Yes, I am serious. This is an election year, if the republicans stop something the voters want I would expect the republicans to lose even more ground. As I said, the republicans are selling themselves as won't vote for the democrat's bills. IF the people are ok with that, the republicans will probably do ok, if they people are not ok with that the republicans will suffer even more.
No, they're not, and no they won't.
Republicans are sellng themselves as "we'd love to vote for ll the things you want, but the meanie radical Democrats won't talk to us, and they're all communists who want crazy things so we protected you."
The voters of the 40 most Republican states - well, rememeber, *Sarah Palin*, the most unqualified national nominee if not candidate I've ever seen, got over 45% of the vote.
These are not mainstream Americans wanting healthcare ready to punish Republicans if they don't vote for it. These are people at odds with the majority of American who LOVE their Republicans' obstructionism.
That's why 40% are not supposed ot have a veto. But they do and this is what we get. But don't tell the falsehood that Democrats can get this passed just by it being a good bill. They can't.
It is very possible that the democrats will suffer due to the economy, but what economic bills have the republicans stopped? I don't recall any economic initiative that the republicans have blocked like health care. Maybe they did, but they kept it quiet. But again it comes down to the election, if the democrats had a good economic recovery plan and it was blocked by the republicans the democrats ought to be able to wipe the floor with them. If the democrats cannot clearly articulate to the american people why they deserve more seats, and how the republicans have prevented the senate from giving the people what you say they want, then they will fail. But if it is as clear as you think it is, I wouldn't give the republicans a snowballs chance in hell.
What you;'re missing is, obstructionism is working for them. It can backfire, but it isn't.
I've previously posted a study showing the Republicans are blocking a record 70% of major legislation, an all time high up from 8% in the 60's. That should give you an idea it's not just healthcare.
Many things aren't getting even proposed becase they knwo they can't pass them. I think that's a mistake - you're right, put them up and get the Republicans on record - but it's not what they're doing.
Seems to be part of this whole misguided 'bi-partisan thing' that they either don't want to be seen havingf Republicansa vote all no, or give Republicans more for their case to vote no and attack the bills.
I also seem to remember the clinton years as being considered very good from an economic standpoint, and very good for this country in general. If they do the same thing they did during those good years, is that a bad thing?
That's a more complicated question. The shutdown of the federal government was not a 'good thing' determined simply by saying 'times were good so so was that topic'.
Many things were a mess. Republicans were busy setting some PREVOUS obstructionist records. For example, many many federal seats were going unfilled in a judicial 'crisis' over their obstructing.
And Clinton's arm was twisted - if it was needed - and he backed some bad things. Not all the evidence was quickly available; his economy was buoyed by some lucky gambles and a tech bubble in part.
You seem to be trying to broaden my point from answering errors I claim in some of your post, to claiming that 'Republicans are doing good if the Clinton period was also good', which is just not good logic.
I'm not broadening these points to a discussion of whether healthcare is a good idea. Just correcting the role Republicans are playing in blocking it.
