The rise of the ‘Drawbridge Republicans’

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  • Joe234
    Member
    • Apr 2010
    • 1948

    #1

    The rise of the ‘Drawbridge Republicans’

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    The rise of the ‘Drawbridge Republicans’

    By Matt Miller, Tuesday, August 21, 4:23 AM

    As Republicans head toward next week’s convention something extraordinary has come into view now that their ticket is complete.

    Mitt Romney came from wealth and went on to build his own quarter-of-a-billion dollar fortune. Paul Ryan, who has never worked a day in the private sector (outside a few months in the family firm) reports a net worth of as much as $7 million, thanks to trusts and inheritances from his and his wife’s family.

    Wealthy political candidates are nothing new, of course. But we’ve never had two wealthy candidates on a national ticket whose top priority is to reduce already low taxes on the well-to-do while raising taxes on everyone else — even as they propose to slash programs that serve the poor, or that (like college aid) create chances for the lowly born to rise.

    Call them the Drawbridge Republicans. As the moniker implies, these are wealthy Republicans who have no qualms about pulling up the drawbridge behind them. Such sentiments used to be reserved for the political fringe. The most prominent example was Steve Forbes, whose twin obsessions during his vanity presidential runs in 1996 and 2000 — marginal tax rates and inflation — were precisely what you’d expect from an heir in a cocoon.

    (In case you were wondering, Ronald Reagan wasn’t a Drawbridge because he entered office when marginal rates, at 70 percent, were truly damaging to the economy. But as GOP business leaders now tell me privately, the Clinton-era top rate of 39.6 percent, let alone today’s 35 percent, are hardly a barrier to work or investment).

    Most rich Republicans who champion regressive tax plans find it necessary to at least pretend they’re doing something to help average folks. John McCain, who’s lived large for decades thanks to his wife’s inheritance, famously had trouble keeping track of how many homes he owned — but McCain also tried bravely to create a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants. George W. Bush campaigned as a “compassionate conservative,” and touted education initiatives that made this claim plausible.

    Today’s Drawbridge Republicans can’t be bothered. Yes, when their political back is to the wall — as Romney’s increasingly is — they’ll slap together a page of bullet points and dub it “a plan for the middle class.” But this is only under duress. The rest of the time they seem blissfully unaware of how off-key they sound. As the humorist Andy Borowitz tweeted the other day, “As a general matter, it’s a bad idea to talk about austerity if you just had a horse lose in the Olympics.”

    Contrast conservative Prime Minister (and heir) David Cameron’s decision to defer his plans to lower the top 50 percent marginal rate in the UK. “When you’re taking the country through difficult times and difficult decisions,” Cameron said, “you’ve got to take the country with you. That means permanently trying to make the argument that what you’re doing is fair and seen to be fair.” As his spokesman added: “We need to ask those with the broadest shoulders to contribute the most.”

    Now that’s a conservative ruling class with a conscience! Can anyone imagine Romney and Ryan saying the same?

    The interesting question concerns psychology. Drawbridge Republicans are flesh and blood human beings peddling indefensible priorities. How do they manage it and still feel good about themselves? One possibility is that they’re simply missing the genes for empathy and self-awareness. (Steve Forbes always did seem a bit like a bubble boy whose inheritance left him impervious).

    But for today’s GOP ticket that explanation feels off. Romney, for all his awkwardness, campaigned and governed in a liberal state, and he enacted a pioneering universal health care law that’s helped many of modest means achieve health security. Ryan is equally mysterious — the boy-next-door who pays lip service to “upward mobility” yet seems to have no notion his plans would likely produce what liberal analyst Robert Greenstein calls “the largest redistribution of income from the bottom to the top in modern U.S. history.”

    My hunch is that extreme forms of rationalization and other defense mechanisms help Drawbridge Republicans cope with the cognitive dissonance. The growth of partisan media makes it easy to tune out disquieting dissenting views.

    Whatever lies behind it, the rise of the Drawbridge Republicans makes the stakes of this election even higher. If Romney and Ryan actually win on their Drawbridge agenda, the United States will have crossed a scary new Rubicon for a supposedly advanced democracy. For years, whenever I’ve heard people criticize “limousine liberals,” I’ve always thought, well, at least that’s better than being a “limousine jerk.” Now it turns out that’s exactly what a Drawbridge Republican is.

    Matt Miller is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and co-host of public radio’s “Left, Right & Center.” He writes a weekly online column for The Post.




    © The Washington Post Company
  • dman21
    Member
    • Jul 2012
    • 1141

    #2
    Honestly, I think our government as a whole is corrupt beyond repair. I don't consider myself Democrat nor Republican, in fact, I don't think I'll even be voting. Why should I? Our votes don't even count anyways. The majority of voters are sheep anyways. Besides that, I don't like anybody that's running. The only worthwhile candidate, in my opinion, didn't even get enough votes. I'm talking about Ron Paul. Our founding fathers would be turning in their graves if they knew what our government has turned out to be. Thomas Jefferson once said, "When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty." I think we are in many ways becoming a tyranny sadly.

    Comment

    • bpc720
      Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 188

      #3
      Joe when are you gonna realize that they all come from money. Do you think Obama isn't a millionaire who crafted Obamacare on behalf of the insurance companies? They all act in self-interest as well as corporate interest. You are buying into the whole thing by being a faithful democrat liberal, dutifully parroting about all the rubbish you hear. F*** republicans and F*** democrats. They are one in the same and once you realize that behind the scenes they do THE EXACT SAME THINGS the better off you'll be. Wake up!

      Comment

      • Joe234
        Member
        • Apr 2010
        • 1948

        #4
        Originally posted by bpc720
        Joe when are you gonna realize that they all come from money. Do you think Obama isn't a millionaire who crafted Obamacare on behalf of the insurance companies? They all act in self-interest as well as corporate interest. You are buying into the whole thing by being a faithful democrat liberal, dutifully parroting about all the rubbish you hear. F*** republicans and F*** democrats. They are one in the same and once you realize that behind the scenes they do THE EXACT SAME THINGS the better off you'll be. Wake up!

        They are not one and the same. The Republicans want to horde for the rich. The Democrats want to
        share the wealth.

        And they are not the same on social issues my friend

        http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/0...8JLC6C20120821

        US Republicans again back strict anti-abortion platform


        2:46am IST


        * Panel backs language amid flap over Akin comments


        * Seeks "human life amendment" to U.S. Constitution


        * Delegates to vote on platform at Tampa convention By Deborah Charles WASHINGTON, Aug 21 (Reuters) - A Republican Party committee on Tuesday embraced anti-abortion language it has used in its platform since 2004, with no mention of exceptions for rape or incest, as one of its Senate candidates was widely condemned over his comments about rape.


        The anti-abortion language was approved by the platform panel with little discussion and is nearly identical to what was in the Republican platform in 2008 and 2004.


        It was adopted on a day in which the issue of abortion was making unwanted headlines for Republicans because of controversial comments about rape made over the weekend by U.S. Representative Todd Akin, a Senate candidate in Missouri.


        The committee also called for a "human life amendment" to the U.S. Constitution in the party's 2012 platform.


        The platform - a statement of principles that is not binding on Republican candidates - will be voted on, and likely approved, by delegates to the Republican National Convention next week in Tampa, Florida.


        Many of the Republican delegates who have shaped the platform in recent years are among its most conservative members and reflect the party's move to the right in the past decade.


        This is likely to be the third consecutive presidential election in which the Republican candidate for president - George W. Bush in 2004, John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney this year - has a more lenient position on abortion than the party's platform.


        Bush, McCain and Romney all oppose abortion but have said it is acceptable under certain circumstances, such as when a rape results in a pregnancy.


        Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, chairman of the platform committee, praised the panel for making quick work of an issue that he said has involved hours of discussions in the past.


        "I applaud the committee's work in affirming our respect for human life," McDonnell said. "Well done."


        A 'HUMAN LIFE' AMENDMENT The language backed by the platform committee says an unborn child has a fundamental right to life that cannot be infringed. It also says the Republican Party supports a "human life amendment" to the Constitution and endorses legislation to ensure that unborn children are protected by the 14th Amendment.


        The abortion issue became a main topic on the campaign trail after Akin said during a television interview Sunday that a woman was unlikely to get pregnant from "legitimate rape."


        The remark sparked a flurry of calls from other Republicans for him to quit his race against Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill - calls Akin has resisted.


        Akin's comments were seen as a distraction before the Republican convention, where Romney will be nominated for president at an event in which Republicans hope to put a national spotlight on Democratic President Barack Obama's handling of the struggling U.S. economy.
        Republicans also want to puncture Democrats' portrayals of Romney as a wealthy, aloof former private equity executive who cannot relate to middle-class Americans by casting Romney as warm and approachable.


        Instead, Romney's campaign has had to deal with the Akin controversy, which also has served as a reminder that Romney's vice presidential running mate, U.S. Representative Paul Ryan, has had stricter views on abortion than Romney. On Tuesday, Romney urged Akin to withdraw from the Missouri race.


        Democrats, meanwhile, linked the proposed Republican platform to Akin's strict views on abortion.


        "Republicans have finally hit rock bottom," said Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida congresswoman who heads the Democratic Party. "I don't have to tell any of you how outrageous Republican Representative Todd Akin's comments were this weekend. But unfortunately, he's not alone in his extreme and dangerous views."


        Wasserman Schultz said the Democratic platform, to be approved during the party's convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, during the first week of September, would express strong support for women's reproductive freedom but also would include language proposed by anti-abortion Democrats.

        Comment

        • Joe234
          Member
          • Apr 2010
          • 1948

          #5

          Comment

          • dman21
            Member
            • Jul 2012
            • 1141

            #6
            Originally posted by bpc720
            Joe when are you gonna realize that they all come from money. Do you think Obama isn't a millionaire who crafted Obamacare on behalf of the insurance companies? They all act in self-interest as well as corporate interest. You are buying into the whole thing by being a faithful democrat liberal, dutifully parroting about all the rubbish you hear. F*** republicans and F*** democrats. They are one in the same and once you realize that behind the scenes they do THE EXACT SAME THINGS the better off you'll be. Wake up!
            Agreed wholeheartedly. Joe234, I will however agree that Bush screwed a lot up.

            Comment

            • bpc720
              Member
              • Dec 2010
              • 188

              #7
              These issues are all just distractions to keep us arguing with eachother and further the illusion that these parties are polar opposites. Bush screwed us with the patriot act and Obama has taken it further with the Expatriation act and the NDAA, and you should read page 1312 of the healthcare bill. Obama is Bush times a thousand if you really look at whats going on. They may be saying different things but the actions are startlingly similar

              Comment

              • truthwolf1
                Member
                • Oct 2008
                • 2696

                #8
                Originally posted by bpc720
                These issues are all just distractions to keep us arguing with eachother and further the illusion that these parties are polar opposites. Bush screwed us with the patriot act and Obama has taken it further with the Expatriation act and the NDAA, and you should read page 1312 of the healthcare bill. Obama is Bush times a thousand if you really look at whats going on. They may be saying different things but the actions are startlingly similar

                Joe is a die hard loyalist and parrot propagandist for the Dem Party. It does not matter what the facts are it is a lost cause to try and argue with these type of people. They will not bend and are just as comparable to a ultra neo-con foaming at the mouth to nuke some country off the planet.

                Comment

                • dman21
                  Member
                  • Jul 2012
                  • 1141

                  #9
                  It's sheep on both sides that are impeding process toward real change in our country. If people would just wake up and see our corrupt system for what it really is, maybe then there would be change.

                  Comment

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