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Tuesday, May 03, 2005
Bill Murchison :: Townhall.com Columnist
A party in the 'no'
by Bill Murchison
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A sure way to inspire correspondence from one of my dedicated readers -- we'll call her Jane -- is to intimate by phrase or nuance that anything is amiss with the Democratic Party. Pending word of her abduction by space aliens, I anticipate an explosion from the general direction of Jane's domicile.

 Washington, D.C., Democrats are demonstrating what Jane might call heroic indomitability. I suggest a likelier phrase: mulish intractability.

 We are at one of those phases in our national affairs where, if George W. Bush sauntered outside and commented on the blueness of the sky, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid would call a press conference and score the president's appalling sense of color. As if any idiot couldn't tell the sky was light purple!

 A sense of frustration settles over the White House, no doubt, but also over the country. We can't get anything done. The likelihood of Democrats working constructively with the president equates with Jennifer Wilbanks' prospects for a golden wedding anniversary with John Mason.

 I need to acknowledge for Jane's sake, and that of Jane's co-believers, that no impasse is ever the complete fault of one person or party. To adduce some lost era of bipartisan amity would be just plain nutty. The essence of partisan politics is competition for the power that comes with winning the most votes; that is why parties aren't ever, shall we say, unduly nice to each other. The Democrats and John Kerry thought they deserved to beat the Republicans and Bush last year. They didn't and they don't like it.

 How much don't they like it? So much that they:

 1) have stalled and possibly killed Social Security reform for the foreseeable future,

 2) decided the president doesn't get to name the judges he wants to name,

 3) decided the president doesn't get to name the United Nations envoy he wants to name, and

 4) blocked a number of other cabinet appointments for purposes it is hard to characterize as other than partisan (e.g., they won't let Lester Crawford become Food and Drug Administration commissioner until the FDA decides on making the morning-after pill available).

 Capitol Hill Democrats protest that each of these issues is a matter of principle. No doubt they are right: The principle is that George W. Bush gets nothing out of this session of Congress. Continued...

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About The Author
Bill Murchison is a senior columns writer for The Dallas Morning News and author of There's More to Life Than Politics.
 
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