Disgusting

by Ted on July 22, 2004

Dwight Merideth had an excellent post the other day called “The Top 10 Ways To Change The Tone in Washington (For the Worse).” He could not have anticipated that the White House would have such a spectacular topper:

The White House helped to block a Republican-brokered deal on Wednesday to extend several middle-class tax cuts, fearful of a bill that could draw Democratic votes and dilute a Republican campaign theme, Republican negotiators said.

The White House blocked a package of tax cuts, targeted at middle- and lower-income taxpayers, because the bill was moderate enough to attract Democratic votes. They chose to fail, by their own principles, rather than allow a small amount of concilliation with the other party. I have a hard time thinking of a more effective way to give the finger to the principle of bipartisanship.

Michael Froomkin says, “This may be one of the most cynical ploys in US politics I ever read about. And I read a lot.” Paperwight has much more; he makes a good comparison to the Republican refusal to accept a Democratic deal to confirm most of Bush’s judicial appointments. And, he notices that the White House is attempting to soothe tempers by allowing more pork in the budget.

These guys have got to go.

{ 13 comments }

1

Brey 07.22.04 at 4:11 pm

Pork, now there’s an issue with bipartisan support.

2

eudoxis 07.22.04 at 5:46 pm

Remember, this is about an extension of the Bush tax cut. It sailed through the house but was killed in the Senate by moderate Republicans over a legitimate funding issue.

3

paperwight 07.22.04 at 7:59 pm

Remember, this is about an extension of the Bush tax cut. It sailed through the house but was killed in the Senate by moderate Republicans over a legitimate funding issue.

Read the source material. In fact, the moderate Republicans in the Senate (read, people who don’t just cut taxes without any notion of fiscal accountability) were uncomfortable with further extensions of the Bush cuts, but were willing to extend for two years these particular tax cuts which benefitted the middle and working class. The Democrats were good with this, but the New Republican Tribe, including Bush, wanted a minimum 5 year extension.

So rather than getting the bill passed, Bush and the House Republicans killed it, so they could strip off the bipartisan taint, and then then bring it up again as an issue closer to the election.

4

paperwight 07.22.04 at 8:00 pm

Remember, this is about an extension of the Bush tax cut. It sailed through the house but was killed in the Senate by moderate Republicans over a legitimate funding issue.

Read the source material. In fact, the moderate Republicans in the Senate (read, people who don’t just cut taxes without any notion of fiscal accountability) were uncomfortable with further extensions of the Bush cuts, but were willing to extend for two years these particular tax cuts which benefitted the middle and working class. The Democrats were good with this, but the New Republican Tribe, including Bush, wanted a minimum 5 year extension.

So rather than getting the bill passed, Bush and the House Republicans killed it, so they could strip off the bipartisan taint, and then then bring it up again as an issue closer to the election.

5

paperwight 07.22.04 at 8:02 pm

Whoops. Sorry about that. I got a 500 server error on the first try, so thought it didn’t go through.

6

eudoxis 07.22.04 at 8:49 pm

The administration is holding out for larger middle class tax cuts and is likely to get them in September. The Democrats will vote, now, for a watered down version (with funding!). Very sensible. I’m all for it. But, the Democrats are more likely to vote for the full tax cuts without funding in September. The present day middle class and the administration wins, the Democrats lose. This may be disgusting, but not for reasons presented in the post, above.

7

GMT 07.22.04 at 10:07 pm

This may be disgusting, but not for reasons presented in the post, above.

Erm, no.

http://tinyurl.com/4mx42

The White House helped to block a Republican-brokered deal on Wednesday to extend several middle-class tax cuts, fearful of a bill that could draw Democratic votes and dilute a Republican campaign theme, Republican negotiators said.

…in an improbable series of machinations, White House officials opposed the tentative deal worked out between House and Senate Republican leaders that would have extended the tax cuts for two years at a cost of about $80 billion.

Claire Buchan, a White House spokeswoman, said the administration was still trying to negotiate. But Republican Congressional officials said the administration did not want a deal that Democratic lawmakers might support, giving them a tax-cutting credential, too.



“If the Democrats had been on the same side, it would have taken a lot of arrows out of the quiver,” said one Republican staff member.

8

eudoxis 07.22.04 at 10:45 pm

Is the outrage over Washington playing politics? That the Bush administration doesn’t want Democrats to gain political points? I’m at a loss for words. I thought the disgust was over the perception that this posturing was at the expense of the middle class. My point was that it was over funding issues because the middle class is going to get their tax cut regardless of this political play.

9

GMT 07.22.04 at 11:01 pm

I’m at a loss for words
And yet you posted over four lines in a third post.

I’m disgusted, though not surprised, that the White House would screw the middle class, not to score political points, but to avoid giving them away.

Funding issues had been resolved between House and Senate Republicans. Campaign issues intervened. I don’t pretend to know the future of middle class tax cuts, but the middle class is clearly not a priority.

10

brett 07.23.04 at 12:56 am

Morons. Because Bush wants a longer extension, and more tax cuts, than the Democrats, it’s Bush who’s playing politics when he refuses it? You trust anonymous congressional staffers who are pissed because they didn’t get their way? Don’t play the media’s game for them.

The principle of bipartisanship? How fucking naive are you? This is an election year.

11

Jane Goodall 07.23.04 at 4:46 pm

“The principle of bipartisanship? How fucking naive are you? This is an election year.”

Ahh, yes, election year! Just a few more months until the scourge of the Unelected Fraud is removed from our national landscape.

Unless, of course, the malAdministration orchestrates a “Looky-here we got Osama!” maneuver, or just cancels the election entirely.

In that case, time to fill the streets and Viva la Revalucion!

12

tom beta 2 07.23.04 at 4:52 pm

The NYT gives a lot of anonymously-sourced info here. Not that that’s always bad, but I wonder why.

The ABCNews article on this (at http://abcnews.go.com/wire/Politics/ap20040721_2437.html) has a somewhat different take, which kinda supports paperweight’s idea that the White House wants this to come up closer to election day.

For what it’s worth, at least the ABC guys tell you why they have anonymous sources. I much prefer the style of their article.

13

Gary Farber 07.29.04 at 6:09 pm

Belatedly linked to this here, by the way, with little comment; it speaks for itself.

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