Forget some specious post-partisanship that tries to "balance" left and right. Conservatives are counting on such weak liberal strategy to move their own agenda further and further to the extreme right. (Extreme wrong, actually.) I wholeheartedly agree with this recent article in the Washington Post, so will let these excerpts speak for themselves. Please see the entire piece:
"We have been studying Washington politics and Congress for more than 40
years, and never have we seen them this dysfunctional. In our past
writings, we have criticized both parties when we believed it was
warranted. Today, however, we have no choice but to acknowledge that the
core of the problem lies with the Republican Party.
"The GOP has become an insurgent outlier in American politics. It is ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition. When
one party moves this far from the mainstream, it makes it nearly
impossible for the political system to deal constructively with the
country’s challenges.
"It is clear that the center of gravity in the Republican Party has
shifted sharply to the right. Its once-legendary moderate and
center-right legislators in the House and the Senate — think Bob Michel,
Mickey Edwards, John Danforth, Chuck Hagel — are virtually extinct....the real move to the bedrock right starts with two names: Newt Gingrich and Grover Norquist.... The forces Gingrich unleashed destroyed whatever comity existed across
party lines, activated an extreme and virulently anti-Washington base —
most recently represented by tea party activists — and helped drive
moderate Republicans out of Congress. (Some of his progeny, elected in
the early 1990s, moved to the Senate and polarized its culture in the
same way.)
"Today, thanks to the GOP, compromise has gone out the window in
Washington. In the first two years of the Obama administration, nearly
every presidential initiative met with vehement, rancorous and unanimous
Republican opposition in the House and the Senate, followed by efforts
to delegitimize the results and repeal the policies. The filibuster,
once relegated to a handful of major national issues in a given
Congress, became a routine weapon of obstruction, applied even to widely
supported bills or presidential nominations. And Republicans in the
Senate have abused the confirmation process to block any and every
nominee to posts such as the head of the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau, solely to keep laws that were legitimately enacted from being
implemented."
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