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One News Now:
PERSPECTIVES:
Oba-Kabuki: A box-office bomb
by Michelle Malkin - Syndicated Columnist
OneNewsNow.com
February 26, 2010
The Oba-Kabuki
healthcare show at Blair House kicked off with a big lie on Thursday
morning -- and it all went downhill from there. The taxpayer-funded
infomercial backfired by exposing the president's thin skin, the
Democrats' naked disingenuousness, and the ruling majority's allergies to
political and policy realities.
Responding to Sen.
Lamar Alexander's opening call for Democrats to renounce parliamentary
tactics designed to limit debate, circumvent filibusters, and lower the
threshold for passage of healthcare reform to a simple 51-vote majority,
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid sputtered indignantly: "No one's talking
about reconciliation!" Everybody and their mother has been invoking the
"R" word on Capitol Hill, starting with Reid.
In a letter on Feb. 16, four Democratic senators pushed Reid to adopt the
procedure, normally reserved for budget matters. A few days later, White
House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs discussed the option. Then Reid himself
talked up reconciliation on a Nevada public affairs show as an option to
ram the government healthcare takeover through in the next 60 days.
According to The Hill, Reid said that "congressional Democrats
would likely opt for a procedural tactic in the Senate allowing the upper
chamber to make final changes to its healthcare bill with only a simple
majority of senators, instead of the 60 it takes to normally end a
filibuster." A few days after that, Reid snapped that Republicans "should
stop crying" about the abrogation of Senate minority rights, since the GOP
had used the reconciliation process in the past.
So, the cleanest, most ethical holier-than-thou Congress ever is now
defending the unprecedented adoption of ram-down rules for a radical,
multi-trillion-dollar program to usurp one-seventh of the economy on the
grounds of "two wrongs make it right"? Hope and change, baby.
For his part, President Obama responded with one part pique and two parts
diffidence. After the summit lunch break, Republicans pushed the
reconciliation issue again in the face of the Democrats' refusal to
disavow the short-circuiting of the deliberative process. "The American
people," an annoyed Obama asserted, "are not all that interested in
procedures inside the Senate." Oh, really? A new USA Today/Gallup
poll reports that 52 percent of Americans oppose using the procedural
maneuver to pass the healthcare bill in the Senate.
The survey also showed that Americans oppose Demcare-style healthcare
"reform" by 49 percent to 42 percent -- with those "strongly" opposed
outnumbering those "strongly" in favor by 23 percent to 11 percent.
Obama's best and brightest team of Chicago strategists, new-media gurus,
and communications specialists still hasn't figured it out: Voters are as
fed up with the corrupt process in Washington as they are with the White
House's overreaching policies. It's both, stupid.
When he wasn't cutting off Republicans who stuck to budget specifics and
cited legislative page numbers and language instead of treacly, sob-story
anecdotes involving dentures and gallstones, Obama was filibustering the
talk-a-thon away by invoking his daughters, rambling on about auto
insurance and sniping at former GOP presidential rival John McCain. "We're
not campaigning anymore," lectured the perpetual campaigner-in-chief.
After ostentatiously disputing the GOP's claims that healthcare premiums
would rise under his plan, Obama walked it back. Confronted with more GOP
pushback on the failure of Demcare to control costs, Obama told GOP Rep.
Paul Ryan that he'd rather not "get bogged down in numbers." Not numbers
that he couldn't cook on the spot without staff consultation, anyway.
Obama and the Democrats labored mightily to create the illusion of
almost-there bipartisanship by repeatedly telling disagreeing Republicans
that "we don't disagree" and "there's not a lot of difference" between us.
But the dogs weren't riding the ponies in this show.
This was a set-up from the start. The "we're so close" mantra is the
rhetorical wedge the White House will use to blame Republicans for fatal
obstructionism, while whitewashing festering opposition from both pro-life
Democrats who oppose the government funding of abortion services still in
the plan and left-wing progressives in the House who are clinging to a
full, unadulterated public option.
While Republicans came off well, the six-hour blowhard-fest was a
monumental waste of time. Obamacare Theater tied up GOP energy and
resources as the White House readies its "Plan B" (expanding government
healthcare coverage, just at a slower pace) and Democratic leaders prep
their reconciliation ram-down for early next week. This Washington
box-office bomb is a prelude to much bigger legislative horrors still to
come. Don't you love farce?
COPYRIGHT 2010
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Michelle Malkin (malkinblog@gmail.com)
is author of "Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks &
Cronies" (Regnery 2009).
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