CyclopsRock
Member
Actually Americas elected a Democratic House, but due to gerrymandering the Republicans held it. I think this has been explained to you before.
And this manifests itself in political bargaining as "strength" how?
Actually Americas elected a Democratic House, but due to gerrymandering the Republicans held it. I think this has been explained to you before.
And this manifests itself in political bargaining as "strength" how?
Really? Yes, it's true that some higher income brackets got their taxes hiked but in exchange the Dems lost the estate tax, and the capital gains/dividends tax, permanently. The latter in particular are huge wins for the Republicans.
Well, personally, I think it would've required an immense effort just to extract marginally higher tax rates on those things and probably not without trading something in return. Instead, Democrats got a good percent of what they wanted and didn't have to give much of anything up. And Obama, in setting up another fight, still ensures another deal in the next few months. The lesson the GOP shouldn't be taking away is some self-aggrandizing nonsense about how they forced Obama to capitulate, because they also gave up quite a lot.Really? Yes, it's true that some higher income brackets got their taxes hiked but in exchange the Dems lost the estate tax, and the capital gains/dividends tax, permanently. The latter in particular are huge wins for the Republicans.
Why are you going around the issue? If the House Republicans received less votes than their Democratic counterparts, then they have no legs on which to stand. They're not representing the wishes of those that have been elected.
Eh. You didn't really say much in that entire post. Obama ran on a platform of raising taxes on the wealthy. He won. Democrats retained control of the Senate and gained seats, and received the most votes in the House. Therefore they have a greater bargaining position and a mandate.I don't think it's me that's going around the issue. My original post was in response to someone saying that the Democrats "caved on everything" - my point was that nothing has changed since before the election in terms of their bargaining position. Ok, so they won a few seats so they could afford a few less compromises, but even that depends entirely on the individuals won and lost. Their ability to withstand "caving" was basically identical to how it was before the latest election. Moral mandates do nothing to change that.
Re: the whole "mandate" issue (which wasn't my point, but it is interesting to discuss - and I live in a country where there have been times that control of our entire government and legislature has been comprised by a party that received less votes than another at an election but won for many of the same reasons), do you have any links to the 'gerrymandering'? - that's a fairly serious accusation to level at a process that's based on census results and received no (upheld) legal challenge. That's a genuine question - it's not a process I followed at all, as someone that doesn't live in the US.
But as a wider point, it's an interesting fact that it can happen, but at the end of the day, there's only a single person that's voted in at a national level - the President; and there are now 47.2% of people in the country who receive absolutely no representation at all in the executive. Anyone else (House + Senate reps) is only representing an area within that nation, and once you devolve elections down to such an area, you inherently get the chance that the party that receives less votes could still gain a national majority of seats; But at the same time, you also end up with less people finding themselves represented by someone they didn't vote for. Genuine question: In how many US States did the winning party in the US House elections [I know they're not done at a state level] receive less than Obama's 51%? I suspect it won't be many.
tl;dr there are more ways to determine a mandate than simply who has the largest national popular vote.
So what happened after Boehner reiterated "go fuck yourself." In my brief experience, those sorts of "conversations" don't end there.
And (I know this is a dumb question, but bear with me), if we stop t-bill payments, then no one buys them anymore, and we're just royally fucked, correct? As in, we cannot finance our existing debt anymore?
Eh. You didn't really say much in that entire post. Obama ran on a platform of raising taxes for the wealthy. He won. Democrats retained control of the Senate and gained seats, and received the most votes in the House. Therefore they have a greater bargaining position and a mandate.
I don't even think we're talking about the same thing. You're talking about a moral mandate, I'm taking about actual political power. A moral mandate doesn't help in bargaining positions because the Republicans aren't going to say "Oh, go on then, we'll go against what we think is best - afterall, you have a moral mandate." They think they're right, in the same way the Democrats think that they're right. "Bargaining position" and "a mandate" are two very different things, though in a decent political system they should be aligned.
Did the House not cave yesterday and vote for the Senate bill?
Really? Yes, it's true that some higher income brackets got their taxes hiked but in exchange the Dems lost the estate tax, and the capital gains/dividends tax, permanently. The latter in particular are huge wins for the Republicans.
Obama wasnt able to let bush tax cuts expire at all in 2010, which is why he punted it after the election. Iirc, this is the only second time Obama was able to raise taxes in his first term after ACA. Also, the earlier debt ceiling deal that republicans rejected in 2011 was better for them than this deal today.
Obama wasnt able to let bush tax cuts expire at all in 2010, which is why he punted it after the election. Iirc, this is the only second time Obama was able to raise taxes in his first term after ACA. Also, the earlier debt ceiling deal that republicans rejected in 2011 was better for them than this deal today.
Republicans thought they could make Obama a one term president by stalling economy and blaming him for a slowdown. Obama won by a pretty nice margin and teapartiers got the boot, and there is an open revolt by teaparty caucus against the speaker, whose position now is perilous. All thesr tailwinds behind Obama made today's deal possible. It's really not hard to understand whats going on.What's your opinion on the reason for this?
I don't get you guys sometimes. You've been criticizing the GOP for not being willing to compromize and now you shoot Obama down in flames because he just compromized.
The fact is that although the deal is not the ideal one what you wanted, it still is a good one. The republicans caved in pretty hard on taxes: you gotta remember that two weeks ago those guys were still refusing tax raises on millionaires!
Noam Schreiber sums it up:
Not yet. Although taxes are a method of behavior modification, I'm not sure we should completely encourage having children
And this manifests itself in political bargaining as "strength" how?
I don't think it's me that's going around the issue. My original post was in response to someone saying that the Democrats "caved on everything" - my point was that nothing has changed since before the election in terms of their bargaining position. Ok, so they won a few seats so they could afford a few less compromises, but even that depends entirely on the individuals won and lost. Their ability to withstand "caving" was basically identical to how it was before the latest election. Moral mandates do nothing to change that.
Because the GOP cheated it's way to holding that House. Were it not for gerymandering, the Dems would have it all. In other words, they do actually have a mandate, at least as far as public votes, opinion and the recent election go.
It's God's plan.
I do wonder what happens next. This vote came up because the stakes were so high that Boehner had to put up the vote despite being mainly a democratic one. That only came about by being after the deadline. So now we've learned literally nothing can get done without mostly democratic support, because too many of the Republicans are still way too hardlined to do anything that can pass the senate and white house. So, now what? Especially now what if Cantor does make a move for speaker. If he gets in would he have even allowed this vote, even in these worst of circumstances for his party? Perhaps he might have at the end of his rope, but he'd probably be even more reluctant than Boehner. If Boehner keeps speaker does he allow votes like these to come up again? The caucus is broken, I think, but I'm just not sure if the gate keeper is broken fully... That worries me.
I do wonder what happens next. This vote came up because the stakes were so high that Boehner had to put up the vote despite being mainly a democratic one. That only came about by being after the deadline. So now we've learned literally nothing can get done without mostly democratic support, because too many of the Republicans are still way too hardlined to do anything that can pass the senate and white house. So, now what? Especially now what if Cantor does make a move for speaker. If he gets in would he have even allowed this vote, even in these worst of circumstances for his party? Perhaps he might have at the end of his rope, but he'd probably be even more reluctant than Boehner. If Boehner keeps speaker does he allow votes like these to come up again? The caucus is broken, I think, but I'm just not sure if the gate keeper is broken fully... That worries me.
I'm just unsure of the dynamics here now. It looks like the debt ceiling fight will probably go to or past the deadline again because of this. You can't negotiate in good faith with Boehner or the house, and if you negotiate outside of it, in the Senate, the house still throws a wrench into things.
Basically how the hell do we get anything done without plunging the economy into more "wtf is going on here!?" sorts of spurts?
As of this writing, every single state except Hawaii has finalized its vote totals for the 2012 House elections, and Democrats currently lead Republicans by 1,362,351 votes in the overall popular vote total. Democratic House candidates earned 49.15 percent of the popular vote, while Republicans earned only 48.03 percent meaning that the American people preferred a unified Democratic Congress over the divided Congress it actually got by more than a full percentage point. Nevertheless, thanks largely to partisan gerrymandering, Republicans have a solid House majority in the incoming 113th Congress.
A deeper dive into the vote totals reveals just how firmly gerrymandering entrenched Republican control of the House. If all House members are ranked in order from the Republican members who won by the widest margin down to the Democratic members who won by the widest margins, the 218th member on this list is Congressman-elect Robert Pittenger (R-NC). Thus, Pittenger was the turning point member of the incoming House. If every Republican who performed as well or worse than Pittenger had lost their race, Democrats would hold a one vote majority in the incoming House.
Pittenger won his race by more than six percentage points 51.78 percent to 45.65 percent.
The upshot of this is that if Democrats across the country had performed six percentage points better than they actually did last November, they still would have barely missed capturing a majority in the House of Representatives. In order to take control of the House, Democrats would have needed to win the 2012 election by 7.25 percentage points. Thats significantly more than the Republican margin of victory in the 2010 GOP wave election (6.6 percent), and only slightly less than the margin of victory in the 2006 Democratic wave election (7.9 percent). If Democrats had won in 2012 by the same commanding 7.9 percent margin they achieved in 2006, they would still only have a bare 220-215 seat majority in the incoming House, assuming that these additional votes were distributed evenly throughout the country. Thats how powerful the GOPs gerrymandered maps are; Democrats can win a Congressional election by nearly 8 points and still barely capture the House.
For two months, the nation has suffered through a fiscal cliff argument that threatened to plunge the nation into another recession. If the incoming Congress bore any resemblance to the one the American people voted for, however, this threat would have disappeared on Election Day because Speaker-elect Nancy Pelosi would have no problem rounding up the votes to eliminate this so-called cliff and set America back on the path to economic growth.
Worse, top Republicans are already threatening to use the looming debt ceiling fight to torpedo the entire U.S. economy unless Congress agrees to slash Social Security or Medicare benefits for seniors. They will have the leverage to attempt this because the incoming House bears no resemblance to the one America actually voted for. And individual Republican House members will be able to engage in this political dangerous game of chicken comfortable in the knowledge that partisan gerrymandering makes many of them untouchable in a general election.
Partisan gerrymanders, like the one that now all but locks the GOP majority in place, have been the subject of repeated court challenges. America can thank the five conservative justices on the Supreme Court for allowing these gerrymanders to continue.
Who cares? Obama did fine.
Obama cut no entitlements.
He extended UE benefits.
He got what will probably end up at $700 billion in revenue (bottom of $620 billion) all from the wealthy.
I'm fine with it. he also built up massive capital with the public. liberals starting to sound as bad as the conservatives. WAAAAH I DIDN'T GET EVERYTHING WAAAH,
Go over?
250k is 450k. Dividends and capital gain tax raises are a joke. No debt limit change and a 2 month delay in the cuts? Keeping some terrible tax credits and getting rid of others.
No republican would ever take a 50/50 deal like this after the last election. Democrats are very good at capitulating.
Add someone else said here I'd love to have Obama try to sell me a car. 50k car at cost? I'll offer to pay 20k max. Obama would sell it to me for 35k and pay the remaining out of his paycheck for the next year.
We do the only thing we can do. Wait till 2014.
Speaking of which....
Speakers need a majority of the house, not a majority of the majority party, right? If so we may end up seeing that vote fall more along the lines of the cliff vote, with Boehner working with Democrats to maintain his role and further marginalize the Tea Partiers. (Or, comedy result, return of Speaker Pelosi.) If not... yea that's gonna be interesting.
But if Boehner does retain speakership, it'll obviously be by way of Democrats, who will certainly be able to have him by the balls and exert some volume of control.
It's the majority of the votes cast, which is exactly why the minority party can't win (unless some people in the majority party decide not to vote for anyone).Yeah I'm really not sure how speakership battles tend to go, or how that would change at a time like this. I'm pretty sure it is just a majority of the house, rather than the majority of a party. So, will Cantor's little insurrection risk losing speakership in order to not vote Boehner? I would think the majority of the time they'd vote in lock step so as not to lose the speakership to the minority party. That'd be pretty awful for them if they did.
It's the majority of the votes cast, which is exactly why the minority party can't win (unless some people in the majority party decide not to vote for anyone).
I'm pretty sure it's a completely open vote, you always get a couple of votes for random people, and I think you just repeat the vote until someone gets a majority, but again, this shit never happens.Does it go down to two candidates at the end, then? One from each party? So we'd see whether it'll be Cantor or Boehner before the votes are even cast?
Re: the whole "mandate" issue (which wasn't my point, but it is interesting to discuss - and I live in a country where there have been times that control of our entire government and legislature has been comprised by a party that received less votes than another at an election but won for many of the same reasons), do you have any links to the 'gerrymandering'? - that's a fairly serious accusation to level at a process that's based on census results and received no (upheld) legal challenge. That's a genuine question - it's not a process I followed at all, as someone that doesn't live in the US.
I'm pretty sure it's a completely open vote, you always get a couple of votes for random people, and I think you just repeat the vote until someone gets a majority, but again, this shit never happens.
But man, that will be HILARIOUS if it does.
The only way Pelosi can win speakership is if Republicans vote for her or not vote at all.
Yeah, the only way Pelosi can win speakership is if Republicans vote for her or not vote at all.How could a Speaker Pelosi ever happen? Republicans would need to vote for her in order to reach a majority and they would rather perform abortions on Reagan's grave than give Pelosi any power.
Or am I misunderstanding the procedure? I thought a House majority, not a plurality, is necessary to elect the Speaker.
Yeah, the only way Pelosi can win speakership is if Republicans vote for her or not vote at all.
If it comes down to Boehner v. Cantor (ie. if there are not enough republican support for either to get a majority) democrats should consider voting for Boehner. Their votes don't matter anyway, he is easier to work with, and it would make dems look bipartisan as fuck.
The thought of a Cantor House is scary. It would be good politically for dems in 2014 but it would be even more of a disaster functionally.
Ah, that's what I was trying to ask before. So Republicans can't split their own vote for Cantor and Boehner leaving the Dems as a solid block? They'll literally have only one candidate up for speakership at the end, right, be it Cantor or Boehner?
That's not going to happen unless there's a big-time civil war in the party. If the Cantor & Boehner forces were that sharply divided they'd probably end up nominating a 3rd person that both sides could live with.
It would leak out who was going to win so everyone would probably know.The dems would have to now the R vote was split to make a move like that too. Would the R's vote first?
We do the only thing we can do. Wait till 2014.
Speaking of which....
I think at this point I would rather Cantor. House republicans were so, so, so close to getting destroyed by the country last night. If Cantor was the speaker instead of Boehner, I don't think the bill even gets voted on and we all watch the republicans weaken their negotiating position while continuing to destroy their brand.
Do you have a link to that article? I want to share it
We do the only thing we can do. Wait till 2014.
Speaking of which....