April was a
startling month, a microcosm of the 21st century to date. These are our times:
·
Madmen
control inhumane weapons that are used, or threatened for use, on our homeland
and abroad.
·
We
“respond” spectacularly in many ways: heroic first responders who instinctively
treat the wounded; relentless investigators who quickly close in on the
perpetrators; and, in the Obama Administration, nimble diplomats who work hard
to defuse the most titanic of threats.
·
And
yet, when it comes to “prevention,” specifically preventive legislation, our
elected officials, our Congress in particular, fail us with numbing regularity.
It was all
on display in April, which started with Kim Jung-Un of North Korea ,
the 28-year old dictator, threatening the use of nuclear weapons against, among
others, South Koreans and, for some odd reason, Texans. It ended with clear evidence of the use of
chemical weapons on the part of the hideous Syrian government. Both events were sobering to say the least, each
testing our ability to demonstrate strength, respond effectively, and yet avoid
knee-jerk military responses. The Obama
Administration has worked hard to avoid overreacting, earning plaudits across
the board. John Kerry’s round-the-globe
dash appears to have resulted in a North Korean back down, and Obama’s “go
slow” approach to the Syrian threat also ensures that every avenue will be
exhausted before American troops are deployed.
In Boston , we were again
confronted with terror on our homeland, and the images of bloody victims,
heroic “first responders” and breathtaking investigative work to catch the
perpetrators will be enduring images.
President Obama once again shined in his role as First Healer, with a
speech that even Mitt Romney declared was “superb.”
But
politically, the month was defined by the demise of the gun control bill in the
Senate. The provision seen as most
effective by Americans in actually preventing future Newtown-esque nightmares was
the Manchin-Toomey Amendment to expand background checks to gun show and
Internet sales. This proposal has the
support of roughly 90% of Americans, according to numerous polls. And yet even this provision failed, securing
only 54 votes, 6 short of the required 60, including “nay” votes from four
Democrats in gun-friendly states. Other gun
control measures fared even worse.
The
aftermath of this failure has been fascinating.
President Obama came under attack, with some of the pundits (including
Maureen Dowd) voicing the view that it must be Obama’s fault if he cannot
translate 90% public approval into 60 votes.
This is a flawed read to my mind, an utter denial of the obvious truth
that Washington
has changed, as backroom deals continue to recede in the face of near-total
polarization of our political environment.
Does anyone really think that world-class schmoozer Bill Clinton could
have pulled out six more votes? Get
real.
More
interesting, to me, was the negative polling aftermath for a number of Senators
who opposed the Manchin-Toomey Amendment.
Public Policy Polling (PPP) has been running a number of polls on
various Senators approval ratings, pre-vote versus post-vote. The pattern is that approval ratings seem to
be falling among those who voted against the gun control measures (and
vice versa). This might mean these some
senators misread their constituents in opposing the measures, since the data
shows overwhelming support. Democrats
are already working to see how a revised bill might be crafted to win the
requisite six additional votes, working on those who appear to be feeling the
backlash.
|
|
% Favoring
|
Vote On
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expanded
|
Expanded
|
Approval Rating
|
Change
|
|
|
State -
|
Background
|
Background
|
Before Vote
|
After Vote
|
Net
|
Senator
|
Party
|
Checks
|
Checks
|
Pos/Neg (Net)
|
Pos/Neg (Net)
|
Approval
|
Flake
|
|
70%
|
No
|
n/a
|
32/51 (-19)
|
n/a
|
Murkowsky
|
|
60%
|
No
|
54/33 (+21)
|
46/41 (+5)
|
-16
|
Begisch
|
|
60%
|
No
|
49/39 (+10)
|
41/37 (+4)
|
-6
|
Ayotte
|
NH - R
|
70%
|
No
|
49/35 (+14)
|
44/46 (-2)
|
-16
|
Portman
|
|
72%
|
No
|
35/25 (+10)
|
26/34 (-8)
|
-18
|
Heller
|
|
70%
|
No
|
47/42 (+5)
|
44/41 (+3)
|
-2
|
Landrieu
|
Loius. - D
|
72%
|
Yes
|
47/45 (+2)
|
49/41 (+8)
|
+6
|
Finally,
President Obama submitted his budget, leaving us with three different budgets
(Senate, House, White House) that have no chance of reconciliation, thereby
inhibiting our economic prospects and allowing the insidious sequester to
continue. That is, unless you are an air
traveler, the Republicans swiftly led the process by which funds were restored
to rehire furloughed air traffic controllers.
If you are at lower levels of Maslow’s Hierarchy than “delayed flights”
and are merely, say, hungry as a result of the sequester, you remain so.
It should
be pointed out that the Obama Administration caved on the air traffic controllers
too, after initially staking out a position that there should be no changes
short of an overhaul, proving once again that courage is sometimes lacking from
all sides.
The
political news from the Obama Budget was his willingness to put forward entitlement
cuts. Any responsible plan to reduce our
annual deficit must include entitlement reform of some magnitude, so
bravo. But this will be an election
issue in 2014. Incredibly,
Representative Greg Walden (R-Oregon), the chair of the House Republican’s
re-election committee, called the Budget a “shocking attack on seniors,” which
is a text-book definition of “cynicism” since of course Republicans would go
much further than Obama’s proposed cuts.
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