Neither Reid nor Pelosi Have the Votes
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Like robots programed to march until they find a cliff and can march no longer, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Reid and Speaker Pelosi have been forced into the most contorted public position on any legislation — perhaps ever. Senator Durbin (D-IL), the U.S. Senate Majority Whip said yesterday that the left forced the Democrat’s hand, and “we’ll “see where we come out.” (H/T Huffington Post.) Sen. Durbin did not say: we have the votes, we will win, but he said, we’ll see — read: we do not have the votes and don’t know if we will get the votes because we have not written the bill yet, nor have we scored it. Here is what Pelosi’s public-facing contortion looks like: a) We must have a public option; b) we will have a public option; and, c) the royal we, have the votes for a public option. But the reality for Speaker Pelosi, who tried the group-peer-pressure-routine on non-compliant House members on Friday in an emergency all-Dem House caucus meeting, is actually inverted: a) the royal we, do not have the votes for a public option; and, therefore, b) we may not have a public option; and, c) the left will be disappointed but the votes are not there so we will just keep our base happy and tell them we tried. This reality is too real, too hard, too unthinkable. But the unthinkable is being thunk (ok, so it’s a fun word): the auto-insistence that “we have the votes” masks a reality too difficult to thunk — so let’s all in the Leadership not think about it and insist that the night is day. Much better, don’t you think? For the U.S. Majority Leader Harry Reid, his contortion looks like this, as described by the invaluable-bio-intel-collection-system known as Milbank (who writes for WaPo):
The quote above about Senator Reid is taken from Dana Milbank’s column today in the Washington Post titled “Harry Reid, shopping for reelection insurance.” Senator Reid has a consensus for discovering on the Senate floor, what the consensus really is — and it may just be that the consensus is that Senators would rather not take a series of tough votes on taxes, spending, the deficit, abortion, illegal immigration, guns, Medicare cuts, the public option and an increase of government control and interference in daily American life. Ultimately, for U.S. Senators’ whose prime directive is to stay in the U.S. Senate, health care reform on the Senate floor is beginning to look like a no-win-electoral-strength-sapping-exercise, which can be ended quickly, with a handful of Democrats voting not to end the 100% certain filibuster. Why take dozens of tough votes, which touch on every thermonuclear political issue in the United States, when you can, instead, take only one vote that spin up the uber-left but keep every other nterest group known to man not angry at you, and make a majority of independents happy too? The political calculation leans heavily in favor of, you know, come to mention it, I’d, uh, rather not. Unless everyone is acting irrationally, i.e., not acting in their own interest, I expect this calculation to be the dominant one. And note to historians, this political calculation has nothing to do with health policy, which everyone will continue to say needs reform. |