by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers
Breaking Free From Rush
Last week, President Obama met
with congressional leaders from
both parties to discuss his
economic recovery program, despite the GOP's apparent
reluctance to compromise
on the package. Obama told GOP members at the meeting
that they
need to stop listening to hate
radio host Rush Limbaugh if Congress
is to accomplish anything. "You
can't just listen to Rush Limbaugh and get things done,"
Obama
told Republican leaders. His scolding of the far right came days
after Limbaugh notoriously declared, "I
hope
he fails," referring to Obama.
Limbaugh fired back yesterday,
stating, "I
think Obama wants me to fail."
The verbal tit-for-tat between
Obama and Limbaugh carries a more significant meaning than what appears
on the surface. In this time of crisis, the country needs a
strong economic recovery package to be quickly shuttled through
Congress and onto Obama's desk. Given that Limbaugh carries tremendous
sway over congressional
GOP, will they break
away from him on the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act?
Or will they continue to partake in
Limbaugh's brand of "reflexive
obstructionism?"
HOPING
FOR FAILURE:
Limbaugh's recent comment saying that he hopes
Obama fails as president is
deeply hypocritical. Conservatives long
claimed that any criticism of President Bush's policies was evidence
that liberals "want[ed]
Bush to fail." For example,
during the debate over
Iraq, perhaps the most frequent right-wing talking point was that
liberals wanted to "surrender."
This straw man argument, of course, had no
basis in reality. Yet today, with a progressive at the country's helm,
Limbaugh is perfectly content saying that he wants the President to
fail at reviving the economy. The comment also underscores
just how
radical Limbaugh is. Even fellow conservative talk radio host Bill
Bennett hinted at disagreement, stating, "The
locution 'I
want him to fail' is not what
you say the first week
the man's been inaugurated." Limbaugh also remarked
last week, "We are being told
that we have to hope he succeeds, that we have to bend
over, grab the ankles, bend over forward,
backward, whichever,
because his father was black, because this is the first black
president."
FOLLOWING RUSH:
Nevertheless, despite his radical
and hateful views, Limbaugh has
held considerable influence on the
actions of the congressional GOP. His role in pulling
the GOP away from immigration reform in 2007 was undeniable.
His rants on the Fairness
Doctrine culminated in legislation
from Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN). Last year, when
Limbaugh infamously referred to U.S. soldiers in Iraq who were critical
of the war as "phony
soldiers," the congressional GOP
rushed to his
defense. Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA), for example, introduced a resolution
"commending Rush Hudson Limbaugh III for his ongoing public
support of American troops
serving both here and abroad."
Furthermore, GOP members have long boasted about their
close
relationship with Rush. "I mean, there's
nothing particularly inflammatory
about anything Rush Limbaugh says," Sen.
Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said in 2002. In
1994, former House speaker Newt Gingrich made Limbaugh an honorary
member of the 104th Congress.
GOP
OBSTRUCTIONISM: In
recent weeks, Limbaugh has been mounting
a fight against Obama's
ambitious recovery package.
"Obama's plan would buy
votes for the Democrat Party, in
the same way FDR's New Deal
established majority power for 50 years of Democrat rule," he said last
week. The question going forward is whether congressional conservatives
will work with Obama to pass a strong recovery package or continue to
buckle under Limbaugh's demands. Thus far, the signs are
discouraging. House Minority Leader John
Boehner (R-OH) -- who said this
week that he will not vote for the
recovery as it stands -- and Limbaugh
have been marching in lockstep in harping on the inclusion
of family planning funding in the legislation. Several other prominent conservatives
are buckling to
their right-wing base in publicly
opposing the
recovery. Limbaugh has also
made Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner his punching
bag in recent weeks, upping the
pressure around the controversy
over Geithner's taxes. Yesterday, Geithner was confirmed by a 60-34
Senate vote. "[C]onservative
talk radio rallied a flood of
calls to Capitol Hill on
Monday opposing his nomination. A majority of Senate Republicans heeded
those calls," observes Politico.
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The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation -- the world's largest philanthropic organization -- will increase its giving this year despite significant financial losses last year.
THINK
PROGRESS: Former Bush
speechwriter Marc Thiessen: CIA torturers are
"American heroes."
WONK
ROOM: Auto industry screams
global warming regulations will bring
"confusion and chaos."
YGLESIAS:
The media is still tilted in favor of conservative opinion-making.
VALLEYWAG:
As Vice President Cheney leaves office, VP's house now appears
unobscured on Google Maps.
ILLINOIS:
Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D) insists, "I am an honest politician."
MINNESOTA:
Three-judge panel begins hearing Norm Coleman's lawsuit in the
contested U.S. Senate race, which could take weeks.
ECONOMY:
Even with a federal stimulus, "states would still be left with billions
of dollars of budget gaps to close on their own."
"[The 2002 Arab peace initiative] is not actually a solution to the
Israeli-Arab dispute should be obvious to anyone with even a modicum of
understanding of the region."
-- Neoconservative commentator Max Boot, 01/24/09
VERSUS
"[The initiative is] a serious opening for real progress."
-- Israeli President Shimon Peres, 11/17/08







