GOP's Debt Ceiling Fight Is About Bringing Down Obama

July 26, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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Impeach him.

Not the president. Barack Obama is holding a huge global and domestic crisis in his hand. To use a Washington metaphor, he's dangerously close to being left "holding the bag" on the Treasury debt ceiling limit. He keeps talking sweet reason about the art of compromise to Republicans in Congress—not a language they speak. Obama played golf with the House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican who drones on about "small business" every chance he gets. Obama is not getting traction or making friends with Boehner because he does not grasp the conversation about the debt limit is not about the debt limit. It's about taking his presidency down—this week—even if it hurts the United States of America, which it will. A small price to pay for this tea-drinking crowd of 87 GOP House freshmen which turned the chamber upside down six months ago.

"This is no way to run the greatest country on earth," Obama declared in a belated speech, sounding a call to arms around the country, last night. That in itself says so much—he's right, but he's the man who's elected by the people—not John Boehner who was elected by a small-town slice of Ohio—to run the country! Everything was calculated to leave Obama in the lurch—by Boehner, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of the old Confederate capital, Richmond, Va. and at least one other mastermind. The conspiracy has succeeded flawlessly so far. They separated Obama from his own party in Congress; in his dealings with only Republicans he went way beyond Bill Clinton's "triangulation" strategy. Obama made allies feel like they were shut out of the deal-making roomwhen he offered concessions that cut at the heart of the Democratic Party's proud history on social programs dating to the New Deal.

[See a collection of political cartoons on the GOP]

The GOP—and I mean the George W. Bush years and the current crop of Senate Republicans, too—has a new deal for you, too. It's called the New Steal. It goes like this: we'll take all the peace and prosperity of the Clinton tax code years up until 2000 and then squander it on a couple unwinnable wars of choice—and by the way, make rich people pay less into the Treasury than they did during those golden years. They might start one of those illusory "small businesses."

[See a collection political cartoons on the economy]

The reason President Clinton was acquitted at his impeachment trial in the Senate for a fling with Monica Lewinsky was because he built bonds of loyalty, teamwork and camaraderie with Democrats in both houses of Congress. Not one of them came forward on the floor to speak against him, except pious Sen. Joe Lieberman, who suggested a censure. He was utterly alone in his opportunistic little ploy. Clinton's true friends all stood by him in the Senate—because he was their president.

Obama, a bit of a loner, needs more bosom buddies among lawmakers. In a crisis, you find out who your friends are. The one who could have steered him straight, sailing into the wind, was the late great senator, Edward M. Kennedy. When Kennedy got his Irish up and roared on the floor, he scared the forest. Obama does not scare the Republican jungle.

[See a photo gallery of Ted Kennedy]

Let's impeach Rush Limbaugh as the master of public dis-coarse. He's the real reason we have so many angry white men in office who are plotting against the president. He's writing the back-story of this debt drama, consulting closely with House Republican leaders step by step. I believe it even if I can't see it because he did the same thing in 1994, in cahoots with Newt Gingrich, who recruited a new House Republican freshman class to take over the House. Yes, I saw Rush with my own eyes getting all the glory as class mascot at a fancy dinner at Camden Yards in Baltimore for the new Republican victors that enabled Gingrich to become speaker. The government shutdowns and showdowns against President Clinton resulted—remember? [See a slide show of Newt Gingrich's career]

Those were the days, my friends. Thought they'd never end

 

Tags:
Tea Party,
Rush Limbaugh,
debt,
Bill Clinton,
Newt Gingrich,
Barack Obama,
politics

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The President is limited in what he can do by the House and Senate. Tea Party thugs are controlling the direction this country is headed and they're doing a damn good job of pulling the wool over everyone's eyes. Americans can't see what is right in front of their face. The Tea Party thugs have boarded what has always been recognized as a great American ship (GOP) and have taken control. They're throwing over the wrong freight (American People) and if they can't keep control of this ship, they're gonna sink every ship (America).

D. W. of SC 4:25AM August 26, 2011

While I concur that there are a significant number of Republicans that would like to see the president out of office, the issue is not so much about who is in office, but rather what direction our country is going to take. It makes little difference which party has control; both are willing to condemn this country to vassal status to the collectivists in the UN with the help of the IMF.

You speak of the "Peace and Prosperity" years of Clinton. Just how peaceful was it for us to condemn 500,000 children to death in Iraq with our sanctions against a dictator we propped up and then have the Secretary of State say it was "worth it"?

Mr President, do we really deserve to be called the "greatest country on earth" if we continue to try to impose our will on other nations by force of arms?

This country does have the ability to be called "great" again, but only if it returns to its principals. Remember, we are not a democracy, in spite of the number of people who think so. It's time to restore the REPUBLIC. At the present time it would seem the only way to do that is to stop congress from spending our future.

Steve Teters of OR 12:48AM July 28, 2011

Yes, this article is correct that the Republicans are trying to cripple the economy to they might win the next election, not governing. Since everyone is blaming the GOP for this debt ceiling tantrum, then they will exclusively be blamed if the country goes into default.

A civil war within the GOP is burning down the House of Representatives and all Americans will suffer from this power struggle. These guys are intentionally not getting any bills passed that will ever become laws and they can't even get the basic housekeeping down which is what raising the debt ceiling is.

The GOP is paralyzed by the Tea Party who will agree to nothing and would rather see the country seize up by default. Not a problem that a default will cost billions and a default is a totally optional crisis, but what do you expect from people who hate this country.

Sue of OH 10:04PM July 27, 2011

Jamie Stiehm

Jamie Stiehm

Jamie Stiehm is a weekly Creators Syndicate columnist. Her op-eds on politics, culture, and history have appeared in newspapers across the nation, including The New York Times and The Washington Post. She previously worked as a reporter at the Baltimore Sun and The Hill. Jamie's first journalism job was as an assignment editor at the CBS News bureau in London.

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