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Republican
Show-and-Tell
By Jonah Goldberg
7/15/2011
A
lot of conservatives are having fun
at President Obama’s expense after his latest gaffe. In the midst of
testy
debt-limit negotiations, Obama told House Majority Leader Eric Cantor,
“Don’t
call my bluff.”
The
first rule in bluffing is to keep
it a secret that you’re bluffing. So, technically speaking, that’s like
a con
man saying, “Don’t give any weight to the fact that I’m lying.”
And
while I do think Obama is not
telling the truth about a great number of things, conservatives should
look
closer to home if they want to criticize impolitic truth-telling.
Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell
has introduced a complicated plan that would truly call Obama’s
fundamental
bluff: that the White House honestly favors a courageous “grand
bargain” that
would make serious and steep cuts to entitlements in exchange for tax
“revenue”
increases (i.e., tax hikes).
High
among the problems with
McConnell’s plan is how hard it is to explain. But basically,
Republicans would
give Obama all of the responsibility for proposing specific spending
cuts and
for raising the debt ceiling three times up to $2.5 trillion over the
next
year. Obama would get his way unless a supermajority of Congress
objected, so
the GOP could vote against Obama without stopping him. Default would be
averted
without Republicans being forced to vote for tax hikes.
Conservatives
are split on the idea.
Personally I think it might be the least bad of the currently possible
options.
But
what’s particularly frustrating is
how McConnell is selling his proposal. In an interview with radio host
Laura
Ingraham, McConnell explained his thinking: “If we go into default,
(Obama)
will say that Republicans are making the economy worse. ... The
president will
have the bully pulpit to blame the Republicans for all of this
destruction,”
setting himself up for re-election.
“I
refuse to help Barack Obama get
re-elected by marching Republicans into a position where we have
co-ownership
of a bad economy,” McConnell added. “That’s a very bad positioning
going into
an election.”
McConnell
is right. But McConnell
isn’t a pundit. Why the hell is he reading his stage direction out
loud? Last
fall, he said that the “single most important thing we want to achieve
is for
President Obama to be a one-term president.” Most conservatives agree
with him,
because without a Republican president, you can’t repeal ObamaCare or
do the
other things conservatives believe are necessary to set the country
back on the
right track. Democrats see things the same way, but from a liberal
perspective.
But
Democrats, for all their
internecine squabbles, have the discipline to take the high road
rhetorically.
Republicans
have a habit of seeming
like actors who first want to know their “motivation” and then read it
instead
of their lines.
In
1991, President George H.W. Bush
explained that he wanted “to be positioned in that I could not possibly
support
David Duke because of the racism and because of the very recent
statements that
are very troubling in terms of bigotry and all of this.” Positioned?
When
Bob Dole, another former Senate
leader, ran for president in 1996, he assured voters, “If that’s what
you want,
I’ll be another Ronald Reagan.” He even launched a national debate on
whether
he should “go negative” against Bill Clinton. According to his own
strategists,
his plan was to “act presidential.” Not to “be presidential” -- just to
act
that way.
Politics
is about show, not tell.
His
remark about not calling his bluff
notwithstanding, Obama has at least demonstrated the political
professionalism
to read his lines. His refusal to sign a short-term debt-ceiling
extension is,
according to him, an act of moral leadership, high-minded pragmatism
and
flat-out bravery.
“I’ve
reached my limit. This may bring
my presidency down, but I will not yield on this,” Obama reportedly
said about
his determination to have a long-term deal. He says he wants the deal
because
America can’t continue to kick the can down the road, even though
that’s what
he did during his entire presidency until the GOP got in the way.
My
suspicion is that if he read his
stage direction instead of his lines, it would sound very different.
Something
like: “I want to be positioned as if I’m taking the high road, but I’m
really
just trying to kick this can past the 2012 election. I want to keep
asking for
things Republicans won’t agree to so I can paint them as irresponsible.
So,
whatever you do, don’t call my bluff.”
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