In the blogosphere, we've often discussed Washington's sick fetishization of bipartisanship. Whether it's pundits or politicians, the entire D.C. Establishment has made abundantly clear that it is first and foremost interested in bipartisanship for bipartisanship's sake before it is interested in the ramifications of public policy. The logic (or, really, illogic) of this fetishization essentially posits that anything that can pass with bipartisan votes in Congress is good, and anything that can only pass with Democratic votes must be bad.*
There are numerous examples of this fetishization - but none have been as blatant as what we see today from Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson (D). I would argue that the behavior exhibited in this New York Times article goes beyond fetishization and to Obsessive Compulsive Bipartisanship (OCB):
Senator Ben Nelson of Nebraska, typically one of the hardest votes for Democratic leaders to corral, is looming as a particularly tough sell [on health care]. “At the end of the day, I want to see everything before I commit to anything,” said Mr. Nelson, who added that he would have trouble backing a bill that did not have some Republican support. (emphasis added)
This is stunning, really. It's one thing for a legislator to talk in platitudes about pursuing policies that could create bipartisanship. It's quite another thing for a legislator to openly say his vote will be explicitly contingent on the votes of the other party irrespective of the policy he's voting on. The latter takes bipartisanship from a mere fetish to an obsessive compulsive fixation, as if the legislator was elected not to judge policy, write legislation or represent constituents, but to only hand out his vote if the other party hands out theirs.
Based on this logic, a bill could meet every single one of Nelson's substantive policy demands, but if all Republicans in the Senate said they were going to vote against it, Nelson would probably vote against it (or, at minimum, he is saying "he would have trouble backing" it). That's beyond extreme - it's into the realm of what was formerly taboo.
Remember, politicians of both parties always get criticized for being a "rubber stamp" for their parties, and always made sure to justify their legislative moves with substance, so as to prove their deliberative independence. Indeed, even Republican lawmakers have been loathe to say they might vote against bills just because the rest of their caucus was going to. But not Nelson - he's a Democrat effectively saying he's may take orders from the GOP conference regardless of what's actually in the bill.
For Democrats, OCB (as opposed to run-of-the-mill bipartisan fetishization) assumes as concrete fact that if there is any GOP support for a bill, it supposedly means the national Republican Party will not attack those voting for that bill during their reelection campaigns. That's an absurd and silly delusion, of course. But it at least explains why someone like Nelson - electorally afraid of Republicans in GOP-leaning Nebraska - would be the first to show signs of acute OCB. The question is whether anyone can talk any sense into him. My guess is no - someone showing such symptoms of such an acute affliction is probably beyond cure.
* Interestingly, this bipartisan standard never applied to stuff passed with only Republican votes - that was deemed perfectly fine by the same Establishment that fetishizes bipartisanship today.


Salon.com
Comments
"progressive" dream falling apart?
Thank God for dems with a conscience AND common sense. Most have no conscience and no common sense.
Look up a minute. Government-funded health care, if we can achieve it, would be a major reordering of our society. Surely the country should have a consensus supporting it before such a thing is done. That's the allure of bipartisanship, that it represents the ordinary trait, the sign one sees, reflecting underlying consensus.
In fact, among the citizenry, that consensus exists. But the extraordinary state of the GOP-- frenzied disorder, frozen ideologies, delusion-- means that they are not capable just now of exhibiting ordinary signs of anything at all. The consensus at large in the country will not find expression through the GOP.
This catastrophic dysfunction of the party dates only from about September, when the crash came. But it's not getting any better, though it's been a year. People can be forgiven for believing an institution with a hundred fifty year history would recover, long before this, and begin to take on the business of running the country. Just doing an end-around would have galvanized the old GOP into effective opposition, so they attempted to engage them.
Some Republicans have acted tactically with some cogency, in fits and starts, but the party's neck is broken, it flails on the ground like an injured animal. If anything is to be changed, apparently, it will be changed without the GOP, which can do nothing now. But that was by no means predictable last spring. Additionally, it's hard for many in the majority party to accept, even now.
The sudden openness this state of affairs has caused brings to the fore the factional differences within the ruling party, which has never been monolithic. The lack of an effective common foe has unlaced the ties which would have made co-operating easier, and enabled those factions to begin moving apart.
Some wings of the Democratic party are ardent for this reform, but others less so. Meanwhile, the entire interplay of party and faction is not the real story.
The true enemy of this reform is the wealth, power and clout of the businesses which will be hurt by it. If a real single-payer system were adopted, some of these interests would be mortally hurt. They are far from defenseless-- they represent a sixth part of the total economy! And they are fighting for all they're worth.
the party rules the cattle, whose only political function is to pay taxes regularly, and cast a symbolic ballot-spear at intervals to elevate a particular grandee of the beltway to the purple.
no one confuses the civil wars of rome with democracy, but relentless newspeak has convinced the american taxcow he has democracy, simply because he walks away from the battle unmarked.
In such an environment, when the Democrats have such a huge numerical advantage in both houses of Congress and hold the presidency, it absolutely baffles me why Rahm Emmanuel, Steny Hoyer, Harry Reid, and far too many others think that they need to do anything other than pay lip-service to the chimera of "bi-partisanship."
Ignore the Republicans. The hell with 'em. Pistol-whip the Democratic caucus into line LBJ style, and get stuff done, you incredible weenies. Good God.