Even if you assume Dems win the Senate with a slim majority, getting 8+ GOP votes to pass a public option without nuking the filibuster is more unlikely than nuking the filibuster to pass M4A. It slips through the filter because it doesn’t involve big change, but it’s a fantasy.
I defer to folks with more sophisticated parliamentary and policy expertise. But assume you can for the sake of argument - here’s why using reconciliation is unworkable. First, you’d be telling other major issues to take a hike - climate change, gun control, democracy reform etc.
If a Dem wins in 2020, it’s unlikely they’ll have a mandate to pursue health care to the exclusion of all other issues. Reconciliation is only available at end of year. Punting on all other issues to pursue public option will mean a year of hemorrhaging capital - echoes of 2009.
Second, using reconciliation would be the ultimate compromise with ourselves, a half measure that gains us nothing but limits our ability to get stuff done. Pursuing a public option via reconciliation will give Rs all the rationale they need to go nuclear when they retake power.
In a Quixotic quest, we’d congratulate ourselves on nobly limiting our ability to deliver when we’re in power while giving Rs plenty of runway to go nuclear themselves. When they retake power they’ll nuke the filibuster and we’ll be left whining to the Sunday shows about norms.
Third, the idea that using reconciliation preserves the traditions of the Senate in any meaningful way is a thumb-sucker. The precedent of passing big-ticket legislation via majority vote would be set in stone. There is no way around this.
In short, a Democratic POTUS is going to pass big legislation by majority vote. The only question is whether they hem and haw and try to backdoor it via reconciliation- bleeding capital and leaving huge issues on the table- or face it frontally and pass big bills from day one.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
“Abolish ICE” is and always will be a political albatross. I don’t care if it gets a bump into positive territory given the horrific stuff we’ve seen—it’ll fall back and remain a drag. BUT sometimes it’s important to do unpopular things. So let’s think this through. 1/
What do we want to achieve? People usually cite things that can be accomplished via reform: no masks, no street grabs, due process, accountability for criminals, justice for victims. Retraining, fixing the culture. Good. All these things are more popular than “Abolish ICE.” 2/
When people think about what this would look like in sum, they tend to land on basically replacing ICE with another agency. So you’re gonna create a new federal agency to do stuff that a reformed ICE could do—OK, fine, let’s keep playing that out. 3/
A quick 🧵 on what seems to be Trump's plan to obliterate the Senate's advise and consent responsibility so that he can recess appoint his cabinet, or at least those members who lack the votes to get confirmed by the Senate. 1/
Remember that only the Senate confirms nominees and judges. The House has no role in the confirmation process itself.
The Constitution allows POTUS to make recess appointments, ie to put nominees in place without Senate confirmation. In the past this has been used sparingly. 2/
For recess appointments to happen, the Senate has to be in recess. For a decade or so, the Senate has not been going into recess when it adjourns but pro forma sessions, which can last up to 3 days. Long story, it goes back to Rs blocking Obama from doing recess appointments. 3/
1. Joe Biden’s profoundly arrogant decision to run again
2. The strategy by groups and their funders to push Harris to take politically disastrous positions in the 2020 primary, thus leaving the people they claim to fight for worse off
Moving forward, we can’t do anything about the first problem but we can do something about the second.
Gadflies need to reckon with the fact that the people they claim to fight for are worse off because of their efforts.
Winning elections is how you change policy.
The price of Trump winning will be paid by vulnerable people, not professional activists.
a quick🧵 on why this selzer poll of Iowa (???) matters, translated for normal people, i.e. those who don't remember where they were when she released her poll of the 2008 democratic primary (me, not normal: i was in the edwards HQ in chapel hill, all love to my JRE08 peeps ✊)
the reason political obsessives revere @jaselzer is that she is uncannily accurate, and has the courage to publish results that do not herd - and which usually end up proving prophetic. her record speaks for itself:
@jaselzer while IA has not been in play for dems at the presidential level since 2008, selzer polls still tend to predict neighboring states such as WI and maybe in this cycle, NE. and/because...
alright here's a 🧵on why i'm feeling optimistic and tips on surviving the next two weeks. take it or leave it.
first i want to endorse @danpfeiffer's take - YOU have agency. if twitter is stressing you out, log off. i like and respect @NateSilver538 but his model is not going to tell us anything by E day that it doesn't tell us today. the race models as a tossup.
but unlike nate my gut says harris is going to win. here's why.
let's starts with the fact that the race is a tossup. that's a GOOD thing compared to where we were a few months ago. in july, we were on track to lose. instead of a death march, harris has us in a position to win.
While it's true that you can't mint candidates who look like Fetterman, the reason his message resonated was that the campaign was so deeply in tune with PA, including knowing that the NJ attack would resonate in ways that many political reporters never really grasped.
A common reaction among super-savvy DC political types was that the NJ stuff was “too online.” Well either Mr. Beuth, a retired 72-year factory worker from Armstrong county, is super online, or many super-savvy DC political types were wrong.
A good takeaway might be that just because something plays well online doesn’t mean it’s “too online.”