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Originally Posted by ernie
The way US politics works is that there isn't really some sort of party whip to vote the way the party wants.
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Whoah. No offense but that's way off. The majority and minority leaders absolutely have their whips out if they want. There are myriad stories of Tom DeLay extending the voting time on bills so he could go and extort specific Republican members of the house for their votes. Vote with us on this, or you don't get a dime during your next re-election campaign.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ernie
I truly believe Obama has a vision as every president does...the parties simply don't buy into the vision at times. IMO, the healthcare is one change they needed people to buy into things for the eventual greater good but too many were concerned with lining pockets and getting re-elected.
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I think the healthcare example is instructive. Obama, as the president, absolutely had the bully pulpit to push through what he wanted, especially given the democratic majorities and supermajorities in the congress. It's quite clear to me that he simply did *not* want to pass many of the items talked about during the campaign for multiple factors.
As for the next election, I think the rest of the world should pray that the republican candidate is not elected. Reading the republican fixes for the economy is absolutely frightening. Austerity*, more tax cuts and increased interest rates during a recession would all lead to the final cracking of the US economy. And if the US economy cracks, then the world over is going to experience reduced demand (which is the number issue in the US today).
* I've read comments regarding the deficit. Yes, the deficit during the Obama fiscal year (October 2009 - today) has been high. However, much of the deficit is due to the stimulus bill and fiscal aid to close the productivity gap coupled with lower tax receipts. In that respect, the deficit is more a function of the extra-ordinary economic circumstance rather than an absolute desire by Obama to shower the world with US debt offerings (treasuries). The structural deficit in the US economy is currently driven by 4 items: social security, medicare (a large chunk being GWB's medicare expansion), GWB tax cuts (none of which brought online) any offsetting spending cuts), defense spending (this includes the money procured for the wars through supplemental bills).