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Wednesday, November 12, 2014

The Republican Majority Must Play Offense or They'll Lose

Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds has an excellent list of suggestions at USA Today for an early salvo of bills the Republicans could fire off when the new Congress comes into session. As he puts it, there are three kinds of bills they can pass: "those Obama will want to sign; those he won't want to sign but will have to; and those he'll veto, but where a veto is unpopular." His six suggestions cover all three categories, including some wonderfully outside-the-box ideas that will make the entire Democrat Party squirm and sweat when the President is obliged to knock them down. I especially like ideas Number 5 and 6. As Insty himself would say, read the whole thing.

It should be obvious to everyone from Mitch McConnell and John Boehner on down that the GOP Congress is doomed unless it plays offense. If they let themselves get pushed around by the media, share power with the defeated Democrats, and spend the next two years cutting deals with Obama, they'll be wiped out in a 2016 Democrat wave that looks an awful lot like the 2014 wave that swept Republicans into power. There is absolutely zero appetite in America for an "opposition party" that delivers hated Obama policies with a slight discount.

The Republicans also cannot be content with merely opposing Obama in the passive sense, i.e. knocking down whatever he sends their way. They have a golden opportunity to do something they could never do while friendly Democrat media was complicit with Majority Leader Harry Reid's quiet murder of legislation: they can take the initiative. As Reynolds suggests, a great deal of political capital can be drained away from Obama (and his increasingly marginalized, nervous Party) by dropping bills he has to veto on his desk. Obama's strategy has always involved amassing political capital without actually spending it - Harry Reid protected him from having to use that veto pen. The vulnerability created by the loss of the Senate's Crypt Keeper is enormous. And since the American people just handed Obama the most stunning repudiation any President has received in the modern age, they clearly expect Republicans to take aggressive action. It has to be done carefully... but there's no reason it can't be both vigorous and careful.

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