“Parachute politics” is systemic in the Democrat party, the party whose members never take “no” for an answer
Representative Maxine Waters of California has a curious explanation for why Democrats were so thoroughly humiliated in 2016
writes
Benny Huang (in disbelief)
—they were just too nice. “That has been a problem in my party, that when we’re in power we’re nice,” said Waters. “We bend over backwards to work with people.”
Any hope that the Democrats would conduct a serious post-mortem was
dispelled with these remarks. The Democrats lost this year and they’ve been losing
with some degree of consistency since Barack Obama swept to power in
2008 but they’re still avoiding introspection. As usual, they’re finding
ways to flatter themselves in defeat, convinced that it was their own
virtue that did them in—plus Russia, racists, and fake news, of course.
The real explanation for why Democrats lost and have continued to
lose is rather complicated but the nitty-gritty is this: Trump’s
positions on certain issues helped win over several rust belt states
that everyone had hitherto considered safely blue while holding onto
the traditionally red ones. This happened despite substantial voter
fraud in at least one of those rust belt states—Michigan.
Was it the Democrats’ nicety that lost these states? Oh, I doubt it. I
think it had something to do with their war on coal and on in industry
in general. Barack Obama spoke openly of bankrupting coal-fired power plants and Hillary Clinton, his would-be successor, bragged that she would “put a lot of coal companies and coal miners out of business.” Killing people’s jobs is not very nice.
Compromise is something the modern Democrat party just does not do.
They’re quite skilled at all sorts of subterfuge intended to look like
compromise but the real thing eludes them. In some rare instances, when
the votes simply aren’t there for their pet projects, they may be
forced to give a little ground. But it wounds them deeply. They quickly
turn to the judiciary or to Daddy Obama to achieve what they can’t
achieve through the legislature. By hook or by crook, they get what they
want.
What ails the jackass party is what I call “parachute politics,”
named in honor of Maxine Waters’ fellow California Democrat, Nancy
Pelosi. During the 2010 Obamacare debate Pelosi displayed an arrogance
that I found shocking. “We’ll go through the gate,” said Pelosi
at a press conference. “If the gate’s closed, we’ll go over the fence.
If the fence is too high, we’ll pole vault in. If that doesn’t work,
we’ll parachute in but we’re going to get health care reform passed for
the America people.”
Does that sound like someone who’s bending over backwards to work
with others? Or does that sound like a fanatic, someone so sure of the
righteousness of her cause that nothing—certainly not the will of the
people—could have dissuaded her from her path? Pelosi spoke these words
just days after Scott Brown pulled off an upset victory in a
Massachusetts special election by promising to be the forty-first vote
against Obamacare. Yes, running against the “Affordable Care Act”
(snort!) was a winning proposition even in ultra-liberal Massachusetts.
People didn’t want the crap sandwich Pelosi was trying to force feed
them and they want it even less today.
Sure, Americans generally agree that they want some kind of health
care reform but they mean something that will make health care more
affordable both at the point of sale and in the final analysis.
Obamacare has only made it more expensive. Back in 2010 there were at
least a few gullible Americans who believed all of Obama’s lies about keeping their current plans and saving the average family of four some $2500 per year. If there are still people who believe these falsehoods they must be delusional.
“Parachute politics” is systemic in the Democrat party. Whether the
issue is killing the unborn, stopping voter ID, redefining marriage, or
any number of other issues, they absolutely do not take “no” for answer.
Voting rights for felons is a good example. This year, Governor Terry McAuliffe of Virginia took the bold step of restoring voting rights
to all felons in his state who had completed their sentences. He did
not attempt to amend Virginia’s constitution. He did not work with
legislators to build consensus. He simply decreed it.
… McAuliffe was undeterred. If the Virginia Supreme Court told him that
he could not restore voting rights en masse he would do it on a superficially “individual” basis. He got to work “signing” stacks of clemency documents using an autopen
to replicate his signature. Governor McAuliffe’s unilateral and
constitutionally dubious scheme was a gift to his dear friend Hillary
Clinton, to himself, and to his party—the “nice” party that Maxine Water
says “bends over backwards to work with people.”
Not that I doubt Maxine Waters’ sincerity when she says this. Her
problem isn’t that she doesn’t mean what she says, her problem is that
she considers every concession made by her party, no matter how small
and no matter how begrudgingly extracted, to be an enormous sacrifice.
If the “arc of history” bends toward her own demented definition of
justice why should she ever give an inch to the evil forces of reaction?
In her mind she and her friends should get 100% of what they want
100% of the time because they are self-evidently right. It’s this
attitude that makes compromise nearly impossible.
… When asked if she would accept a hypothetical invitation from Trump
to meet and find common ground, Waters replied unequivocally that she
would not.\
She’s not alone. Congressman Keith Ellison, who is a strong contender to replace Donna Brazile as the next chairman of the DNC, said that “All there is to do is vote ‘no’” to whatever Trump and the Republicans propose. Now there’s
some of that famous bipartisanship! I hope the Republican leadership
heard Ellison and realizes that he and much of his party cannot be won
over. They can be opposed and hopefully defeated but they can’t be
swayed from their reflexive opposition. Please don’t try.
I can recall a time not long ago when Ellison’s and Waters’ defiant
attitude would have been called “obstructionism.” Of course that was
when some Republicans weren’t kowtowing to President Obama. (Others were
kowtowing their asses off, by the way.) Things are different now. I
also recall that “obstructionism” was not just unseemly but racist to
boot. Not anymore. Now that I think about it, there was also a time in
the recent past when Republicans’ “obstructionism” justified
presidential end-runs around Congress. Is that still fair play or did
that change too?
But don’t let Maxine Waters fool you. She may try to pretend that
extraordinary circumstances have driven her to adopt a never-before-seen
attitude of resistance but that just isn’t true. She was a partisan
warrior before November 8th just as she’s a partisan warrior now. She
was not “nice” when the Democrats ran the show and neither was the rest
of her party. Their 2006 and 2008 victories convinced them that the
country had gone left for good. What was the sense in reaching across
the aisle to the moribund minority?
Liberals are rewriting history before our very eyes, inventing some
mythical time when the Democratic majority extended a hand of mercy to
those evil Republicans only to have it slapped away. Those of us with
memories longer than a goldfish’s know better.