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Posted
Wednesday, January 28, 2009 9:46 PM
| By
Eve Fairbanks
Dayo, it's giving a little too much credit where credit doesn't belong to say Republicans "ruled" by hissy fit on the contraceptive provision. You could claim that it was removed thanks, obliquely, to House Minority Leader John Boehner and the other GOPers who turned it into a big story, but at bottom (no jokes, please), it was removed for Democrats' sake. The Blue Dog Democrats, that is, who could have sunk the stimulus had they voted en masse against it and who—having run on heroic promises to crusade against fiscal irresponsibility—were feeling super antsy about the whole $819 billion bonanza.
Usually, the House GOP's bellyaching about being victimized by Nancy Pelosi and left out of the "process" strikes me as so many crocodile tears. Did any more vomitous image emerge from last fall's congressional session than that of Eric Cantor, then the GOP's chief deputy whip, waving a copy of a "partisan" speech by Nancy Pelosi in front of the cameras and claiming that it had so hurt his delicate-flower Republican colleagues' feelings they'd refused to vote for the financial bailout? But I actually think the Republicans performed a type of useful minority function in this whole contraceptive thing: publicizing a conservative objection to the bill so that more conservative-minded Democrats could consider whether it might sway them, too.
But "ruled" by hissy fit? No Republican voted for the stimulus, even after the contraceptive provision was yanked. But it didn't matter, because hey hey, it still passed the House! Some rule. I know it's considered a moral defeat for Obama that tonight's stimulus vote was party-line, but frankly, I kind of liked it. The GOP might have thought it was in "the minority" last year, but this New York Times lede is what it really feels like to be in the minority: "Without a single Republican vote, President Obama won House approval on Wednesday ..."
Maybe more of these ledes will finally prompt some soul-searching.
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