Coming Back from the Health-Care Debacle

Spread the love

Loading

Conrad Black:

The health-care-reform fiasco illustrates perfectly why the United States has been an ineffectual, gridlocked failure at legislative self-government for over 20 years. It is not only not a system with two parties ready to govern; it is not a system with one party ready to govern. The Cruz Right took 30 percent of the vote in the Republican primaries and the Sanders Left took almost 50 percent of the vote in the Democratic primaries. The Clinton-Obama Democrats are chasing pathetically after the itinerant base of their party as it has scurried to the left like a frightened lobster, and the Republican Right has cooled down to some degree, but shows no disposition to take one for the team. There is little point in assessing blame for how the Trump administration and the Democratic congressional leadership have reached such a lamentable state of vituperative hostility, but deescalating it will take time, work, and a will that is not now visible.

This crisis has been a long time ripening. George H. W. Bush inherited from Ronald Reagan a strong party, a reasonably serene Congress, and a happy country victorious in the Cold War, but he raised taxes and allowed the charlatan Ross Perot to steal enough Republicans to elect Bill Clinton. Clinton was adequately competent (as Bush had been), but lost the Congress after the first health-care fiasco, and was amused the rest of his term being a naughty, southern, corn-fed boy; and there was no consensus for anything except welfare reform. George W. Bush counter-attacked international terrorism well but mired the country in ill-considered wars and compounded Clinton’s inflation of the housing bubble until the worst international financial crisis since the 1930s erupted underneath him. Barack Obama came in on a wave of goodwill and national (well-deserved) self-congratulation for having elected a non-white president, but he was far to the left of the country, lost control of the Congress after the second health-care fiasco, and the rest was an anti-climax of chronic deficits, militant political correctness, and feckless foreign policy. The media soft-pedaled the president’s ineptitude and the country wanted to like him for esoteric reasons, but two-thirds of the people thought the country was headed in the wrong direction. It was.

Donald Trump ran against all those whom he held responsible for the terrible policy failures of 20 years. The litany is familiar, including the matters just cited along with increasing domestic violence, a shrinking work force, inaction in the face of about 12 million illegal immigrants, and a syncopated lurching in foreign policy that never elaborated a consistent objective apart from opposition to terrorism, though with fluctuating determination. Since he ran against all factions of both parties and almost all the national media, only a mighty landslide of personal support such as FDR received in 1932 or LBJ in 1964, and to a degree Ronald Reagan in 1980, was going to enable him to put his whole radical and overloaded agenda through. The country has a regime pledged to change course radically in many policy areas and a mandate to do that, but the replacement policies are a matter of sharp debate between Republican factions. In the climate created by the nastiest campaign in recent history, and one in which the honesty of the media was a legitimate issue, followed by the greatest electoral upset at least since 1948, coalitions will have to be assembled gradually and from different pieces, issue by issue. Most of us who do not know the congressional personalities had no alternative but to assume and hope that Speaker Ryan and the president’s congressional liaison and the able Health and Human Services secretary, former congressman Tom Price, could count the noses correctly in putting their bill together, to get it to the Senate, where the greater contest was expected. Our confidence was misplaced.

There must be a consensus, even within the U.S. Capitol, that the United States simply has to get its system working and become governable again. Everyone there knows that the Republicans won and that the Clinton, Obama, and Bush eminences were rejected amid widespread public discontent with decades of misgovernment. The argument in democratic politics is always whether the center is a position of strength or weakness, and that depends on whether it can push the Right and Left off to the shoulders, which in these circumstances means crowding over 40 percent of last year’s primary voters off to the sides, unless large numbers can be induced to succumb to the grace of conversion. Donald Trump is not everyone’s idea of a centrist, but in this crowded scene, he is the only prominent candidate for that honor that we have. Logically, the Clinton faction of Democrats could be amenable to join forces with the administration on some issues, especially if the tendency to criminalize policy differences, a deadly contagion that began with Watergate and is now more rabidly transmitted than ever, does not lead to a resurrection of the legal soft points of the Clintons. The FBI director, James Comey, is severely compromised and has no credibility with anyone, but getting rid of him now would be more trouble than it’s worth.

The president is right not to condemn the Freedom Caucus, but not because their conduct is very distinguished. They are mainly invulnerable electorally and evince the same irreconcilable, mindless dogmatism of many otherwise-intelligent conservative commentators now reduced to declaring the president unfit, for psychiatric reasons, to hold the office to which the country has elected him. But Trump will need the Freedom Caucus and can tailor some projects to attract their support, starting with the confirmation of Judge Gorsuch.

Read more

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

9 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

I hope the bump with repeal/replace has clued in the old school that they need to include every republican into their club, Republicans are not the mindless sheep Dems are always walking lockstep for a Party and what actually beneficial to the country is secondary to the agenda. Its like the difference between being a group of adults and telling the kids to grab the rope so they dont get lost.

@kitt: Kitt–This morning Don says repeal and replace is “gonna be easy.”
This guy is a con man whose credibility is virtually gone. You know it–I know it–hell 65% of the voters know it.

@Richard Wheeler:

This guy is a con man whose credibility is virtually gone.

This coming from someone who told us for months Hillary was a shoo in for POTUS, that the dems would retake Congress, and who compared Trump’s coming loss to Goldwater’s. Given how adamant you are of how perfect Obama was/is doesn’t help your credibility either given the facts which overwhelmingly say otherwise.

@another vet: You must ignore the pathetic comments that Rich has been relegated to make. He surly has nothing to say that could be true based upon his previous predictions.

@Richard Wheeler: It will be easier if he insists on a conservative free market bill. I think he loves America and his Ego will drive him to be known as the guy who helped America back on her feet.
I cant agree with him 100 % he spent a long time as a democrat he is new at this but wants to be good at it. He is in this meat grinder less than 100 days, lets give him some time. He needs to draw Cruz, Lee and Paul a little closer and push Ryan to do the right thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qg_TRaiWj4o
You have to give me links to this stuff I no longer subscribe to Cable, they all carry CNN.

Randy A.V. and Kitt You should just keep watching Hannity and getting Trump’s tweets.
That’s all you need LOL

Behind Blue Eyes GREAT

@Richard Wheeler: Well now that was another reason to dump cable, at least he never said he was a news guy. .None of the so called news networks are news just highlights from the AP and propaganda spinning.

How many conspiracy theorists does it take to screw in a light bulb?

The world may never really know….

@Richard Wheeler: Jokes on you. I don’t watch Hannity! Spreading more fake news. Speaking of spreading fake news, in addition to the fake news you spread about how Hillary’s election was a sure thing, have you found any updates about the Minnesota cop you accused of executing the black motorist? If it was true, surely CNN, MSNBC, or SNL would have had an update by now.

I wonder how Rich is going to defend his liberal felons when they are all identified?