What do you do if you
haven’t drunk the tea?
Lots of Progressive
Charlestown readers are registered Republicans. They read PC because of our
local coverage since, as they often remind me, party labels (except maybe
“CCA”) matter very little at the town level.
I try to bear that in
mind, although my politics also affect my views on local issues almost as much
as they do on national matters.
But, geez, it’s gotta be
tough to be a Republican these days. As most people who pay any attention at
all to politics know, the weeks since the November 6 election have been pretty
tough on the GOP. For whatever reasons, they seem to have only compounded all
the problems that caused them to get their asses kicked on Election Day on
matters as diverse as the budget, taxes, Social Security, disaster relief, the
farm bill, energy, violence against women and even time-honored traditions of
civility.
To see Republicans like New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and ultra-conservative Rep.Peter King call their own party a disgrace and to suggest that maybe it’s just nuts for a northeastern Republican to stick with a party that tells the whole northeast region to “go f@$k itself,” well, that’s something I never expected to see.
Some weeks ago, there
was noise about the possibility of the Congress enacting the much-dreaded CCA
boogeyman, the “Carcieri Fix” (click here
for detail). I predicted that it simply wasn’t going to happen, simply because
the 112th Congress couldn’t get anything
done.
Sure enough, the 112th
Congress finally adjourned with no Carcieri Fix.
Also no Farm Bill, which
for most Republican legislators is an absolute no-brainer since it is
absolutely essential to the economies of nearly every Red state in the US. The
Senate passed a new five-year version of the Farm Bill months ago, but in the
Republican House, they couldn’t even agree to bring it to the floor.
It was only after the
network news started broadcasting the story that, without the Farm Bill, milk
prices were going to double (and the networks weren’t making this up), that the
House finally agreed to a temporary extension of the existing Farm Bill for a few months into 2013.
The disaster relief bill
for Hurricane Sandy was the last straw for many northeastern Republicans. In
the end, after Gov. Christie, Rep. King and others cursed out Speaker Boehner
and the other House leadership, that the House approved a $9 billion stopgap bill, promising to consider the rest of the
money, $51 billion, later. That $9 billion simply covers federal flood
insurance payments that have already been committed and nothing for the broader
need to help rebuild the northeast.
We’ve run a number of
syndicated articles in Progressive Charlestown about the Republican
misadventures on the budget and their seemingly relentless push to gut Social
Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
Then there’s the House Republicans’decision to allow the Violence Against Women Act expire because they objected
to the new bill’s extension of protection to Native Americans, even though data
shows domestic violence to be a particular problem.
LBJ gets in Sen. Richard Russell's face, literally |
Chafee couldn’t bring the
elevator to a halt in time to stop at LBJ’s floor. He immediately returned to
get Johnson who cursed him out in terms that would make a Marine blush. Chafee
was told to immediately tell his sponsor to try to save his job. Anyway, that’s
the legend – whether it’s true or not, I can’t say, but by all accounts,
Johnson could be a pretty nasty guy.
But not even LBJ would
have done what Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner did when he walked up the
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and told him to “go f@%k yourself” for no
apparent reason other than, just because he could. When Reid, who is an elderly
gentleman and a devote Mormon, asked Boehner what he said, Boehner repeated his
statement.
Cartoon by Tim Eagan. For more, click here |
Now, I’m a pretty salty
guy and those who know me know that I am not bashful about using colorful
language. But, is this any way to run a country?
I’m curious, and I would
invite the Republican readers of Progressive Charlestown to share their views
on exactly what the f%@#k is going on. And how, as Republicans, can they
explain, never mind justify what House Republicans are doing to this country?
Waiting to hear, GW,
Davespop and our legion of anonymous commenters. What’s it like to be a
Republican these days?