Historians
and lame-duck officeholders abetted by the cultural currency of a new Lincoln
movie fill the tube with talk about the traditional role of (gulp) compromise in American politics.
Ideological
purity is pushed offstage in favor of praising negotiation, deal-making,
tradeoffs and even bribery to get to a legislative yes.
Steven
Spielberg’s film dramatizes a Great Emanicipator pursuing lofty goals with low
methods, ending slavery by wheeling and dealing—-exemplifying, in David Brooks’ words, that you achieve greatness “only if you are willing to stain your own
character in order to serve others--if you are willing to bamboozle, trim,
compromise and be slippery and hypocritical.”
Idealism
may eventually stage a comeback, once rescued from Tea Party clutches, but the
new pundit mood calls for Obama to emulate his predecessors in political back-dooring.
On “Face the Nation” Bob Schieffer elicits from biographers of Lincoln, Jefferson and
Eisenhower evidence that they were all “great negotiators” and “great compromisers”
in a mode often associated only with LBJ. (Jon Meacham notes Jefferson sought a
Constitutional amendment for the Louisiana Purchase but, when Napoleon wavered,
glibly denied he needed one and went ahead to double the size of the country.)
Now
that wheeling and dealing are trendy, who knows how far the reelected President
can go if he stoops enough to conquer? His Congressional opposition seems more than ready to join him in backpedaling to the future.
2 comments:
I wouldn't trust Sen. Graham any further than I could throw the southern dandy. So I'll believe him when I see him and other Republicans actually start to deal and negotiate in good-faith with the Democrats and Pres. Obama. However, I do look forward to watching the newly compromise-friendly GOPers deal with the asylum-running crazies in the party and their likely open revolt.
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