ChrisWeigant.com

Who Will Sit On The 1/6 Select Committee?

[ Posted Wednesday, June 30th, 2021 – 15:40 UTC ]

The House of Representatives just passed a measure to create a select committee to investigate the 1/6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, and all the things which led up to it and fed into it. This will be a partisan undertaking, as the 13 members of this committee will be named by Speaker Nancy Pelosi -- and while she may be open to allowing up to six Republicans on it, she will also have the power to veto any suggestions made by Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. It is looking like this committee will provide the most substantive and wide-reaching investigation into all the things which were allowed to go wrong. That's important, because America really does deserve to know the truth -- the whole truth -- about what happened that dark day.

Most House Republicans are incensed. But they simply have no leg to stand on. They really don't. In the first place, while a number of Republicans in the House voted for what would have been a much better way to handle this (a nonpartisan special commission comprised solely of people who were not sitting members of Congress), in the end this measure fell at least three votes short of breaking the inevitable filibuster in the Senate. So Republicans had their chance to get on board with a better way to do it, and they torpedoed this effort. Therefore, they have no real right to complain now about the select committee being "too partisan."

Secondly, one word puts the lie to the moral high road House Republicans are attempting to walk: Benghazi. Republicans, when they were in charge of the chamber, felt no compunction whatsoever to set up purely partisan committees to investigate something they thought would tarnish the leading Democratic presidential candidate -- indeed, over and over again. There were multiple investigations into Benghazi, please remember. The very same Kevin McCarthy even admitted that they were set up to worsen Hillary Clinton's chances of becoming president. And the exact same rules for naming members to the committee applied -- Pelosi (who was only the minority leader, back then) was allowed to put forward names, and McCarthy had the power to veto any of them. In fact, they copied this language exactly in the 1/6 measure, to make this point obvious. So all those House Republicans who now will flood the cable news airwaves with their faux outrage and indignation should immediately be reminded of Hillary Clinton sitting in front of a committee hearing for 11 hours straight, answering every rude and insulting question the Republicans could dream up. Because not until Donald Trump runs a similar gauntlet will things even begin to approach parity, on this front.

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Let The Haggling Begin

[ Posted Tuesday, June 29th, 2021 – 15:46 UTC ]

So far, most of the attention on the progress of President Joe Biden's economic agenda has been on the bipartisan infrastructure deal. It went first, so it got the spotlight first. Now that the Republicans and Democrats seem to be in the final stages of hammering out a deal, the attention is soon going to shift to the second part of the plan: the budget reconciliation bill that will be designed to make it through the Senate solely with Democratic support.

As I've been pointing out, the most interesting thing about this bill is that Senator Bernie Sanders is in charge of writing it. Bernie's not on the outside looking in anymore, he now chairs the Senate's budget committee. And he's about to flex his power for the first time. Although the key will be (as always, these days) what Senator Joe Manchin will agree to. And this past weekend, this bidding game began in earnest.

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Biden Should Have Let Pelosi Take The Heat

[ Posted Monday, June 28th, 2021 – 15:07 UTC ]

President Joe Biden made a political mistake, last week. Thankfully, it looks like he has rectified it with the right people, meaning it will not be a major stumbling block in the continuing negotiations over his hoped-for bipartisan infrastructure deal with a group of moderate Republican senators. Biden walked his error back, and everyone sounded placated a few days later, and now the process is back on track once again. So far so good. But Biden never needed to get out in front of this issue in the first place, because Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi had already volunteered to take all the political heat. Which is precisely what Biden will now allow her to do, and what he really should have done from the start.

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Friday Talking Points -- The Art Of The Deal

[ Posted Friday, June 25th, 2021 – 17:49 UTC ]

Call it true irony. The man who had a book ghost-written for him called "The Art Of The Deal" could never actually manage to strike any kind of deal. So the man who replaced him ran on his own dealmaking skills, in a time where pretty much everyone in Washington considered the idea too old-fashioned to ever work. But President Joe Biden just got his first big deal, this week. A bipartisan infrastructure plan is now going to move forward in the United States Senate and has what can only be called a better-than-average chance of passing.

Biden doesn't just value bipartisanship for bipartisanship's sake, of course. He truly does believe in the concept and really would prefer Congress return to the days of yore when bipartisanship was actually pretty common (always hard-fought, but mostly achieved). But at the same time, Biden is a politician and knows full well what this will mean for him, personally.

Now, Biden is savvy enough not to say this until after he signs the bill, because he knows how fragile the applecart is right now, and how there are many things which could still upset it before it does arrive on his desk. But immediately after he does sign it, he will quite likely say something along the lines of: "Cynical people thought it wasn't even possible to bring the politicians from both sides of the aisle together to get something done. I never believed that. I think America works best when we work together, and I have always believed that. I promised bipartisanship during my campaign, and many in my own party scoffed at the idea. But here we are, with the proof that -- with leadership and support -- it is still possible."

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A Successful Endgame Emerges

[ Posted Thursday, June 24th, 2021 – 15:03 UTC ]

After months of breathless anticipation, a path forward just hove into sight. The legislative endgame for a major portion of President Joe Biden's agenda is now in view. And -- surprise! -- it looks like a bipartisan infrastructure deal will actually be a part of it. I fully admit I was wrong about this one, because I have been cynically calling the entire negotiating process Kabuki theater and I would have put the odds of failure much higher than the odds of success. But today, Biden publicly appeared with the Republicans who have been negotiating with him and the Democrats, and he formally put his seal of approval on the last-ditch offer the Republicans just made. By doing so, Biden opens the door to having two successful bills arrive on his desk, one with 10 or more Republican senators' votes and the other passed on strictly partisan lines. As I've been saying all along, the American people just do not care about the process, so this whole exercise was pretty pointless, to me, but it now at least it looks like it's going to be successful.

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Social Security For Kids

[ Posted Wednesday, June 23rd, 2021 – 15:40 UTC ]

I just read one of the most hopeful articles I think I've ever read about the Democratic Party. Nancy Pelosi and the White House are making a huge push to get all Democrats to get out there and toot their own horns. This really shouldn't be all that amazing -- it shouldn't even be news because it should be so routine -- but it really is, since Democrats have long been particularly bad in this regard. Republicans know how to settle on one songbook and then endlessly sing the same thing from it -- for just weeks on end. But Democrats have never had that singular focus, which is part of the reason why I became a blogger in the first place (in the hopes that they would, eventually).

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Happy Birthday, Dianne Feinstein. Now, Please Step Down?

[ Posted Tuesday, June 22nd, 2021 – 15:52 UTC ]

Dianne Feinstein was born in 1933. She was 11 years old (two months' shy of turning 12) before any president in her lifetime was not named "Franklin Delano Roosevelt." She was not a baby boomer, she was a Great Depression baby. She probably grew up listening to F.D.R.'s fireside chats on the family radio. Not television, mind you, radio. That's how old she is.

When Feinstein was born, there were only 20 amendments to the U.S. Constitution (there are now 27). Her mother was four months pregnant with her when the most recent amendment had been added, which changed the date of the presidential inauguration from March 4 to January 20. Prohibition was still in effect when Feinstein was born, but (ironically) under federal law "marihuana" was still legal. The first drive-in movie theater opened the same month as her birth. At the end of 1933, FM radio received a patent. That was the world Dianne Feinstein was born into.

As can be readily seen, that world is so far removed from today as to be almost unrecognizable. And yet Feinstein is still one of California's two sitting United States senators, representing almost 40 million people. She has now been senator for 29 years.

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Reconciliation Needs To Pass First

[ Posted Monday, June 21st, 2021 – 16:29 UTC ]

To an outsider, what is happening in Washington right now is splitting hairs for no particular reason. It won't matter to the public one whit whether what Congress passes to advance President Joe Biden's agenda is in one bill or two, or whether any Republicans vote for any part of it. The public is really only interested in results: "Did you get anything done? Are they things that will help me out?" That's it. And pretty much everything being discussed is wildly popular, proposal by proposal, so the public's going to support and enjoy seeing these programs implemented or expanded no matter what the vote count in the Senate or the House winds up being. Joe and Jane Public just do not care about any of that.

However, within the hallowed halls of Congress, this is all a very important big deal indeed. This is because two men, Joe Biden and Senator Joe Manchin, are obsessed with the concept of bipartisanship. They both really want a bill that at least 10 Republican senators can vote for. So they've both taken up an enormous amount of time to see whether that is even possible. The end result will be unveiled in a day or two, as the Republican side's final offer. Both sides have made known what their dealbreakers are, so assumably the final bill won't have any corporate tax hikes or increased gas taxes in the section on how to pay for it all. The total will be reported as "over $1 trillion" but this is all smoke and mirrors, as it will likely only contain somewhat less than $600 billion in new spending. But now that both sides are so close to an actual deal, the whole thing could fall apart. As perhaps it should.

Democrats, led in this case by Bernie Sanders (who now chairs the Senate's budget committee) have always been completely honest about their entire game plan: allow the negotiations to finish, pass the deal with a bipartisan, filibuster-proof majority, and then pass everything else in Biden's agenda in a separate budget reconciliation bill that will only require 51 votes (and can be done on partisan lines, if Manchin agrees). If the bipartisan bill doesn't pass, then everything within it will be added to the budget reconciliation bill. Either way, Biden's total agenda gets passed. That's been the plan all along.

However, there are now new fears that even this won't work. Because everyone expects the bipartisan vote to come first, with the reconciliation vote following afterwards. But this would mean that Democrats would have to take Manchin (as well as Kyrsten Sinema and possibly a few others) at his word that he was indeed going to vote for the reconciliation bill. He'll probably have some last-minute complaints and demand certain tweaks to it, but in the end he'll vote for it.

But now progressives aren't so sure. Do they have reason to worry? Well, you'd have to ask Manchin, and he's a master at being cryptic about what he will and won't support in the future.

There's another problem as well. Because now that a deal actually looks possible, some of the 11 Republican senators currently in the group holding negotiations with Biden and the Democrats are sounding awfully squishy on their own support, threatening that if Democrats do just push everything else into a second bill, then they wouldn't support the bipartisan agreement. Democrats, once again, have made absolutely no secret of their plan all along, so for Republicans to now act as if they are suddenly aware of the second bill is simply ridiculous.

Also, as many are now pointing out, the idea that one party gets this kind of say in a completely separate piece of legislation from the other party is just ludicrous. Republicans would be voting against a bill they agreed upon simply because Democrats were going to pass another bill? That's not exactly treating legislation on its merits, obviously. If the compromise deal is good enough for them to vote on, it should be good enough, period.

The way around this whole problem is for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to announce that even if a deal is reached on the bipartisan compromise (containing what Republicans deign to accept as "classic infrastructure" projects), the Senate vote on this deal will happen immediately after the budget reconciliation bill. Bernie Sanders can then write the whole bill and include everything Biden asked for in his American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan except for the things in the bipartisan infrastructure deal. But the Senate should wait until Bernie's done with this and has produced an actual bill. By holding a vote on this bill first, there would be no question about Manchin's support and any last-minute bickering with him would happen before the bipartisan bill even gets to the Senate floor.

The whole idea of doing the bipartisan bill first was that then even if it failed, it could all be included in the partisan reconciliation bill (and would probably wind up being better, since Democrats wouldn't have to worry about what any Republicans thought about it). But while switching the order of the bills would remove that backstop, it might not be the worst thing in the world.

Switching the vote order solves the first problem, at least -- progressive nervousness over Manchin and Sinema (and any other Democrats who might object to the reconciliation bill). It wouldn't be in question, if they were forced to vote first on reconciliation, in other words.

It doesn't completely solve the other problem, but that is a problem entirely created by the Republicans. Their entire game plan -- which, unlike the Democrats, they have never actually publicly admitted -- could have either been to stall Biden's agenda forever and prevent any votes on any of it from ever taking place (they've certainly used this playbook successfully before), or to take all the best parts from Biden's agenda and pass them, leaving Democrats forced to hold tough votes on things like raising taxes on corporations and high income earners. Secretly, they hoped that divisions within the Democratic Party would have meant the reconciliation bill never successfully made it through the Senate. This is all speculation, I should add -- I have no actual proof of anything Republicans are thinking or plotting. But it seems pretty obvious.

By passing the reconciliation bill first, Democrats would be risking the 11 Republicans senators getting so annoyed (at seeing such legislative success for Biden) that they wind up voting against their own negotiated compromise bill. They would still have the power to tank this bill, and if they did so Democrats could not simply then pass the deal under budget reconciliation rules, since there's a "one bite at the apple" rule -- two such bills wouldn't be allowed.

This is the biggest risk -- the one part that was supposed to be bipartisan is the part that fails, while the partisan parts pass. But would that really be such a bad thing for Democrats? In the first place, everyone would know who was to blame -- the Republicans who made a promise and then refused to honor it when it came time to vote. That's a pretty easy case to make, politically. Democrats could hammer Senate Republicans for "sabotaging infrastructure investments in the future." And secondly, while they wouldn't be allowed another bite at the apple in exactly the same way, they would still eventually be able to get the programs passed. Republicans have been trying to convince everyone that there is this sacred thing called "an infrastructure bill" and that that is not only the only way to pass such things but also that they must be hypervigilant so nothing that doesn't fit their "infrastructure" definition sneaks in somehow. But this simply isn't true. There's nothing magical about an infrastructure bill, and any of the infrastructure ideas could be passed in (for instance) next year's budget. So Biden's agenda might be delayed, but in the end might wind up being signed into law anyway.

The only really tough thing in all of this is assuaging the hurt feelings of both Manchin and the 11 Republicans. Schumer will have to be careful not to be too blatant about why he's switching the order of the bills, because everyone will know anyway that this was necessary because Joe Manchin can't be trusted. And the Republicans will work themselves into a snit, but their explanation of: "We all thought if we passed this bill that Joe Biden would be happy enough with that and just absolutely give up on the rest of his agenda for the next two years, minimum." This is so ridiculous it staggers the mind, really.

But this seems like the best way forward, at this point. Get Manchin's reconciliation voted nailed down before the bipartisan bill comes up, and there won't be anything for progressives to worry about. If the Republicans throw a hissy fit, Biden and the Democrats should just say to them: "You were the ones who wanted to do infrastructure in this fashion, you went back on your word, and now you can go explain to your state's constituents why they're not getting that new bridge or freeway. Because, come election time, your opponent will indeed be pointing that out to the voters."

-- Chris Weigant

 

Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant

 

Friday Talking Points -- America Is Back

[ Posted Friday, June 18th, 2021 – 17:57 UTC ]

President Joe Biden had a pretty good week all around. He began the week in Europe, where he met with the leaders of NATO, the European Union, the G7, a few royals (just to mix things up), and Vladimir Putin. That's a pretty packed schedule, but Biden seemed to manage just fine. The Europeans were both visibly thrilled and massively relieved to be visited by a United States president who was, once again, a sane adult (and not a petulant little child-man). They heaped praise upon Biden -- mostly just for being "President Not-Trump." You may laugh, but please recall President Barack Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize solely for being "President Not-Dubya," years earlier. But more seriously, Europe announced some deals with Biden (including, notably, a truce being called on the subsidy war over Boeing and Airbus airplanes). Not only were personal relationships either reaffirmed or begun, tangible diplomatic progress was made. Europe stood as one with the United States over the contentious issues of Russia and China, which only strengthened Biden's position for his meeting with Putin. The Putin summit didn't produce a whole lot in the way of tangible deliverables, but then again it didn't produce an American president willing to believe Russia's ex-K.G.B. leader over his own intelligence services either, so it has to be chalked up as a major improvement. Throughout it all, Biden stuck to one very simple slogan that summed up what his trip was supposed to be showcasing to the world: "America is back."

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Manchin Lays Out His Voting Rights Priorities

[ Posted Thursday, June 17th, 2021 – 16:32 UTC ]

This has been an extraordinary week. I say that because things seem to actually be happening in Washington, which is (to put it politely) not the normal state of affairs at all. Congress even proved that, on occasion, they could move with blinding speed, as they passed a bill to make Juneteenth a federal holiday in a matter of days, instead of the usual "months, if not years." President Joe Biden has already signed the law, long before most Americans were even aware of its existence. The federal workforce will get to take tomorrow off, which just wasn't true at the beginning of the week, or even yesterday. It's long been a closely-held secret, but Congress can act this quickly, when they really want to.

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