Peter T.
location: New Hampshire
listening to: Too much of everything!
registered: 1999.05.20
posts: 3017
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Cheer Up, Republicans
You’re going to have a moderate Republican president for the next four years: Barack Obama.
By William Saletan|Posted Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2012, at 11:27 PM ET
Dear Republicans,
Sorry about the election. I know how much it hurts when your presidential candidate loses. I’ve been
there many times. You’re crestfallen. You can’t believe the public voted for that idiot. You fear for your
country.
Cheer up. The guy we just re-elected is a moderate Republican.
I know how stupid that sounds. Barack Obama is the head of the Democratic Party. For five years,
conservative politicians and media told you he was a raving socialist. In the heat of the campaign, when
you’re trying to beat the guy, it’s hard to let go of that image of him, just as it’s hard for Democrats to
see past the caricatures of Mitt Romney. But now that the campaign is over and you’re staring at a
second Obama term, the falsity of the propaganda may come as a relief. By and large, Obama’s
instincts are the instincts of a moderate Republican. His policies are the policies of a moderate
Republican. He stands where the GOP used to stand and will someday stand again.
Yes, Obama began his presidency with bailouts, stimulus, and borrowing. You know who started the
bailouts? George W. Bush. Bush knew that under these exceptionally dire circumstances, bailouts had
to be done. Stimulus had to be done, too, since the economy had frozen up. A third of the stimulus
was tax cuts. Once the economy began to revive, Obama offered a $4-trillion debt reduction
framework that would have cut $3 to $6 of spending for every $1 in tax hikes. That’s a higher ratio of
cuts to hikes than Republican voters, in a Gallup poll, said they preferred. It’s way more conservative
than the ratio George H. W. Bush accepted in 1990. In last year’s debt-ceiling talks, Obama offered
cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid in exchange for revenue that didn’t even come from
higher tax rates. Now he’s proposing to lower corporate tax rates, and Republicans are whining that he
hacked $716 billion out of Medicare. Some socialist.
AdvertisementYes, Obama imposed an individual mandate to buy health insurance. You know who else did that?
Romney. You know where the idea came from? The Heritage Foundation. Personal responsibility—
insisting that people carry private insurance so we don’t have to bail them out in emergency rooms and
hospitals—was a Republican idea. Same with Wall Street reform: There’s nothing conservative about
letting financial institutions gamble with other people’s money in ways that would force us to bail them
out again. Even Obama’s cap-and-trade proposal echoed the market-based emissions-control policies
of the 1990 Bush administration and the 2008 McCain campaign. And last year, when the EPA
proposed a new air-pollution limit, Obama ticked off environmentalists by killing it on the grounds that
it might jeopardize the recovery.
Remember how Democrats ridiculed George W. Bush’s troop surge in Iraq? Obama copied it in
Afghanistan. He escalated the drone program, killing off al-Qaida’s leaders. He sent SEAL Team 6 into
Pakistan to get Osama Bin Laden. He teamed up with NATO to take down Muammar Qaddafi. He
reneged on his pledge to close Guantanamo Bay. He put together a globally enforced regime of
sanctions that is bringing Iran’s economy to its knees. That’s why Romney had nothing to say in last
month’s foreign policy debate. No sensible Republican president would have done things differently.
Obama’s no right-winger. You might have serious issues with his Supreme Court justices or his moves
on immigration or the Bush tax cuts. But you probably would have had similar issues with Dwight
Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, or Gerald Ford. Obama’s in the same mold as those guys. So don’t despair.
Your country didn’t vote for a socialist tonight. It voted for the candidate of traditional Republican
moderation. What should gall you, haunt you, and goad you to think about the future of your party is
that that candidate wasn’t yours.
Peter T.
(view)
Cheer Up, Republicans
You’re going to have a moderate Republican president for the next four years: Barack Obama.
By William Saletan|Posted Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2012, at 11:27 PM ET
Dear Republicans,
Sorry about the election. I know how much it hurts when your presidential candidate loses. I’ve been
there many times. You’re crestfallen. You can’t believe the public voted for that idiot. You fear for your
country.
Cheer up. The guy we just re-elected is a moderate Republican.
I know how stupid that sounds. Barack Obama is the head of the Democratic Party. For five years,
conservative politicians and media told you he was a raving socialist. In the heat of the campaign, when
you’re trying to beat the guy, it’s hard to let go of that image of him, just as it’s hard for Democrats to
see past the caricatures of Mitt Romney. But now that the campaign is over and you’re staring at a
second Obama term, the falsity of the propaganda may come as a relief. By and large, Obama’s
instincts are the instincts of a moderate Republican. His policies are the policies of a moderate
Republican. He stands where the GOP used to stand and will someday stand again.
Yes, Obama began his presidency with bailouts, stimulus, and borrowing. You know who started the
bailouts? George W. Bush. Bush knew that under these exceptionally dire circumstances, bailouts had
to be done. Stimulus had to be done, too, since the economy had frozen up. A third of the stimulus
was tax cuts. Once the economy began to revive, Obama offered a $4-trillion debt reduction
framework that would have cut $3 to $6 of spending for every $1 in tax hikes. That’s a higher ratio of
cuts to hikes than Republican voters, in a Gallup poll, said they preferred. It’s way more conservative
than the ratio George H. W. Bush accepted in 1990. In last year’s debt-ceiling talks, Obama offered
cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid in exchange for revenue that didn’t even come from
higher tax rates. Now he’s proposing to lower corporate tax rates, and Republicans are whining that he
hacked $716 billion out of Medicare. Some socialist.
AdvertisementYes, Obama imposed an individual mandate to buy health insurance. You know who else did that?
Romney. You know where the idea came from? The Heritage Foundation. Personal responsibility—
insisting that people carry private insurance so we don’t have to bail them out in emergency rooms and
hospitals—was a Republican idea. Same with Wall Street reform: There’s nothing conservative about
letting financial institutions gamble with other people’s money in ways that would force us to bail them
out again. Even Obama’s cap-and-trade proposal echoed the market-based emissions-control policies
of the 1990 Bush administration and the 2008 McCain campaign. And last year, when the EPA
proposed a new air-pollution limit, Obama ticked off environmentalists by killing it on the grounds that
it might jeopardize the recovery.
Remember how Democrats ridiculed George W. Bush’s troop surge in Iraq? Obama copied it in
Afghanistan. He escalated the drone program, killing off al-Qaida’s leaders. He sent SEAL Team 6 into
Pakistan to get Osama Bin Laden. He teamed up with NATO to take down Muammar Qaddafi. He
reneged on his pledge to close Guantanamo Bay. He put together a globally enforced regime of
sanctions that is bringing Iran’s economy to its knees. That’s why Romney had nothing to say in last
month’s foreign policy debate. No sensible Republican president would have done things differently.
Obama’s no right-winger. You might have serious issues with his Supreme Court justices or his moves
on immigration or the Bush tax cuts. But you probably would have had similar issues with Dwight
Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, or Gerald Ford. Obama’s in the same mold as those guys. So don’t despair.
Your country didn’t vote for a socialist tonight. It voted for the candidate of traditional Republican
moderation. What should gall you, haunt you, and goad you to think about the future of your party is
that that candidate wasn’t yours.
