The delusional Democrats of 2017

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Matthew Continetti:

Democrats have been in power for so long that they’ve forgotten how to oppose. Their party has been on a roll since 2005 when the botched Social Security reform, the slow bleed of the Iraq war, and Hurricane Katrina sent the Bush administration into a tailspin. The Democrats won the Congress the following year and the White House two years after that. And while they lost the House in 2010 and the Senate in 2014, Democrats still had the advantage of retaining the White House, a president seemingly immune from criticism, the courts, the bureaucracy, and large portions of the media. The correlation of forces in Washington has weighed heavily in favor of the Democrats for a decade.

No longer. The election of Donald Trump has brought unified Republican government to Washington and overturned our understanding of how politics works. Or at least it should have done so. The Democrats seem not to understand how to deal with Trump and the massive change he is about to bring to the nation’s capital. During the general election they fell for the idea that Trump can be defeated by conventional means, spending hundreds of millions of dollars in negative television advertising and relying on political consultants beholden to whatever line Politico was selling on a given day. This strategy failed Trump’s Republican primary opponents, but Democrats figured that was simply because the GOP was filled with deplorables. It was a rationalization that would cost them.

Republicans control the House, the Senate, 34 governor’s mansions, and 4,100 seats in state legislatures. But Democrats act like they run Washington. Nancy Pelosi’s speech to the 115th House of Representatives was a long-winded recitation of the same liberal agenda that has brought her party to its current low. Give her points for consistency I guess. Chuck Schumer is just being delusional.

Smarting from the failed nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court, the Senate minority leader pledged to oppose Donald Trump’s nominee weeks before inauguration day. “If they don’t appoint somebody good,” he said on MSNBC, “we’re going to oppose them tooth and nail.” That would “absolutely” include keeping the seat held by the late Antonin Scalia empty, he said. “We are not going to make it easy for them to pick a Supreme Court justice.”

I suppose it’s too much to expect a graduate of Harvard Law School to grasp the difference between majority and minority. Mitch McConnell was able to block Garland’s appointment because the Republicans controlled the Senate. The Democrats do not. And McConnell was able to hold his caucus together because he was on solid historical ground. Lyndon Johnson’s nomination of Abe Fortas as chief justice failed in the election year 1968, and the so-called “Biden Rule” of 1992 stipulated no Supreme Court replacements during the last year of a presidency. Schumer himself, in a 2007 speech, expanded the waiting period to the final 18 months of a president’s term. Now, despite a record of calling on the Senate to confirm the president’s nominees—as long as the president is a Democrat—Schumer has adopted the strategy of no Supreme Court confirmations at all. How does he think President Trump will respond? By caving?

An attempt to filibuster the Scalia replacement may force McConnell to change the rules so that Supreme Court vacancies can be approved by a majority vote. And where would Democrats be then? Not only will they have lost the Scalia seat, they will be completely vulnerable should another vacancy arise in the next two years. And Schumer has a reputation for political savvy.

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The liberal demacrats are the all time lowest life form in the galaxy lower then a snake in a wagon rut

@Spurwing Plover: So true. As this Post illustrates, they are only opposing because they can, not because it’s the right thing to do. The President is entitled to have the cabinet and personal advisors that he is comfortable with. I guess the Dims would prefer Trump to nominate all Dimocrats for his cabinet.

chucky schumer has a few sealed files in NYC. theses files are not for small stuff for felonies.

McConnell: Democrats need to ‘grow up’ and let Trump nominees get confirmed

Did McConnell suddenly grow up himself on November 8? He and his pack of tricycle-riding obstructionists have been blocking Obama nominees as a matter of course for years. They didn’t even give Obama’s entirely reasonable Supreme Court nominee the courtesy of a down vote. Now democrats are supposed to overlook obvious issues with many Trump appointees in the same way republicans overlooked the many obvious issues with Donald Trump? They’re supposed to just shut up and say nothing as republicans put foxes in charge of the hen house?

McConnell can go stand on his head in the corner. Maybe he’ll briefly see the world right-side up.

“Democrats have been in power for so long that they’ve forgotten how to oppose.”

Think so? You don’t even have your “facts” straight. Democrats haven’t controlled the House for 5 years now. They haven’t controlled the Senate for 2 years now. But that’s not the half of it: Of the 22 years ending with the current year, republicans have controlled both the House and the Senate for 12 years, while democrats have had majority control of both houses for a grand total of only 4 years. For the arithmetically impaired—a group which obviously includes Matthew Continetti—12 years is 3 times longer. His opening statement is total nonsense.

@Greg: You enjoy revising history don’t you?