The GOP would still be as hyper-partisan, but I highly doubt that they would be as obstructionist. They would have a fear of Hillary that they don't have of Obama.
Doubtful. They didn't fear her husband and impeached him over a *******, so I doubt they'd fear her.
He's more than a bumbling novice at this point, he's politically incompetent. And he doesn't have a communication problem. You can salvage a communication problem, but you can't salvage the fact that the American public hate his policies. They hate the stimulus. They hate Obamacare. They hate the bailouts. No amount of proper communication can fix that.
They hate Obamacare because of GOP lies and misperception (death panels, government takeover, the very name Obamacare), just as most fail to realize the stimulus did at least stop the excessive 2009 bleeding and have been misled by Republicans to believe he signed TARP....a Bush-era policy (that was actually quite successful).
I certainly agree that the hyper-partisanship allows Boehner to slight the President to cheers of his own party, but the fact remains that if Obama can't even schedule a speech properly and do it so incompetently, shows that Obama has a lot of problems that need to be fixed and right away.
But again....it was Bob Daley's screw-up (if you believe Boehner's spin) and Obama had nothing to do with it. It is a weak example based on looking for an excuse to dig Obama. He didn't make the call and nobody will remember it by next week.
They did pull this **** with Bill Clinton in the 90's and guess what? They lost. And they lost BADLY. And they faced political consequences. They don't want to repeat such a mistake.
They did lose badly, but they pushed Boehner to shutdown the government in April and to default in August, saying they only lost in '95 because Newt threw in the towel too early. That tells me many of them didn't learn a lesson and considering afterwards they
impeached Clinton over oral sex, I
HIGHLY doubt they'd be any more humble with a woman they characterized as a lesbian and a murderer in the 1990s and 2007.
But you're right the Clintons are better at responding to such evil crap.
The don't work with Obama because they have no fear of him, due to the fact that he's politically incompetent allowing them to be obstructionist. They don't fear political consequences because the public now sees him as irrelevant and his re-election prospects look very dim with Romney or Perry as the nominee.
Perry's numbers have been plummeting in the last week. I do agree they don't respect Obama. Never have and never will. Obama's mistake has been trying to work with people who never respected him to begin with and getting burned a dozen times for it between 2009 and summer 2011. Hillary would not have tried the bipartisan route and would have been clobbering them from day one. But I stand by the man who has accomplished so much (DADT Repeal, CFPA, New START, Student Loan Reform, Libya regime change without invasion, Osama bin Laden dead, drastic al-Qaeda assassinations and, yes, HCR) as weak or incompetent.
Unemployment and continuing to concede the messaging war to the GOP have been and remain his biggest liabilities. The latter cost him dearly in the debt ceiling fiasco, starting with it happening in the first place.
There would be political consequences if they fought Hillary. She knows how to fight. She knows how to pick her battles. While they would act like an opposition party, there would still be some fear of her because she shows levels of relevance and competency.
She wouldn't treat them like potential partners, but treat them like enemies as she and her husband did. I agree she would have come out much stronger of 2011. But while she'd be more successful politically, I have reservations about what her policies would be--i.e. I think the economy would be just as abysmal and we'd have a lot less to show for it domestically and another decade of Afghanistan.
But in terms of partisan fighting, she is a warrior and not a concilliator. So, if reelection is the main goal, then yes, she'd
probably be in a stronger position right now....but we don't know for sure.
It's not ******** that the GOP is bitter towards Obama for how he brushed them to the side in the 111th Congress. And now that they actually have power, payback is a *****. This should be a lesson to future Presidents to not treat the opposition as irrelevant, because if they end up in power, they will retaliate.
It is ********. Obama did not slight GOP senators and Boehner and Cantor dropped the first gauntlet in 2009 when they refused to even discuss a stimulus package with the WH in February of that year. McConnell said at the beginning of 2009 that his first priority was to make Obama a one-termer. They have just maintained the same obstructionist ******** in 2011 because they, like you, perceive Obama's attempts at bipartisanship as weakness and took full advantage of it...again. But it was nothing about payback and all about self-empowerment. Governing the country isn't even an afterthought to them or their apologetic excuse for being so recalistrant that you're repeating in this thread.
Just like how many within the Democratic Party refused to accept the legitimacy of George W. Bush's Presidency. Sorry, but if you're going to call the GOP out on this, you have to call the Democrats out for treating Bush the exact same way.
No Dems under Bush ever said things like "Did Bush mastermind the 9/11 attacks that murdered 3,000 Americans to start an illegal war in Iraq? Well, I take the president at his word, but if other Americans want to believe that...." They didn't snub him on joint sessions of Congress and last I checked there wasn't a year where they filibustered 85% of his proposals and appointments or threatened to default the nation to force Bush to draw down troops from Iraq....
Sorry moral equivalency there is also ********.
I do believe that Obama was surprised by the nastiness. But that's because I think he had the idea that he would have been some Mr. Smith Goes to Washington type of guy and when the reality slapped him in the face, he got a little bitter about it.
I think he was surprised that, like the Clintons, they valued destroying him over serving their country. Hence the bitterness and the huge mistake of trying to befriend them again in 2011. I'm actually agreeing with you hear for different reasons.
It's not whether or not she wouldn't have done something, it's about her wisely spending her political capital instead of wasting it on what many pundits (even those who are highly revered) that call the biggest political blunder in modern political history. And she wouldn't constantly try and bring up ideas that have no chance of passing at all (the tax increases on the wealthy were just an example).
But that is the kind of fight she'd bet her political capital on because she knows public support would be with her. She wouldn't expend it on HCR....which I'm glad Obama finally got started....because she would see the political downside. Instead, she'd save that capital for this fight that wouldn't help a lot of Americans...but it would let her vilify Republicans with class warfare and help her reelection. It's really whether you value policy priorities or political victories more has remained my point.
The GOP base will say that the GOP lost because of Newt crumbling, but they know the reality. They lost because Bill out-politiced them. I'm not with the Clintons politically, but they are freaking geniuses in the realm of politics.
It's just not the base. It's AEI and the Heritage Foundation. My point is many believe they lost because of Newt failing, not because of Bill's brilliance. And in any case it doesn't mean they fear the Clintons. Otherwise Bill would not have been
impeached on a flimsy distraction.
Hillary Clinton would have been far more effective that Obama. I've really come to the conclusion. I think that Hillary would have coasted to re-election, even in this bad economy in 2012 as opposed to Obama who is so damn politically incompetent, even his re-election strategy is ******ed when it should be so simple.
Out of curiosity, what do you think his reelection strategy should be? Because like George H.W. Bush, despite his accomplishments, I see few "simple" ways forward.