The ‘American Values Agenda’

[tag]Congress[/tag]ional [tag]Republicans[/tag] gave up, quite literally, on passing a substantive policy agenda several weeks ago, choosing instead to focus on divisive bills, which they didn’t expect to pass, in the hopes of rallying the base in advance of the [tag]midterm[/tag] [tag]elections[/tag].

The result has been as annoying as it is futile. The better part of June has been spent on an anti-gay [tag]amendment[/tag], a permanent repeal of the [tag]estate tax[/tag], and a [tag]flag-burning[/tag] measure, none of which were expected, or even designed, to pass.

Of course, it’s only June. Have congressional Republicans run out of divisive, [tag]culture-war[/tag] votes? Not even close.

House Republicans intend to hold votes this summer and fall touching on abortion, guns, religion and other priority issues for social conservatives, part of an attempt to improve the party’s prospects in the midterm elections.

The “[tag]American Values Agenda[/tag]” also includes a proposed constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage which already has failed in the Senate a prohibition on human cloning and possibly votes on several popular tax cuts.

“Radical courts have attempted to gut our religious freedom and redefine the value system on which America was built. We hope to restore some of those basic values through passing this legislative agenda and renewing our country’s commitment to faith, freedom and life,” Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., said Tuesday.

The “American Values Agenda” is basically [tag]James Dobson[/tag]’s playbook.

Among the ideas:

* Strip federal courts of [tag]jurisdiction[/tag] on cases involving the [tag]separation of church and state[/tag].

* Require that some women seeking to end their pregnancies be informed the procedure “will cause the [tag]unborn child[/tag] [tag]pain[/tag].”

* A ban on human [tag]cloning[/tag].

* Prohibit the confiscation of legal firearms during national emergencies.

* Apply anti-[tag]gambling[/tag] laws to the Internet.

The next question, of course, is whether any of this will work. For the far-right [tag]GOP[/tag] [tag]base[/tag], who feel as if they’ve been largely ignored for the last two years, this might be too-little, too-late. The religious right movement is crazy, but it’s not stupid. If these 11th hour votes are just being thrown in to placate Dobson’s followers, and none of them actually become law, the scheme may not do much to rally support for November.

As for regular ol’ voters, one also has to wonder if picking a culture-war fight might backfire. It’s not a great pitch to the electorate: “We gave up on trying to pass substantive legislation, but look at all these right-wing ideas we voted on (but failed to pass)!”

It’s been painfully obvious for a while now, but it’s almost comical how unserious congressional Republicans are about matters of state. This is what the “[tag]party of ideas[/tag]” has come to? It’s kind of embarrassing.

It’s really convenient, for us, that the GOP has given up on legislation where it might have mattered. By the time they’re finished we should have a stack of C-SPAN tapes that will sink a ship (or, in this case, the GOP). “This bloviating over “values” is what they’re proud of? Aren’t they aware that while they’ve been fiddling we’re allowing global warming to increase, getting bogged down in an Iraq quagmire, passing on trillions in debt to our children, giving away trillions to the obscenely rich, making fools of ourselves internationally and corrupting our domestic political processes?”

Here’s to you, GOP [clink!]. If the Democratic operatives aren’t asleep at the TiVo switch, we should have our Fall campaign ready-made for us … without focus groups and overpaid consultants, too.

  • …but it’s almost comical how unserious congressional Republicans are about matters of state. This is what the “party of ideas” has come to? It’s kind of embarrassing.

    Excellent talking point for democratic challengers this Fall.

  • Are you kidding? We’ve got plenty of time to debate the finer points of these non-issues! It’s not like we’re involved in two wars, intent on starting a third, spending money we don’t have, trampling civil rights, destroying privacy, or ignoring a health care crisis. Obviously Congress doesn’t have anything better to do.

    I guess for Hastert, a two million dollar windfall for a property scam he engineered counts as a ‘family value’.

  • Repubs are playing to their strengths. They can’t govern. Period. What they’re good at is flailing away at wedge issues. So they have dropped all pretense of governing in favor of the fire breathing rhetoric.

    I’m not sure it’s going to work. When our lapdog media asks them about such shameless pandering as the flag burning amendment, as opposed to things average Americans consider important, they can’t even muster an answer.

    Wedge issues work best when everything else is working reasonably. When everything is broken, they become ridiculously obvious. It’s all they’ve got left – which I assume is the reason for the hysteria over the NYT. It won’t get any prettier until the lot of them are run out of town on a rail. In the meantime, I expect a steady diet of 9/11-gay marriage-flag burning-treasonous liberal media from here til November.

  • “It’s not like we’re involved in two wars, intent on starting a third,” – doubtful

    With Iran and North Korea both apparantly in our gun sights, that would be a third and a fourth war.

  • Jack Danforth’s pronouncement from last year was true, but only unofficially so. The party has now brought it to official full fruition:

    BY a series of recent initiatives, Republicans have transformed our party into the political arm of conservative Christians.

    The “American Values Agenda” (cue laugh track) contains literally zero practical governance planks. How utterly pathetic and dispicable.

  • Require that some women seeking to end their pregnancies be informed the procedure “will cause the unborn child pain.”

    Not to digress, but I’ll back this, if they also decide to require recruiters to tell parents that if their kid joins the Army, they’ll be underequipped and over-deployed, they’ll run the risk of getting multilated and killed, and they’ll receive subpar service from an overworked VA if they get wounded. Oh, and if their expensive equipment gets blown up with them, it comes out of their paycheck, which compared to other jobs, is laughable.
    It’s all about the truth, you know.

    “Prohibit the confiscation of legal firearms during national emergencies.”

    Whiskey Tango Foxtrot??? This is seen as a real problem in the near future?
    Republicans really, REEEALLY, need to stop watching Red Dawn and Invasion USA.

  • I think the Dems should put up a Restore American Values agenda and match it up to the Rethugs American Values of guns, Gods, gays, flag burning, deficits and abortion agenda. In brief bulleted points, illustrate how Rethugs fritter away time on that stuff while our agenda features universal health care, protected social security and medicare, higher minimum wage, improved education, protected environment, a sound economy, energy independence, stem cell research, effective national security measures in concert with our allies, end of Iraq war with focus on true threats, It works well with the “Had Enough?” theme.

  • The dems must counter punch these dirty rat bastards masquerading as “morally superior” to the “godless liberals”. They want to talk about values? Frame the ‘morality’ debate in terms of the Beautitudes of Christ. We all know that every policy and action the GOP has undertaken runs counter to the teachings of Christ. If the dems can manage to point out the hypocracy of the “morally upright” GOP in a national debate, we may be able to take the higher ground. When they talk about their values, gay marriage, abortion, flag burning, we talk about violence, poverty, war, foresaking the truly needy, being stewards of the earth – I’d love to see them explain their actions. I call for the Democrats to pre-empt the GOP by creating a faith and values platform, to clearly and succinctly outline what Democrats consider their faith and values, and hammer the airwaves. Spend the money, get on the talk show circuit, hold press conferences… I’m talking about a media blitz to counter what we know is coming from the republicans. I

  • I guess for Hastert, a two million dollar windfall for a property scam he engineered counts as a ‘family value’.

    Comment by doubtful — 6/28/2006 @ 11:39 am

    Can anyone say Whitewater? Maybe we can find some blowjobs somewhere to sex this scandal up…

  • Tom Tom Tom, what about the homosexual prostitute Jeff Gannon that visited the White House VERY frequently after regular visiting hours? Who could have given the authorization for that, and what was he doing there?

  • Dems should stick to substantive issues and argue that symbolic votes on the conservative agenda is an example of Republicans avoiding America’s real problems.

    This worked in Colorado, home of Focus on the Family and many social conservatives. Democrats now control both state houses for the first time in about 30 years. And this came about because state Republicans were debating Guns, God and Gays while the state was sinking into financial ruin.

    If it works here, it might work nationwide.

  • Can anyone say Whitewater? Maybe we can find some blowjobs somewhere to sex this scandal up…

    Eeeewwww…. the thought of anyone (or anything) giving Dennis Hastert a blowjob is more than I can take this early in the morning. That is a serious ICK.

    I mean, the thought of he and his wife having sex is bad enough…

  • Not surprised by any of this. When this is all you have, then you have to go with it.

  • Be careful. Don’t forget that we thought we had the Republicans on the ropes in 2004, and look what happened. I’m guessing that at some point Karl Rove will begin to beat the drums of “the liberals are coming, the liberals are coming” to energize that evangelical base.

  • Democrats should stop showing up for these “debates”. While Reublicans waste time and the peoples money Dems should be caucusing on Iraq, Medicare, Education, Hurricane Preparedness, Port Secuity, Afghanistan, Intelligence Failures and Signing Statements. Without end, Democrats can hold unofficial hearings about substantive issues which actually affect us, the American People. Otherewise it’s just keeping the kids busy.

    And I would personally like to see a nationwide movement to place a monument to the original Bill of Rights in every courthouse in the land.

  • Another victory (for us) in the American Values rodeo and roundup:

    House Republicans failed Wednesday to advance a bill protecting
    the words “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance. Only a day
    earlier, the GOP had placed the measure on its “American Values
    Agenda” in hopes of bolster the party’s prospects in the fall
    election.

    But Republicans could not muster a simple majority on the issue
    in a committee where they outnumber Democrats by six.

    The legislation tries to strip federal courts of jurisdiction
    over cases challenging the pledge. It responds to a federal
    appeals court ruling in 2002 that the pledge is unconstitutional
    because it contains the words “under God.” A district court judge
    made a similar ruling last fall, citing the appeals court
    precedent.

    A simple majority is required to report a bill to the House floor
    with a favorable committee recommendation. The House Judiciary
    Committee split 15-15 on the pledge bill Wednesday; Rep. Bob
    Inglis, R-S.C., joined 14 Democrats to oppose it.

    Ten of the committee’s 23 Republicans did not show up for the
    vote. The chairman, Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., said he
    would try again for a majority on Thursday.

  • Comments are closed.