Tapped’s Sam Rosenfeld suggested yesterday that Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio), who is currently vying to replace Tom DeLay as the House Majority Leader, isn’t receiving nearly enough ridicule for his “For a Majority that Matters” platform (.pdf). If you read it, you’ll see why.
Many GOP caucus members suggested that Boehner and his rival for the post, Rep. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), create policy agendas that members could consider before choosing the next Majority Leader, kind of a “campaign platform” to show rank-and-file Republican lawmakers what they’d do in the leadership. Boehner came up with this. It speaks volumes — by hardly saying anything.
Boehner’s agenda spans 37 pages in a PowerPoint-like presentation, highlighting the lawmaker’s vision. For example, there’s this gem:
“A vision doesn’t have to be achievable in the foreseeable future…But you never know. If a vision is powerful enough and the commitment to it great enough, it might even come true. President Reagan left the White House with America much as he hoped it would be in that first inaugural address. The Nazis were defeated. And in August 1989, Poland became free.”
Now, if this were just an introductory point to help capture Boehner’s big picture, it would merely be bad writing. But the problem is the “platform” doesn’t get any better. Boehner goes on for 37 pages talking about why he should be the House Majority Leader without actually mentioning a substantive issue, policy, bill, or idea.
Instead, we get platitudes such as, “Where are we? Stuck in neutral, and hesitant to push the accelerator.” Where does Boehner want to accelerate to? I don’t know; he didn’t say. I’ve seen high school student council candidates produce more substance.
It’s not just that Boehner and Blunt are weak; it’s that this further highlights the decline of the party which is supposed to be the “party of ideas.”
Matt Yglesias explained this well earlier this week.
Take a look at John Boehner’s campaign platform in his race for majority leader and you’ll see just that phenomenon — lots of vague invocations of the need for big thinking and calls for “a majority that matters,” but no actual ideas or any idea of how the Boehnerified GOP majority will matter.
This despite the oft-heard and always-annoying complaint that Democrats lack new ideas. There’s just nothing happening on the Republican side.
Nothing but fear of getting caught in a corruption scandal. And tax cuts. Lots and lots of tax cuts.