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Jim Kennedy

Jim Kennedy

Posted: October 24, 2010 04:33 AM

Give Bipartisanship A Chance

What's Your Reaction:

An imagined speech by President Barack Obama, delivered November 4, 2010

Two years ago tonight, you voted for change, and I accepted the responsibility of leading America on a new path, and in joining with you in the work of remaking this nation.

Two days ago, you sent a message, and that message is clear: the change you sought has not yet been delivered, and you are deeply concerned about the course we have taken and where it might lead.

We achieved health care reform, but you are worried about its impact on your families.

We steered away from the precipice of financial ruin, but have not delivered the jobs and economic security that would mean a true return to the prosperity you seek and deserve.

We have withdrawn combat troops from Iraq, but the war in Afghanistan is taking more American lives and the journey to peace remains long and uncertain.

Some of you believe I have not been bold enough, or stayed true enough to the hope you placed in me, and for you the trumpet of progress has sounded too softly...and on some issues has not been heard at all.

I say to you, my friends, we must aim high and dream big...I would not be here if I did not...but because politics is the art of the possible we must measure our progress by how far we have come, not how much farther we have yet to travel.

Others believe I have gone too far too fast, and you want to dig up the seeds that have been planted and go back to the way things were. My friends, the answers to our problems lie not in the way things were. The causes of our crises do.

Those who want to go faster must see the value in incremental change and those who want to go back must see the risk of reversing course.

And I must see the mistakes I have made as well. At times I have lectured rather than led...favored tactics over strategy. You want vision, not division. You seek common ground, not a battleground.

And I must do more to restore your faith in me, in our government and in the journey we must take together.

In this journey we must restore to our government that which has always existed in our people: a sense of shared purpose and destiny and a belief that we are obligated to turn over to a children a world that is better than the one in which we live today.

So where do we go from here? Sometimes Democrats and Republicans take the results of elections too personally. By that I mean, in victory, sometimes we make the mistake of assuming that the people have endorsed everything we believe and rejected all the things proposed by our opponents.

But in truth, in America the people choose not Democrats or Republicans so much as they choose leaders, and in so doing they put faith in us as leaders to work together to get things done.

It is in that spirit that I believe the American people spoke loudly and clearly yesterday, and said with one voice: give bipartisanship a chance.

And it is in that spirit I offer these ideas:

First, I am calling on the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic campaign committees of the Senate and the House of Representatives to cease-fire. I call on them to refrain from attacking Republicans for the next six months. I invite the Republican National Committee and their congressional campaign committees to accept such a cease-fire as well.

That means for six months we in Washington can try to work together in search of common ground without the distracting and debilitating partisan games that all of us have spent too much time playing up until today.

A rhetorical cease-fire does not put our parties out of business. They can still raise funds and recruit candidates and stake out positive positions on the issues we face. But at least in this singular moment of American political history we can take a step back and take a brief break from the kind of daily partisan duels that kill consensus and prohibit progress for the American people.

And second, the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform is scheduled to issue a report on how to solve our nation's financial crisis on December 1. Today I am announcing my intention to convene a summit of Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and the Senate to hammer out a plan for speedy consideration and implementation of that Commission's recommendations. We must take the bipartisan baton from the members of the Commission and demonstrate a unity of purpose in achieving the goal of financial stability once again.

The pundits are already predicting gridlock in the wake of the election results. But the problems we face as Americans are greater than the priorities of our political parties. The American people want patriotism, not partisanship. We must open a window of opportunity to redeem their trust in us.

The proposals I make tonight open that window just a crack. More can and must be done, by me and by all who have been elected to serve. But it is a start.

Two years ago tonight, speaking to you from Grant Park in Chicago, I said "we have never been a collection of Red States and Blue States." We are the United States.

And though the maps on the television news shows this week are colored in red and blue - a little more red than blue, I must admit - I still see one nation, under God, indivisible. And the promise of liberty and justice for all can only be fulfilled if we put politics aside and give bipartisanship a chance.

Thank you, God bless you, and may God bless America.

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mommadona
I paint. I blog. Therefore, I am.
01:51 PM on 10/24/2010
"Annnnd the #DLC speaks"..... { aaannnnd the sound of many many many #NAFTA *crickets }.

You broke it. You own it.

http://thoreau.eserver.org/theory.html
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ewldest
I don't care "whose" war it is - end it now
12:07 PM on 10/24/2010
I was expecting satire, or a reasonable argument with which I could agree or disagree on the merits of argument. But this article is just plain silly - an insider's pipe dream.
The Republican project is to stall for the next two years so they can get the guy with more melanin than they out of the White House. And they've already told us what 'bipartisanship' means to them - "do it our way or no!"
The Dems must take the gloves off and duke it out for the next 2 years - they may not get much done, but they can reveal the GOP as the party of unAmerican corporatists they really are.
leftcoastindy
Where did I put my MOJO
11:06 AM on 10/24/2010
What we need is a ceasefire by the lobbyist/coorporations. As long as they (and the MIC) control congress, it doesn't matter wether dems can agree with repubs on anything.
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10:31 AM on 10/24/2010
We've been here before. Seriously, the president has given bipartisanship a chance. And the Republicans are not interested. You need to face the fact that the Republicans have become so radicalized that they are not interested in working with the Democrats or anyone else. The unilateral cease fire that Obama and the Democrats declared two years ago, must end if the Democrats ever want my vote again.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jim Kennedy
12:33 PM on 10/24/2010
Sure it is naive and simplistic. And yes, "we've been there, done that" before. But what's the alternative to gridlock? Neither the President nor the country benefits from a legislative stand-off for the next two years. I believe the lessons of '95 and '96, when President Clinton worked with both parties to get things done, hold true today.
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01:23 PM on 10/24/2010
So how then are the Republicans going to be any different after November than they were before, especially if their obstruction ends up gaining them control of the House and maybe even the Senate? You still haven't explained how to work with a party that is not interested in cooperating with you. And this strikes me as the definition of insanity, which I believe is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result. Seriously, if the president declares yet another unilateral cease fire after November, he is going to lose what is left from his base. And that means he will be voted out in 2012.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mommadona
I paint. I blog. Therefore, I am.
02:10 PM on 10/24/2010
Bringing up that oxymoron of the "Democratic 'Leadership' Council" again.... I say that's the main PROBLEM for U.S. ~ "Ya gotta GO along to GIT along" mentality of "It's all about the Benjamin$" crowd.

I quit the Democratic Party and went Independent due to my dealings with this group of DINOs.

Shame on you for pushing the poison pill once more on U.S. Utter shame.
09:31 AM on 10/24/2010
Baloney. It works if you have an opposition that is genuinely interested in working with you. But the Republicans have demonstrated time and again that they have no such intention. Even if such a cease-fire were put into place, you can bet your bottom dollar that they would be breaking it within a week, all the while insisting that the Democrats hold to it.
11:02 AM on 10/24/2010
Baloney says it all.
09:22 AM on 10/24/2010
After reading this drivel I felt like vomiting. For two years we have had a unilateral ceasefire by the Democrats, and now you want to try it again? Please sir can I have another! Bipartisanship take TWO parties, not one.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Welib
Peace on Earth!
08:53 AM on 10/24/2010
Bipartisanship takes 2 parties to sit down together and work things out. Republicans have refused. They sat down in January 2009 and refused to do anything for the last 2 years.

NO MORE BIPARTISANSHIP. OBAMA IS STILL WIPING THE SPIT OFF OF HIS FACE FROM ALMOST 2 YEARS OF TRYING TO BE BIPARTISAN. ENOUGH! MORE FORWARD WITHOUT REPUBLICANS.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjcc1987
You can't have everything. Where would you put it?
08:58 AM on 10/24/2010
I fear it is too late. The wrong Democrats were recruited (Blue Dog) and the party became lukewarm to helping the working American. Democrats, by their very nature will move across the isle to seek bipartisanship, the Blue Dogs never came back. In 2012, we must focus on electing DEMOCRATS, real Democrats.
12:04 PM on 10/24/2010
Progressive Democrats.
08:42 AM on 10/24/2010
Jjust another Obama apologist. When your back is to the cliff, about to be edged over, people will do strange things.
08:05 AM on 10/24/2010
Perhaps good for a first draft. But if the only thing the President did wrong was

"At times I have lectured rather than led...favored tactics over strategy. You want vision, not division. You seek common ground, not a battleground."

You may want to justify why there is little admission that the programs put in place are not what your original mandate was perceived. "You seek common ground, not a battleground."
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LeftLeanWing
Ah.. I said..Ah Said I said... Proceed Guv'nah
06:52 AM on 10/24/2010
"
First, I am calling on the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic campaign committees of the Senate and the House of Representatives to cease-fire. I call on them to refrain from attacking Republicans for the next six months. I invite the Republican National Committee and their congressional campaign committees to accept such a cease-fire as well.
"

He tried that.... and it takes TWO SIDES to cease fire.... and as far as I'm concerned that Democrats have been sitting it out in the Trenches since Nov 5th, 2008 while the Republicans have been in full assault mode since that time.

BiPartisanship is an Ideal, a Political Utopian Dream....
But it is not Reality and no longer Advisable.