The Pottery Barn Rule, GOP Edition: I Broke It, You Buy It
The first House vote on the bailout just failed, 208-225. Republican congressmen voted against it by a two-to-one margin. This would seem to be a problem, not only for the rest of us, who will suffer for it, but also for Republican politicians.
So what do you do if you’re a Republican congressman? Do you accept some responsibility for the fiasco? Of course not. You, the party of macho moose hunters and multi-day snowmachine racers, blame the tone of Nancy Pelosi’s pre-vote speech:
Some members of the House GOP are blaming Speaker Pelosi’s hard-edged partisan speech for the loss.
“Progress had been marked by magnaminity with Frank, and Hoyer … Hers (speech) had a partisan tone,” said Rep. Adam Putnam.
Suddenly the enduring popularity of the Republican party makes complete sense to me: being a conservative means never having to take responsibility for anything.
P.S. I’d sure love to be there for the Boehner-McCain phone call that is probably happening, oh, right about now.
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Second Quick Update (#1 below): McCain’s campaign is giving it a whirl as well, blaming Pelosi’s tone and (surprise!) Obama for the House Republicans’ vote:
Just before the vote, when the outcome was still in doubt, Speaker Pelosi gave a strongly worded partisan speech and poisoned the outcome.This bill failed because Barack Obama and the Democrats put politics ahead of country.
Good luck with that one, guys.
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Third Quick Update: Seems there is at least one honest Republican left. Courtesy of The Corner:
Rich – I’m afraid Rep. Frank has a point on this one. Some feelings on the GOP side were hurt, so they voted against the economic well-being of the country?
Sincerely,
A very concerned GOP staffer.
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Quick Update: What do you do if you’re a Democrat in Congress? Noah Millman has the answer:
The Democrats met the Administration more than halfway, and the GOP leadership could not deliver the promised 80 votes. Tomorrow, the Democrats introduce their own bill, pass it on a party-line vote, and dare the Administration to veto.
There are lots and lots of reasons not to like this bill. But most of those reasons are Democratic talking points. The GOP alternative proposal was borderline illiterate.
While they’re at it, you’d hope that they’d go ahead and do it right, nationalizing and recapitalizing failing banks as Yves Smith and Nouriel Roubini and Paul Krugman have been advocating. Odds of that happening? I’m going with zero to none.
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