EFTA01102141.pdf
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Uje cis ton post February 27, 2013
Ending the permanent crisis
By EJ. Dionne Jr.
This has to stop.
Ever since they took control of the House of Representatives in 2011, Republicans have made
journeys to the fiscal brink as commonplace as summertime visits to the beach or the ballpark.
The country has been put through a series of destructive showdowns over budget issues we once
resolved through the normal give-and-take of negotiations.
The old formula held that when government was divided between the parties, the contending
sides should try to "meet in the middle." But the current Republican leadership doesn't know the
meaning of the word "middle," so intimidated by the tea party has it become.
Here is a way out of permanent crisis: President Obama should demand the repeal of all artificial
deadlines and tell both houses of Congress that he won't make further proposals until each
actually passes a replacement to the sequester — not a gimmick or something that looks like an
alternative, but the real thing.
With everyone on the record, normal discussions could begin, and Washington would no longer
look like the set of a horror movie in which a new catastrophe lurks around every corner.
The solution to the problems of democracy is more democracy, so let both houses hold votes on
all the potential remedies — on Obama's own proposal, on packages put forward by Democrats
Chris Van Hollen in the House and Patty Murray in the Senate, and on anything the Republicans
care to proffer, including the sequester itself.
Let the House Republican majority show that it can come up with a substantial alternative or,
failing that, allow a plan to pass with a mix of Republican and Democratic votes.
In the Senate, ditch the unconstitutional abuse of the filibuster and let a plan pass by simple-
majority vote. Misuse of the filibuster is a central cause of Washington's contorted
policymaking. Let's end the permanent budget crisis by governing ourselves though the
majorities that every sane democracy uses.
The air of establishment Washington is filled with talk that Obama must "lead." But Obama
cannot force the House Republican majority to act if it doesn't want to. He is (fortunately) not a
dictator.
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EFTA01102141
What Obama can do is expose the cause of this madness, which is the dysfunction of the
Republican Party.
Journalists don't like saying this because it sounds partisan. But the truth is the truth, whether it
sounds partisan or not.
And a staunch conservative has succinctly explained why this problem really is a Republican
problem. In an admirably candid interview Monday with Ezra Klein on MSNBC, Ben
Domenech, a conservative blogger, said the new tea party Republicans in the House don't want
their leadership to sit down with Obama to talk because "they have their doubts about the ability
of Republicans to negotiate any better situation."
Read that carefully: We are in this mess because Republicans don't trust their leaders to bargain.
Domenech added that many conservatives "don't buy this distinction between smart cuts and
dumb cuts," a distinction that is not "all that critical." This is astonishing: Government is bad, so
all cuts are more or less the same. And you wonder why we have a crisis?
House Speaker John Boehner keeps saying that the House has twice voted for ways to replace
the sequester. What he doesn't say is that those votes were held in the last Congress, so the bills
are dead. If they are so good, why doesn't the speaker bring them up again and pass them now?
The answer is almost certainly that he doesn't have the votes. If I'm wrong, Boehner can prove it
by calling the question. I'm not worried.
One proposal Republicans are floating would give Obama more flexibility to administer the
sequester. Thus, a party that says it can't trust Obama enough to negotiate with him would trust
him so much as to grant him exceptional power.
The contradiction is so glaring that Republicans are split on the idea, and it's foolish anyway. As
a senior administration official suggested, it's like being told that two of your fingers will be cut
off but you could choose which fingers. How is it a "concession" to ask Obama to organize the
cuts he says would be a disaster?
The nation is exhausted with fake crises that voters thought they ended with their verdict in the
last election. Those responsible for the Washington horror show should be held accountable. And
only one party is using shutdowns, cliffs and debt ceilings as routine political weapons.
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