The WaPo ran a good front-page piece today on what seems like an increasingly likely scenario: a Democratic Congress will be “the end of George W. Bush’s presidency as he has known it.” The question then becomes, of course, what exactly would the White House do for its final two years.
The Post’s Peter Baker and Michael Fletcher actually found a few people willing to suggest that Bush could turn over a more bi-partisan leaf.
“One of the lessons for President Bush if he loses one or both chambers is the California example,” said Sergio Bendixen, a pollster for Democrats. “Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger at this time in 2005 was considered to be in deep trouble. But now he is a shoo-in for reelection. How did he turn things around? He has gone from a very partisan Republican to somebody who was working with the other party. I wouldn’t be surprised if Bush does the same thing.”
John Bridgeland, a former Bush domestic policy adviser consulted by the White House in recent planning, said that regardless of who wins the election, the president would benefit from cooperating across party lines. “Without doing so, it will be more difficult to get things done that will be lasting,” he said.
I have no idea what these guys are talking about. Bush only knows one way to operate — he doesn’t “do nuance” and he doesn’t “work with the other party.”
Harold Meyerson has a great op-ed today exploring what, exactly, a Democratic Congress would do legislatively. Look over the agenda and tell me if Bush is likely to take a Schwarzenegger-like approach to getting things done.
In the House, the Democrats have made clear that there’s a first tier of legislation they mean to bring to a vote almost immediately after the new Congress convenes. It includes raising the minimum wage, repealing the Medicare legislation that forbids the government from negotiating with drug companies for lower prices, replenishing student loan programs, funding stem cell research and implementing those recommendations of the Sept. 11 commission that have thus far languished.
All these measures command massive popular support. The reason they’ve not been enacted is that House Republicans have passed rules making it impossible for the Democrats to offer amendments to any significant legislation, thereby sparing themselves the indignity of having to choose, say, between the interests of their financial backers in the drug industry and their constituents.
It’s far too soon to know for sure what’s going to happen, but I suspect a Dem Congress, if there’s a Dem Congress, would simply dare Bush to veto everything in sight. (What’s more, they’d put Republicans like John McCain on the spot by bringing popular measures to the floor, and daring them to oppose the bills before the 2008 presidential election.)
Frankly, I’m a little surprised the WaPo found anyone willing to say, out loud, that Bush might be willing to govern in a non-partisan fashion. Cooperate with congressional Democrats? Sign progressive legislation that he’s vehemently opposed for six years? Put aside a rigid ideology to get something done?
We’ve all been watching the same Bush, right?