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GOP Actions Often Defied What Most Americans Want On Key Issues Tackled During Lame Duck Session

John Bohener House Gop Agenda

ALAN FRAM and JENNIFER AGIESTA   12/25/10 12:39 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Republicans say they will follow "the people's priorities" when they gain power on Capitol Hill next month. Yet when it came to tax cuts for the wealthy and other top issues that dominated the just concluded lame-duck Congress, the GOP either defied what most Americans want or followed their will only after grudging, drawn-out battles.

Relentlessly focused on the next election, politicians are usually loath to act against voter sentiment. Still, the post-election weeks of the 111th Congress saw battles in which Washington seemed oblivious to the direction most people wanted lawmakers to take, as measured by public opinion polls. These included:

_Congress' approval of a compromise between President Barack Obama and congressional GOP leaders renewing expiring tax cuts for everyone, despite broad public opposition to including people earning over $250,000. An Associated Press-CNBC Poll in late November found only 34 percent wanted taxes reduced for the richest Americans.

_Democrats' struggle before Congress finally repealed the prohibition against gays serving openly in the military. An ABC News-Washington Post poll this month showed 77 percent favored ending the ban, consistent with other polls, and a Pentagon survey of thousands of servicemen and women found 7 in 10 supporting the move or saying it wouldn't hurt.

_The failure of Democrats to approve the Dream Act, which would have helped many young illegal immigrants become citizens if they attend college or join the military. A Gallup Poll this month found 54 percent support for the measure.

_ Roadblocks the Obama administration faced before ultimately persuading the Senate to ratify a new nuclear treaty with Russia, even as an AP-GfK Poll last month showed 67 percent backing Senate approval of the START pact.

On each, Republicans led the effort to oppose policies that most people support, though Obama and many Democrats eventually joined them to back tax cuts for upper-income families. Capitalizing on the leverage they gained by winning House control and extra Senate seats on Election Day, the GOP used Senate procedures to force Democrats to get large majorities to prevail. In the case of START, GOP leaders forced delays that in the end were not successful at denying Obama and Democrats the two-thirds Senate majority that the Constitution requires to ratify a treaty.

The GOP's stance was striking for a party that spent much of the 2010 congressional campaign accusing Democrats of ignoring the public's will, a sentiment echoed by Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, expected to be the next House speaker.

"Beginning in January, the House is going to become the outpost in Washington for the American people and their desire for a smaller, less-costly and more accountable government," Boehner said. "The president's agenda may be the agenda of Washington, but beginning Jan. 5th the agenda of this House will be the agenda of the American people. The people's priorities will be our priorities."

On some of the final issues, Obama and Congress listened to what most people want.

While polls show wide concern about record budget deficits, people are leery of addressing the problem by raising taxes or cutting cherished programs like Social Security or Medicare. Politicians went nowhere near such unpopular proposals. In a token move that would have little budget impact, Obama proposed freezing federal workers' salaries, which most people support, and Congress quickly agreed.

On other matters, lawmakers were driven more by what each party's strongest supporters wanted, according to analysts on both sides.

"This is definitely a listen-to-your-base lame-duck session," said GOP pollster Glen Bolger.

On the lame duck's marquee issue, Obama and Republican leaders reached a deal to retain everyone's tax cuts – a GOP demand – for two more years, and to extend unemployment benefits to millions of people whose coverage was expiring, a priority of Democrats and the administration.

Polls by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center and ABC News-Washington Post showed at least 6 in 10 Americans supported that compromise, making the deal easier for many Democrats to back.

But most Democrats opposed giving the tax breaks to the highest-earning Americans, a position that an AP-CNBC poll showed was shared by nearly 2 in 3 people, including 8 in 10 Democrats. In the end, though, many of them were reluctant to reject the compromise, knowing its defeat would mean they had capped 2010 by voting to let peoples' taxes rise in January.

"It says, 'We don't want to be seen as the ones who raise taxes for everyone,'" Democratic pollster Dave Beattie said of why many Democratic lawmakers backed down and supported the tax deal.

It was easy for most Republicans to support the tax legislation, since a majority of their supporters favor upper-income tax cuts.

Many ardent conservatives oppose a new nuclear pact with Russia, eased immigration restrictions and repeal of the "don't ask, don't tell" ban against military service by openly gay people. That gave GOP lawmakers leeway to oppose those measures, despite overall public support for them.

"These are red-meat Republican issues," said Timothy Nokken, a political science professor at Texas Tech University who studies Congress.

Also making opposition easier for Republicans was their realization that despite the broad backing those issues have, they don't drive the votes of many people.

"Even though there is support for START and repeal of 'don't ask don't tell,' these are not primary core issues for voters, and there's little harm that could come to them by opposing those two," said Republican consultant Steve Lombardo.

___

AP Polling Director Trevor Tompson and AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Republicans say they will follow "the people's priorities" when they gain power on Capitol Hill next month. Yet when it came to tax cuts for the wealthy and other top issues that do...
WASHINGTON — Republicans say they will follow "the people's priorities" when they gain power on Capitol Hill next month. Yet when it came to tax cuts for the wealthy and other top issues that do...
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08:21 AM on 12/29/2010
*Most* Americans I know want less Government. Are ya working on that, fellas?
12:39 PM on 12/30/2010
Most Americans I know want less corporate greed.
06:24 PM on 12/28/2010
For the "people" means Wall Street scammers. They are the contributors. So quit picking on the GOP. Have you no mercy? Their salaries are difficult to live on.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
08:53 AM on 12/28/2010
Give me a break - we hear the same thing from every politician elected to office - "I will listen to my constituents" and then they go on their merry way, down the greenback road with their hands out to anyone who has the money they need to get reelected.

"Constituents"? Only those with the big bucks need apply. BOTH parties are on constant campaigns for election or reelection.
07:26 AM on 12/28/2010
Are we surprised? The hard-core foaming-at-the-mouth Republicans are 'Machiavellian' to such an extent that it would make Niccolò Machiavelli blush.
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07:22 AM on 12/28/2010
up chuck!
07:05 AM on 12/28/2010
In all fairness to the Republicans, they don't specify which people when they say they will follow the people's priorities.
07:03 AM on 12/28/2010
Republicans have never done what they say.

They say what people want to hear, then do what they want. In most cases this means establishing laws and policies that transfer more wealth to the wealthy.
08:22 AM on 12/29/2010
None of them do. SSDD in the USA.
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Soulmentor
"To thine own self be true...."
02:58 AM on 12/28/2010
*******Republicans say they will follow "the people's priorities" ....*********

Of course they will, silly. After THEY have decided for ''the people" what those priorities are.
08:27 AM on 12/29/2010
Like bandwidth and copyright infringements?
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caseyblab
12:32 AM on 12/28/2010
Yes, now that the Supreme Court has decided that Corporations are people, the Republicans are now willing to "listen to the people".
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Shawny
01:40 PM on 12/30/2010
You just hit the nail on the head. Thanks
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JumpDownTurnAround
12:06 AM on 12/28/2010
Yeah right! Suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuure they will. And I've got a bridge I'd like to sell you too!
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Sister777
Make Corporations Pay
07:45 AM on 12/28/2010
Hey, after the repubs get done they might just have privatized that bridge, then you really can sell it!
08:23 AM on 12/29/2010
The get Obama's "Science Czar", John Holdren, on it so we can have *less* bridges.
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givesflack
shrink GOP small enough to drown in bathtub
11:44 PM on 12/27/2010
I figured out this past election season that the GOP backed party of multinational corporations have succeeded in flooding the national dialogue with phony rhetoric and group tactics to suppress honest and natural discussion a country would ordinarily have. Just you look a how many irrelevant and dishonest topics each conservative talk show hosts spouts about, how many illiterate signs held up at tea party rallies, the obnoxious amounts of things that we have to weed through every time Palin/Boehner/Backmann etc speaks and the vast amounts of money thrown at GOP unqualified candidates all with the backing of the mainstream media. The public never gets to hear competing views because we are inundated with this misinformation and the media sifts through it generously asking itself and the American people to pay attention to this the false information's relevance as if it's already accepted truth without taking serious stands on real issues and or Democratic view points, treating them irreverently.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Steelsil
Warren/Grayson 2016! Yes We Can!
11:32 PM on 12/27/2010
First they Republicans will have to decide who the 'real Americans' are, so they will know who to listen to.  There is $arah's 'real Americans,' who have dead animals strapped to the hood of their pickups, and there are the country club Republicans'  'real Americans,' who smoke big cigars and make more than a million dollars a year.
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Mikecoatl
11:53 PM on 12/27/2010
The latter is who they REALLY serve. The former are simply ign0rant enough to go along with it.
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Davwbaird
Brothers and sisters of the same mother
08:53 PM on 12/27/2010
The reputugs plan on cuttinh the federal budget 20 percent.

The will kill the recovery. the states are going under.
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Sister777
Make Corporations Pay
07:52 AM on 12/28/2010
They plan on ending agencies like the EPA, yet doubling the the defense budget to 2.74 trillion annually. Now that the banks are claiming insolvency again, be sure they will spend our tax dollars to keep their buddies afloat. Nothing for hardworking Americans, but socialism galore for banks. Banks that stole our homes, our 401k's.

No, the repubs only want to destroy the power of the government to prevent them from taking with no oversight nor regulations our countries rich natural resources to off shore corporations to make stuff for emerging middle class such as India and China.
08:24 AM on 12/29/2010
Aka, less Government. Let's hope you are correct!!!!
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Davwbaird
Brothers and sisters of the same mother
02:11 AM on 12/30/2010
let's hope I am not. not fond of and recession
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johuyik
Pro-2cnd and anti-NRA.
08:47 PM on 12/27/2010
Republicans are better than Democrats because the run bigger deficits!

"The most important measure of the deficit is not the size in dollars, or even the size in dollars after adjusting for inflation. The most important measure is the size relative to the nation’s economic output, what economists call Gross Domestic Product or GDP. And in fact, the current projected deficit was equaled or exceeded in four years during the Reagan administra­tion and two years in the term of Bush’s father."

http://www­.factcheck­.org/artic­le148.html”
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Artemis34
"Women 4 the GOP" is like "Chickens 4 the KFC"
08:59 PM on 12/27/2010
That was an assessment done in 2004, half way through G W B's damage. And they cite as a reference, Alan Greenspan's testimony. 

Not to mentions when you fight wars "off-books," it is just playing games with the deficit numbers. 
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AndyB62
Immune to Romnesia & Romonomics
08:12 PM on 12/27/2010
GOP is hypocritical and water is wet.