badgenome said:
Obama knew very well how fierce partisanship is in D.C., and despite his campaign trail promises to change the tone, poisoned the well immediately after taking office when he said, "Shut up. I won." He had no intention of working with Republicans, and the idea that he wasted all kinds of time trying to reach out to them is just fiction. Trying to get Olympia Snowe to vote for your agenda =/= bipartisanship. To your second point: what would you have done exactly? Many moderates and Blue Dogs simply weren't going for it. It's no mystery why, especially now that everyone can see plain as day just how false were all the platitudes their leadership tried to feed them about how people would learn to love the bill and they'd be rewarded in the midterms. The Dems had to pull every trick in the book to just barely push any kind of bill through, and when they couldn't revist the bill in the Senate after Scott Brown's election, the whole enterprise was thought to be dead. You're simply not dealing with the political reality with which Obama was faced, and thus are not giving him enough credit. |
Unrealistic and a little bitter on my part, i'll grant. I'm just mad that the Democrats blew their one chance to really get this done in a while, but of course now that it's through the door, we can work to fix it, and if all these Tea Party freshmen are true to their own cause, hopefully work within the system to cut health care costs (though they seem more determined to slash at benefits, but time will tell if they really get anywhere, or end up like the Contract With America of 94)

Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.







