House of Representatives: Still terrible at everything
Somehow or other, the U.S. government, for the first time in years, is close-ish to being functional. Dont read too heavily into that word functional. The government is not and will not probably be moving on your pet issue any time soon, sorry. But the Senate is actually moving, on bipartisan pieces of legislation that are in the public spotlight: a farm bill, a comprehensive immigration bill. GOP senators who typically pretend to negotiate compromises and then run for the hills once they near a motion to proceed, like Lindsey Graham and Bob Corker, are suddenly seeing out those compromises. One of the two houses of Congress, in our lifetime, may well be nearing the minimum threshold for competence.
Now then, whats the problem? Oh right, its the House of Representatives, which is terrible at everything, and offers no indication of being any other way until at least 2023. Lets give some credit: Theyre adept at passing go-nowhere bills to repeal Obamacare or ban abortion or tattoo the words Under God to every babys forehead. Great work there from the House Republican Party. On issues that might appeal to an even slightly broader cross-section of the country, though, theyve got nothing. You know this. Youve seen the same routine in nearly every important vote since 2009. Remember that time the government considered arbitrarily defaulting on the public debt and destroying the global economy forever? That was a head-scratcher for the House; took some real working out before they concluded it would best be averted, for now.
It always works out the same way, at the 11th hour. A Senate-originated compromise, after much pouting, is taken up by the House after several defeats of their own insane legislation. Maybe a tweak or two is offered. The House passes it. Conservatives serve up uncreative epithets for John Boehner for exercising the only decent option available to him. The next big piece of legislation comes up. And, at least as of yesterdays farm bill flop, they begin this same fatal cycle of time wasting again.
The House leadership seemed to think, this time around, at least, that a combination of cheap tricks and a backup plan called blaming Democrats would change this deeply entrenched dynamic of incompetence that surrounds everything it tries to do.
Read more: http://www.salon.com/2013/06/21/house_of_representatives_still_terrible_at_everything/
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts)Kablooie
(18,645 posts)When a party's founding philosophy is that government is awful and should be eliminated, what to you expect?
I wouldn't be surprised if its all a deliberate attempt to bring the government down.