Obama's 'Chicago-style politics'
Republicans are accusing the Obama White House of an offensive offensive strategy for its critics -- which lately include FOX News Channel's most vocal commentators.
Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, on the Senate floor, has accused the president of reviving the old "enemies list'' of Nixon days , this from a guy who served the Nixon White House as a young man. Those enemies include the insurance industry.
And now House Republican Leader John Boehner says the White House's attack tactics are nothing short of "Chicago-style politics.''
"The White House and congressional Democrats know that their liberal special-interest agenda is not very popular,'' Boehner (R-Ohio) said at his weekly press briefing today. "And now they are following a familiar pattern: when you can't win an argument based on the facts, launch vicious political attacks.
"This Chicago-style politics is shutting the American people out and demonizing their opponents,'' Boehner asserted.
"They are writing the health care bill in secret, even though the president called for all of this to be out on an open table and have C-SPAN cameras in the room,'' he said. "Instead, Democrats are targeting those who don't fall immediately in line - the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, doctors, Fox News. (talk radio, insurance companies, republicans, governors, military generals)
The Administration promised during the campaign that they were going to usher in an era of 'post-partisanship' in here in Washington,'' the House Republican leader said, "but what they are doing is flat-out despicable."
Obama has negated, dismissed, ignored, minimized, deionized and chastised all opposition during the past 9 months.
ReplyDeleteI have never seen him involved in an honest debate with anyone in the opposition. (though he says this is what he wants)
And everything is being done in secret! None of these spending bills are being debated publicly let alone published publicly.
Bottom line: At least Bush had bi-partisan support. Iraq, Afghanistan, Prescription Drugs, Freedom of Information Act, No Child Left Behind all had bi-partisan support.