep back any of the more extreme conservative measures. Passing repeals of the ACA was easy when you knew it would die leaving the House, but with a friendly Senate things get more complicated,

The truth of the matter is killing the ACA would involve throwing millions of their insurance, and forcing the issue through a government shutdown. No simple repeal bill will be signed by the president. Any bill defunding it will not be signed by the president. You can only get those signature by attached it to ‘must pass’ legislation and then refusing to back down as the government shutters in crisis.

A smarter course would be to seek modifications to the ACA and then declare victory, but after selling the evils of the ACA to their base for six years it will be hard convincing said base that now it is acceptable policy no matter how much tinkering at the edges (medical device taxes etc) you have performed.

Of course the Republican now own the budget process. No longer can they pass the Ryan budget confident it will go nowhere and have the actual pain its cuts would cause remain theoretical. It’s true that the Democrats, in a fine display to invertebrate physiology, failed to pass a budget for 4 years, but last year when they did pass one, the Republicans refuse to conference on the matter. Now it is all theirs.

I do not know what is going to happen, but I do suspect it will be interesting.

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One thought on “The Red Election

  1. Brad

    Obama is no FDR.

    I like what Megan McCardle has to say about the 2014 election results and what happens next.

    http://www.fresnobee.com/2014/11/05/4220604/turns-out-obama-is-not-fdr.html

    Also, in my opinion Obama is no LBJ. More like Jimmy Carter. And Obama leaves a troublesome political legacy for his party of ideological arrogance, smug incompetence, reflexive dishonesty, geographic division and racial acrimony.

    Though to be fair to Obama, the party choose him. Obama was lifted up by powerful currents swirling within the Democratic party during the Bush years. Obama isn’t so much a Democratic outlier, as he is a creature of the new Democratic establishment. a man who relentlessly toes the party line.

    The DLC/Clinton years are over. CAP/Obama are the new reality of the Democratic Party.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_American_Progress

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