Game playing and “manufacturing crises” by “Tea Party Republicans” called out by John Carney

Filed in National by on December 20, 2011

There is a lot to like in this short statement by John Carney on the House Republicans plan to oppose the tax cut extension passed 89-10 by the Senate.

WASHINGTON — U.S. Representative John Carney (D-DE) released the following statement tonight after House Republicans announced their intention to vote down a payroll tax cut extension passed overwhelmingly by the Senate:

“Tomorrow, House Republicans intend to vote down a payroll tax cut passed overwhelmingly by Senate. Tea Party Republicans are playing games and manufacturing crises.

“The bill passed by the Senate isn’t perfect, but it ensures that middle class families don’t receive a tax hike in January, and it gives us time to pass a broader package. I hope that House Republicans come to their senses — and soon.”

“Tea Party Republicans are playing games and manufacturing crises.” That pretty much hits the nail on the head.

“I hope that House Republicans come to their senses — and soon.” This honest and direct acknowledgment that REPUBLICANS have lost their sense is a water shed moment. What Carney did here was simply state an obvious truth without feeling the need to tart it up with the sheepish and phony “bi-partisanship” which requires every mild critique of Republicans to be paired with the rejoinder that Democrats are also “part of the problem.”

Republicans are the problem. The more Democrats say it, the better.

About the Author ()

Jason330 is a deep cover double agent working for the GOP. Don't tell anybody.

Comments (31)

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  1. Delaware Dem says:

    Perhaps your Dems4Kovach game worked. Carney has been sounding like a fighting Dem lately.

  2. jason330 says:

    Maybe. The statement gives a hint that he has this sensibility in him, but I think he hasn’t acted on that impulse because he probably gets a lot of contact from constituents who get all their info from Fox News.

    I don’t want this thread to turn meta – but I’ve changed my thinking about what blogs can do for the 547th time, and I think they can punch a hole in the protective bubble under certain circumstances.

  3. puck says:

    It is a baby step, but one that is very welcome from Carney, especially the calling-out-Republicans part.

    A harder step will be for Carney to call out Republican policies when his own party is advancing them. But you have to crawl before you can walk, I guess.

    I still get depressed about the “not perfect” part though. Step back a moment, and consider this spectacle of Democrats bargaining with Republicans for tax cuts.

    And I hate that Democrats are buying into the discredited idea that tax cuts create jobs. We’ve been fighting that for 30 years and now we are peddling it.

    What makes the Senate version suck is the two-month time limit, guaranteeing another drama-queen moment early next year, plus the pipeline thing.

    If we are going to make Republicans sweat over this (and they are), I’d rather make them sweat over a clean long-term extension.

    This payroll tax issue is the perfect opportunity for Democrats to play Chicken all the way to the end this time.

  4. socialistic ben says:

    Maybe someone with good sum-it-up skills can explain this without making fun of me…. the state dept has said that if there is a deadline for the shit-spigot, (pipeline) it will actually stop it’s progress. This bill contains a deadline. I at least dont want to be able to put tar from canada right into the gulf of mexico. this is a good thing right?

  5. puck says:

    Hillary did say that. We’ll see what Hillary is made of now.

  6. socialistic ben says:

    @Jason, blogs dont do anything but blah blah blah and you should be going out and yada yada yada, unlike some people who just narf narf narf…. also, Israel abortion guns Protack

  7. socialistic ben says:

    Isnt she also on track to retire in 2012? or was that just speculation…. it’s hard to keep it separate these days.

  8. puck says:

    ““The bill passed by the Senate isn’t perfect, but it ensures that middle class families don’t receive a tax hike in January…”

    I thought that sounded familiar, and now I remember where I heard this before. This is the same Democratic logic that delivered tax cuts to the rich last December.

    In less than two years, Democrats have devolved from “making sure the rich pay their fair share” to “making sure nobody gets any tax increase.”

    Remember we gave up a millionaire’s surcharge for this Senate bill.

    If we want to decouple middle class cuts from cuts for the rich, the middle class is going to have to take a tax hit, and fight to get it back later.

  9. Truth Teller says:

    The majority of people were for single payer or universal Health care and the Dem’s didn’t act. The majority of the people are for making the wealthy pay their fair share and the Dem’s didn’t act. Wall Street and the Bankers rob us and get a bail out with our money and people lose their homes and Eric Holder sits on his hands while this theft continues. Mean while congress continues to deal in inside trading which takes advantage of the rest of us.

  10. MJ says:

    Carney posted the same message on his Facebook page and even took on a few people who said he was dropping the ball by supporting the Senate-passed bill.

  11. jason330 says:

    Talk about political game playing. Republicans voted down this measure, but in a way that allows them to say they didn’t.

  12. Geezer says:

    Let’s remember that what Carney is disappointed about is that the GOP won’t take a deal that gave them 90% of what they want.

    It takes two to tango. For whatever reason, Democrats won’t fight for their supposed principles. They prefer to give REpublicans most of what they want, then turn to the audience (us) and say, “Can you believe how unreasonable they are?” IN other words, they’re not doing any of this for us. They’re doing it for themselves and their electoral prospects.

    This isn’t a “baby step” by Carney. It’s the next step in a carefully choreographed dance.

  13. Jason330 says:

    I agree with your point on Dems strategy and how suck ass it is. I disagree with regard to Carney. In the context of all of his past statements about how BI-PARTISANSHIP RULZ!!, this represents some movement on his part.

  14. Jason330 says:

    The answer for the Democrats would be to be on the offensive for once. But that would not be “bi-partisan” and so they would be seen as “part of the problem” by the wise DC villagers who pass judgement on this stuff.

    Also – Obama does not give congressional Dems much to be on the offensive about.

  15. puck says:

    Sadly, Geezer’s kabuki theory is probably the correct one. “Kabuki” is usually the correct explanation with this Congress and President. I can’t think of an example of any honest battles that were fought and won or lost.

    Ultimately both parties are now firmly behind trickle-down economics and “no tax increases for anybody, ever.”

    Still, Carney’s latest statement is better than his alternative (which we have heard very recently).

  16. jason330 says:

    “Ultimately both parties are now firmly behind trickle-down economics and “no tax increases for anybody, ever.”

    Sad because all of that failed jibber-jabber was resoundingly crushed at the polls just a few years ago.

  17. puck says:

    “but it ensures that middle class families don’t receive a tax hike in January…”

    We are all hostages now. Permanently.

    The way to end this hostage crisis is to let the hostages feel their chains so they become acutely aware they are hostages, and start fighting back.

    That’s why I’m for tabling the payroll tax cut and expiring ALL the Bush tax cuts.

  18. jason330 says:

    I’m in agreement with Winston Smith when you start to talk about us proles getting some class consciousness. I just don’t see it happening. We’ll be fighting about who has the nicest chains, or making grand pronouncements about how the 1% can’t be chained because they are such noble job creators.

    No my friend Mr. Puck, I’m feeling rather hopeless this year.

  19. puck says:

    The message is that if we don’t let the 1% continue their looting, the middle class might get a tax increase. Well comparing those two evils, I’ll take the tax increase, thank you very much. I’m tired of my elected Democrats letting Republicans run rampant in my name.

  20. jason330 says:

    Got it. Won’t work. The destruction of Social Security genie is out of the bottle. The only thing we can do is cut taxes and shrink government now. Prosperity through Austerity

    Everything else makes job creators cry, and all goodness flows from the benevolence and happiness of job creators. They thirst for sacrifice as lustily as the most bloodthirsty pagan gods of yore.

  21. jason330 says:

    Barclay’s analyst: Failure to pass payroll tax extension likely drop GDP by 1.5 percentage pts

  22. puck says:

    If you believe tax cuts create wealth let’s cut it to zero.

    If you really want to know what financial experts think about payroll tax cuts, go ask one if it would be a good idea to cut your 401(k) contributions so you can go shopping.

  23. mediawatch says:

    The one thing I have never heard from these “job creators” is how much their taxes will have to be cut before they create one job that pays, say, $40K a year.

    And, as we well know, whatever that figure is, if you give the “job creator” the choice between using the money to create a job or to keep it for himself, he’ll keep the money.

  24. puck says:

    For that answer we must consult Creedence Clearwater Revival:

    And when you ask them, “How much should we give?”
    Ooh, they only answer More! more! more!

  25. puck says:

    Force Republicans to pass tax cuts? “Oh no Senator Reid, pleaae don’t throw us into that briar patch!”

    “The House has zero leverage,” this Senate GOP aide says. “If I’m Schumer or Reid, what I’d do is let it expire and force the House to come back the next day and pass it.”

    I do like the idea of Republican disarray though (see the link). I guess there are forces working that I don’t fully understand.

    Once again Democrats are promising to stand firm. We’ll see, but if Democrats ever wanted to play Chicken to the end, this is the issue to do it on.

  26. MJ says:

    Here are the names of the rethuglicans in the House who just gave the finger to 160 million Americans:

    Adams
    Aderholt
    Akin
    Alexander
    Amash
    Amodei
    Austria
    Bachus
    Barletta
    Bartlett
    Barton (TX)
    Benishek
    Berg
    Biggert
    Bilbray
    Bilirakis
    Bishop (UT)
    Black
    Blackburn
    Bonner
    Bono Mack
    Boustany
    Brady (TX)
    Brooks
    Broun (GA)
    Bucshon
    Buerkle
    Burgess
    Burton (IN)
    Calvert
    Camp
    Campbell
    Canseco
    Cantor
    Capito
    Carter
    Cassidy
    Chabot
    Chaffetz
    Coffman (CO)
    Cole
    Conaway
    Cravaack
    Crawford
    Crenshaw
    Culberson
    Davis (KY)
    Denham
    Dent
    DesJarlais
    Dold
    Dreier
    Duffy
    Duncan (SC)
    Duncan (TN)
    Ellmers
    Emerson
    Farenthold
    Fincher
    Fitzpatrick
    Fleischmann
    Fleming
    Flores
    Forbes
    Fortenberry
    Foxx
    Franks (AZ)
    Frelinghuysen
    Gallegly
    Gardner
    Garrett
    Gerlach
    Gibbs
    Gingrey (GA)
    Gohmert
    Goodlatte
    Gosar
    Gowdy
    Granger
    Graves (GA)
    Graves (MO)
    Griffin (AR)
    Griffith (VA)
    Grimm
    Guinta
    Guthrie
    Hall
    Hanna
    Harper
    Harris
    Hartzler
    Hastings (WA)
    Hayworth
    Heck
    Hensarling
    Herger
    Huelskamp
    Huizenga (MI)
    Hultgren
    Hunter
    Hurt
    Issa
    Jenkins
    Johnson (OH)
    Johnson, Sam
    Jordan
    Kelly
    King (IA)
    King (NY)
    Kingston
    Kinzinger (IL)
    Kline
    Labrador
    Lamborn
    Lance
    Landry
    Lankford
    Latham
    LaTourette
    Latta
    Lewis (CA)
    LoBiondo
    Long
    Lucas
    Luetkemeyer
    Lummis
    Lungren, Daniel E.
    Mack
    Manzullo
    Marchant
    Marino
    McCarthy (CA)
    McCaul
    McClintock
    McCotter
    McHenry
    McKeon
    McKinley
    McMorris Rodgers
    Meehan
    Mica
    Miller (FL)
    Miller (MI)
    Miller, Gary
    Mulvaney
    Murphy (PA)
    Myrick
    Neugebauer
    Noem
    Nugent
    Nunes
    Nunnelee
    Olson
    Palazzo
    Paulsen
    Pearce
    Pence
    Petri
    Pitts
    Platts
    Poe (TX)
    Pompeo
    Posey
    Price (GA)
    Quayle
    Reed
    Rehberg
    Reichert
    Renacci
    Ribble
    Rigell
    Rivera
    Roby
    Roe (TN)
    Rogers (AL)
    Rogers (KY)
    Rogers (MI)
    Rohrabacher
    Rokita
    Rooney
    Ros-Lehtinen
    Roskam
    Ross (FL)
    Royce
    Runyan
    Ryan (WI)
    Scalise
    Schilling
    Schmidt
    Schock
    Schweikert
    Scott (SC)
    Scott, Austin
    Sensenbrenner
    Sessions
    Shimkus
    Shuster
    Simpson
    Smith (NE)
    Smith (NJ)
    Smith (TX)
    Southerland
    Stearns
    Stivers
    Stutzman
    Sullivan
    Terry
    Thompson (PA)
    Thornberry
    Tiberi
    Tipton
    Turner (NY)
    Turner (OH)
    Upton
    Walberg
    Walden
    Walsh (IL)
    Webster
    West
    Westmoreland
    Whitfield
    Wilson (SC)
    Wittman
    Womack
    Woodall
    Yoder
    Young (AK)
    Young (FL)
    Young (IN)

    It’s more important to drink the tea than it is to cut taxes for the middle class.

  27. jason330 says:

    The WH statement that comes out in the next hour or so will be telling.

  28. puck says:

    Prediction – Groundhog Day:

    1. Obama tells Congress to get back to work and forge a compromise.
    2. Senate leadership works out an even more Republican-friendly version of the bill.
    3. Biden is dispatched to pimp the new bill to uncomfortable Senate Democrats.
    4. Obama flies overseas while the bill is on the Senate floor.
    5. Obama returns to sign the bill.

  29. jason330 says:

    And I thought I was jaded.

  30. puck says:

    How can you not be jaded when top Democrats are saying things like this:

    “Right now Americans want two things from their Congress: middle class tax relief and compromise,” said Rep. Steve Israel of New York, chairman of the House Democrats’ fundraising committee.

    When you believe “no tax increases for nobody nohow” there is no telling what other crazy stuff you might agree to to get it.

    The hostages must be saved from tax increases at all costs!

  31. Anonymous says:

    Truthteller: Perfect! There is really only 1% difference between the two corporate parties.