So... agree or disagree, I say what I think on here. 🤷‍♂️ I took flack from the left for defending CARES. The current deal might end up as better than nothing and worth passing. But Dems left billions in aid on the table that would’ve helped many facing dire straits. For example.. Image
Let’s take the 12/2 decision by Dem leaders to endorse the 900B bipartisan frame. These kinds of negotiations are all about that baseline- you fight like hell to give an inch. Pelosi/Mnuchin had a $1.8B baseline. Securing no concessions, Dem leaders *halved* the baseline to 900B. Image
Some argue that Dem leaders refusing to cut a deal before the election helped Biden. Sure. Others note McConnell rejected the 1.8T deal. Yes! But: why cut the baseline in *half*, giving away ~$1T in aid, for no concessions? There’s miles of landing room between 1.8T and 900B.
At this point McConnell has watched Dems come all the way down from 3.4T (with HEROES) to 900B. Meanwhile, he started at 500B and hasn’t come up at all. Does he join Dems’ embrace of the bipartisan group? Of course not! With the baseline reset to 900B, he seeks more concessions.
McConnell pushes to sever state aid, pairing it with liability shields, supposedly his biggest priority. Having halved the 1.8 Pelosi/Mnuchin baseline to 900B Dems prepare to drop it further to 748B. Dems didn’t trade state aid (~300B) for liability, they traded away 900B for it.
All this time and for months prior, Dems have been spinning their wheels, never mounting anything resembling an aggressive pressure campaign on popular policies like $1,200 checks. Instead, they did the opposite, repeatedly signaling their eagerness to climb down on key demands. ImageImage
Enter Bernie and the Progressive Caucus, whose pressure campaign forces direct checks into the package. (Pressure works!) But by now, the baseline has been lowered to 748B, so when their checks get forced back in, the total is back to 900B instead of up to around $1.1 or 1.2T.
As NYT, Politico & others reported, McConnell wants a deal to help in GA. The idea that he’ll swallow 900B but would have rejected 1.1T or 1.2T is heavy on assumption and light on evidence. Dem leaders gave away their chance to try for more when they endorsed the 900B baseline. Image
Note, too, that what I'm proposing here is not a fantasy. Bipartisan "gangs" often pop up in these kinds of negotiations. (I was there for many of them!) Usually, the leaders hold back. Their endorsement is one of the biggest bullets you have. Dem leaders rushed it and wasted it.
Why does this matter? This👇 is why. The delta between the current bill and what was achievable is around $300B. That's a *lot* of aid, desperately needed by many. Dem leaders voluntarily jumping down from the $1.8 baseline to $900B made it easy for McConnell to cut off this aid.

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More from @AJentleson

21 Dec
Democrats should not take a victory lap on this bill. It provides less than a third of the aid economists say is necessary and McConnell is getting all the credit- after blocking aid for months. Instead we should explain why this bill is inadequate and how Dems will deliver more.
Dems got out-maneuvered. Failing to secure state/local aid means the bill comes in ~$300B below what was achievable, with harsh consequences. Politically, McConnell is getting all the credit. Embracing the bill undercuts Warnock and Ossoff by validating McConnell’s victory lap.
Vote yes, say it’s crap. This bill may be better than nothing, but it’s a slap in the face to working Americans who are getting hosed while corporations rake in record profits. Hang its inadequacy around Trump and McConnell and hammer home that Dems want to deliver more.
Read 7 tweets
18 Dec
With Mnuchin endorsing a $1.8T proposal in Oct that included $1,200 checks, $400 UI & $300B in state/local, and with Trump still actively trying to increase direct checks, there is simply no way to argue that Dem leaders secured the best deal possible. McConnell ate their lunch.
Of course McConnell won’t bring the bill straight up, that’s not how it works. The leverage is the WH endorsing (enthusiastically!) policies Dems favor. Under Obama, McConnell used Obama’s endorsement of spending cuts to much greater effect than Dems with roles/policies reversed.
There’s a weird “McConnell is evil BUT we must also believe whatever he says” learned helplessness. Leaders declare specific bills DOA, then the negotiators run at each other with the pieces. Dems might not have been able to get $1.8 but they definitely could have gotten > 900B.
Read 9 tweets
16 Dec
This will one day be cited by Republicans as a reason they refused to cooperate with Biden - which will be a bullshit manufactured excuse to cover for the fact that they never intended to in the first place, and only prove that Jen was right.
And there it is. This is bullshit and should be covered as such. It’s an insult to our intelligence to believe that Republicans were gearing up to work with Biden but their delicate sensibilities were offended so they balked. After the last four years let’s not play this game.
Read 4 tweets
16 Dec
McConnell is upbeat because he is getting what he wants: the least amount of aid injected into the economy while still passing a bill before the GA runoffs. Dems are upbeat because they love doing "deals," even when that deal is giving McConnell everything he wants.
The package Dems are gearing up to accept closely resembles the skinny framework McConnell released months ago. Dems came down by several trillion dollars while McConnell inched up. Unclear what the bipartisan negotiations achieved since this is basically just McConnell’a bill.
What more could Dems do? Dems did basically none of the things you'd normally want to do to pressure the other side. Instead of anything resembling a pressure campaign on popular policies like the checks,they spent months signaling their willingness to climb down off key demands.
Read 8 tweets
9 Nov
Ever since McConnell's hand-picked candidate, Trey Grayson, lost to Rand Paul in the 2010 GOP primary he has almost always done whatever the base wants. E.g., blocking Garland was a move to cover his right flank after seeing Boehner ousted by the Tea Party. It just paid off big.
When McConnell entered the Senate in the 1980s he carved a niche by doing what other Republicans would not, and blocking popular campaign finance reform bills. After leading one such filibuster, his colleagues “were finally beginning to know who I was,” he enthused in his memoir.
McConnell’s efforts to block campaign finance reform bill spanned the 1980s and 1990s and earned him the nickname Darth Vader. They also helped him climb the ranks of GOP leadership and rise to NRSC chair. Along the way he embraced the Darth Vader tag. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
Read 7 tweets
13 Oct
With respect to Bruce, the thing about Madison is that you have to follow his entire thought. A few lines up, he calls majority rule "the fundamental principle of republican Government." He would lay out both sides, then come down firmly for majority rule. loc.gov/resource/mjm.0…
At the Constitutional Convention, Madison argued for majority rule in the Senate and against giving states the same number of senators. Remember this next time someone throws Madison at you: he wanted the Senate to be majority rule *and* proportional by population like the House.
That quote ^^ is Madison at the Constitutional Convention arguing against the Great Compromise: a bicameral Congress with representation in the House proportional by population but equal in the Senate. Madison decried equal representation for states in the Senate as "injustice."
Read 6 tweets

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