Friday, April 15, 2011

Obama vs. Ryan, ctd.

Joe Klein on GOP reactions to Obama's budget (via the Dish):
And so it's painful when reality intrudes. Here is the reality: the Republicans have spent the past 30 years creating deficits and the Democrats have spent the past 30 years closing them. The unimportance of deficits became an article of faith during the second Bush Administration: "Reagan proved that deficits don't matter," Dick Cheney famously said. It has been rather hilarious for those of us with even a minimal grasp of recent history to watch these folks pull fierce 180-degree turns on the issue--and it is even more hilarious to watch them accuse Obama of hyper-partisanship after the dump-truck full of garbage they visited upon his head these past few years.
Indeed, the sheer hatred that Republicans have for Obama has led them to overreach, to latch onto Paul Ryan's well-outside-the-mainstream budget plan. They now face a presidential election where they are completely tied to the idea of destroying the most popular government program out there--Medicare. They are now tied to the incredibly cruel and witless notion that they're going to ask 90-year-olds to make free market choices, with vouchers constantly diminishing in value, in an extremely complicated health market. And most important, as the President said, they are now tied to a slick attempt to make middle class people pay more for Medicare while demanding lower taxes for the wealthy.
Republicans are their own worst enemies.  They are also the worst enemies of the middle class.  As poorly informed as this electorate is, and as bad off as this economy is, Republicans would have a good shot at winning back the White House if they didn't shoot themselves in the foot all the time.  I don't understand why Republicans hate passenger rail, when they are always riding the economic policy crazy train.  It is good to see mainstream journalists call them out on it.

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