The whole setup is stupid, due to a chain of constitutional oddities. There's no distinction between budget votes and other kinds of votes. Most other systems, Westminster-style or otherwise, have a process which results in either a budget being passed or a fresh election being held which should result in a majority capable of passing one.
The US system has elevated a denial of service attack (filibuster) to the status of important democratic ritual. This doesn't help either.
("Funding continues as-is" may be rendered impossible by external factors, as in the Greek budget crisis.)
It is impossible for this not to be a political topic and I probably shouldn’t be even discussing it here, but whatever.
What would be the reasonable thing for the democrats to do right now? They weren’t allowed to see the tax bill. That’s what happens when something has the 51 republicans and it can’t be filibustered in the current environment.
Further, the republicans haven’t even brought a bill forward to be filibustered likely because they don’t have the votes in their own party.
I’m fairly centrist for this site but the republicans controlling every part of the government as well as already using their reconciliation power and blaming the democrats is so shockingly perverse in its cinycism. That’s before you even take into account the duplicity on DACA that has broad bipartisan support up to a meeting with the president last week.
Neither morally or strategically should the democrats budge on this.
Except they are hurting tons of people in the US in exchange for strategy. That's simply not right.
And of all issues DACA? It's important to some people, but as a national topic it's pretty minor.
> What would be the reasonable thing for the democrats to do right now?
Realize they are weak and accept it. Then take the offer they were given and do the best they can. But don't hurt unrelated people in the US to try to increase their own strength.
As a national issue, deporting people who should by rights be citizens and have known no other country than ours, many of whom are parents of actual American citizens, children, citizens, who might not even know Spanish, that's a minor issue?
In comparative terms it's minor: 35 million enrolled in CHIP [0] (shutdown) vs. 3.5 million DACA. Hopefully all would agree that neither is minor from a moral standpoint.
... Until they did? Your comment is true of all bills and all proposals. "Party X was free to vote on it, they chose not to. Until they chose to." Furthermore, the minority had promised to veto all funding unless DACA was included, at all times. Regardless, the above comment was simply pointing out the difference in terms of magnitude.
Maybe the simple reading of the statement is true of everything, but what’s unique here is that it was deliberately held up so it could be used as a bludgeon during the shutdown negotiations.
Especially egregious was the fact that it had broad bipartisan support, and had been scored by the CBO to save money. The health and welfare of children was used as a political bludgeon.
The 51 seat party should simply out forward a bill that can be accepted by 60 seats. If they fail, they should take 100% responsibility. Republicans have to concede that those last 9 seats are democrat seats and the power of those seats is (perhaps unfairly) almost as big as the 51 first seats, but the responsibility still lies with the majority to govern.
You know, like I'm sure you wanted the Republicans to do under Cruz in 2013?
Shame on the Democrats for opposing the Republican party, as the Republican party did the last eight years. They should just "realize they're weak and accept it [and do what they're told]".
The sad thing about this is that you most likely you think your perspective is eminently objective and unbiased.
I personally, was totally against the tax cut after reading about it in the media.
Then it actually passed and the media (yup, that same media) put out some calculators. I played with those, and realized I was seriously mislead.
Wait another month, when people will get higher paychecks, and see if it's still unpopular.
I really wish the media would stop telling me how to think. Just tell me what happened. Leave out the reactions, and quotes from "other people" telling me what I should think about a topic.
Best I can do right now is read opposing media outlets and contrast them, but it's hard to do.
So? The survey is older than the present. The comments I've seen online and in person show that people actually do support it, which will only increase once higher paychecks arrive.
Are you? I don’t think the popularity of the tax cut is terribly relevant, although its unpopularity makes this cock-up worse. You felt it was worth correcting, but you can’t back it up with anything more than anecdotes or guesswork. So what’s the point of arguing?
The US system has elevated a denial of service attack (filibuster) to the status of important democratic ritual. This doesn't help either.
("Funding continues as-is" may be rendered impossible by external factors, as in the Greek budget crisis.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss_of_supply