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Mitchell Bard

Mitchell Bard

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GOP Buyer's Remorse Is Nice, But It Only Matters If It Leads to Votes

Posted: 03/25/11 11:44 AM ET

There seems to be a growing tide of GOP buyer's remorse sweeping the country.

Republicans campaigned in 2010 on creating jobs and cutting spending and the deficit. But once in power, both in the U.S. House of Representatives and in numerous states, all those promises went out the window. Instead, they've offered a steady stream of items from the traditional far-right wish list: union busting, blocking abortion, redefining rape, limiting voting rights, going after public radio, etc. Even their budget priorities were not in tune with their campaign promises, as unpopular tax cuts for the rich will outpace their proposed budget cuts. (Not not to mention the petty-seeming, far-right initiatives, like going after a mural supporting labor in Maine and reversing environmentally-friendly cafeteria policies in the House, while spending money to add signs to federal buildings mentioning God.)

Unsurprisingly, voters have been unhappy.

In Wisconsin, a governor, Scott Walker, who never campaigned on union busting, offered as one of his first proposals the virtual gutting of public sector unions (except for police and firefighters who, not coincidentally, supported his campaign; to their credit, police officers and firefighters nevertheless joined in protesting Walker's union-busting bill). He followed that up with a proposed budget that offered tax cuts for the wealthy but cut programs for the middle class, most notably hundreds of millions of dollars in education cuts (paired with rules that would prevent local school districts from doing anything to raise education funds locally).

So in addition to nearly a month of protests at the Capitol (the largest in Madison since Vietnam), polls show overwhelming disapproval of Walker's far-right initiatives, and one survey found that if the November election were held again, Walker would be handily defeated. Some Republicans are speaking out against Walker, regretting their votes for him. And the disapproval is not just poll-based. The governor's opponents have begun recall drives against eight Republican senators (several with good chances of actually leading to recall elections), as well as shining unprecedented attention on April's Wisconsin Supreme Court justice election, with Walker ally and incumbent David Prosser being targeted by angry anti-Walker constituents.

Wisconsin is not unique in this regard, either. A poll revealed that voters in Ohio would not vote for their governor again if they had the chance. Even Republican legislators in Florida are not happy with Governor Rick Scott's ideologically-based rejection of federal high-speed rail funds. And there is national discontent with what the Republicans have done since taking over the House (based on Speaker John Boehner's priorities since January, you would think that Planned Parenthood and NPR were destroying the economy).

One would think this wave of buyer's remorse, coming less than three months after Republicans rose to power, would make someone like me happy. After all, I believe that the GOP's economic agenda is to protect the interests of wealthy and corporate interests at the expense of the other 98 percent of Americans, while pushing for far-right social programs that go well beyond what most citizens want. So yes, part of me is enjoying the realization sweeping the country that the Republicans are not looking out for their interests.

But I can't get too happy about the discontent at Republican overreaching, because it's meaningless if people don't learn from what has happened in 2011. And based on 2010, I'm not convinced the lesson of 2011 will stick.

The story is pretty simple: The Republicans controlled the White House and Congress for most of the Bush administration. During that time, their policies of deregulation, tax cuts for the rich and reckless foreign intervention plunged the country into debt and war, nearly brought down the financial system, and sent the economy spiraling into recession, accompanied by 10 percent unemployment. We are currently paying the price of nearly a decade of the Republicans' disastrous policies.

In the midst of the near financial collapse, Americans sent a message at the polls in 2008, electing Democrats to the White House, as well as large Democratic majorities in the Senate and House.

Whether you support or oppose President Obama's policies, he pretty much did exactly what he said he would in his campaign. He promised a stimulus bill to help get the economy restarted, a health care law to cover all Americans, a tightening of financial regulation, a drawing down of troops in Iraq and renewed focus on Afghanistan. And that's exactly what he did.

And yet, in 2010, boosted by lower turnout and a sea of lies demonizing and mischaracterizing the president's policies, especially health care (socialism! death panels!), Republicans regained a majority in the House and won state-based elections across the country. The lesson of the Bush years was forgotten.

Which makes 2011 a case of "here we go again." Americans are angry that Republicans have ignored their campaign promises and prioritized a far-right agenda voters do not support. But for how long will this anger last? Is this a hiccup, one that will go away in 2012 when the Republicans tell some more lies and demonize the president further (watching Republicans flip-flop on Libya, led by Newt Gingrich, just to stay on the opposite side of the president, has been truly entertaining)? Or is the anger the beginning of a movement, a realization that Republicans are not looking out for most Americans, and that the party's campaign rhetoric has no basis in reality?

That is the key question to come from the first three months of 2011. If GOP buyer's remorse has no lasting impact, it's meaningless now. Let's hope that the American people have finally learned their lesson and translate this anger into votes, this spring in Wisconsin, and then nationally in 2012.

 

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There seems to be a growing tide of GOP buyer's remorse sweeping the country. Republicans campaigned in 2010 on creating jobs and cutting spending and the deficit. But once in power, both in the U.S.
There seems to be a growing tide of GOP buyer's remorse sweeping the country. Republicans campaigned in 2010 on creating jobs and cutting spending and the deficit. But once in power, both in the U.S.
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dean77
"There's only one God, mam."
05:19 PM on 04/28/2011
Republicans couldn't do much because they only had the House. We have to wait until 2012 to really bring Change You Can Believe In.
12:17 PM on 04/07/2011
Defunding NRP, attacking public workers, Taking down a mural attesting to the struggles of the working class, tax cuts for the rich that didn't creat jobs over the last 30 years of Reaganomics. Where's the job's??? Who does this strengthen our country?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Isenki
Public campaign funding
07:28 PM on 04/06/2011
Sorry, Mitchell, I don't believe a word of it until I see some statistics.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hotintexas
09:28 AM on 03/31/2011
Who protested when the Repugs cut help for the lowest, poorest hanging fruit in USA? Most of you thought it was a good deal to cut out money for the "Welfare Queens" who were trying their best to feed and clothe their families. But when it affects YOU, you all yell. Well, how does it feel to be the new "Welfare Queens"? They started at the bottom, because the poor people have no money to protest, they will not stop until they have all they can get from YOU. Then they will move up the ladder. 400 people with more wealth than the rest of us combined? Do you think that is an accident? Does Greed ever stop? What can be done with one group of people (divide and conquer) can be done to another. All that must be done it to point a finger at them and say- "they are making to much and not paying enough" and we believe it. Until they come for you, who cares? Not most of the USA.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
06:35 PM on 03/28/2011
Republican Politicians have proven that they want to defund public schools and take away Social Security checks and medicare coverage for our seniors. They want to turn back the clock to september 1929 for wages and regulations. We all know what happened in october 1929
Death Panels? Insurance company board rooms are full of them
Wealth redistrubution? Almost completed but the poor can still work more for less than they get now.
Housing? why buy a house when the rich can rent you an apartment?

there will always be Greedy Men in America, it is Governments job to stand between that greed and the rest of us,not to side with the greed!
03:17 PM on 03/28/2011
Both sides have done nothing but sell jobs to china. Both sides work hard to defund important social programs. One side with supporter outrage, the other by running the programs into the ground. Both sides are immune to our laws and above our values. Both have the same corporate masters and they always act on their behalf. Did Obama handle BP differently than Bush would have? Meet the new boss... You need to wake up and see they are playing us against each other. They are the same party.
03:59 PM on 03/28/2011
"They" can't do anything if we don't allow it! We have allowed it, so now we're paying the price Everyone is so mad at President Obama, but this has been going on for a lot of years. Wisconsin is just the beginning. If we don't wake the hell up, we will get exactly what we deserve.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
southernred
Steaming in the South
10:55 AM on 03/27/2011
Yes, I think most "conservatives" realized these republicans are CROOKs.
I log in every day just to see what craziness Scott Walker is up to daily!
Hopefully he will be recalled as soon as it is possible.
Even if you are conservative... this guy is just dishonest in all of his actions.
"yeah, we thought about putting troublemakers in the crowd" .....
This is an unsafe guy. What else will he do. And he has absolutely NO remorse about this statement!
01:43 AM on 03/27/2011
This is just too much liberal tripe to ingest in one night. I'll bbl.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
p mantis
All Good Things...
03:00 AM on 03/27/2011
It's REALITY!
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pursang
Corporate Criminals Playing with Tanks
12:07 AM on 03/27/2011
It's going to by interesting to see how the big money Citizens United slam ads will frame things in 2012. That and whether the masses will continue to believe the TP candidates after most that won in 2010 have turned into normal Republicans once they got to Washington.
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alongst
too often denied to speak
11:03 PM on 03/26/2011
Last November showed how much Dem buyers remorse this country has.
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pursang
Corporate Criminals Playing with Tanks
12:12 AM on 03/27/2011
I hate to disagree but all 2010 showed was that the American voter wants immediate fixes to problems that require long term solutions. We're going to see this every two years from here on out or at least until we start getting a better educated electorate. We're going to flop from party to party looking for the magic pill that brings back the post WW2 prosperity and it's never going to happen.

The rich and the corporations have killed that dream except a lot of people don't see it. They will continue to vote on wedge issues while the country is being destroyed because the masses are looking everywhere but where they sholuld be.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:36 PM on 03/30/2011
An absolute bull's eye.
09:27 PM on 03/26/2011
Ah, here's hoping people don't forget easily. As we all know, when the elections come so will the Fox misinformation news campaign. If only the fans of Fox could figure out they are being misled. I am still hopeful people will remember the betrayal of the republicans.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeMongoose
08:30 PM on 03/26/2011
As Yogi Berra put it "this is Deja Vu all over again". Despite proving beyond any doubt that they are incapable of BEING Americans, let alone governing other Americans, the Republican keep getting chances.

The reason why is that when given power, Democrats curl into a fetal position. Until Democratic politicians aspire to be more than being wimpy Diet Republicans, the GOP will continue to get opportunities to destroy this country they allegedly love.
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
08:12 PM on 03/26/2011
I personally think it's less a case of "buyers remorse" than it is of "false advertising".

Where is our recourse? Can we demand they be taken back and exchanged for the product and or services that were promised in their ads?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
bolivare
IT'S SO FLUFFY!!
02:07 AM on 03/27/2011
Hold recalls all over the nation. Might not get them all, but enough to send an even stronger messge. Get this country working again and stop this childish vendetta behavior. It's solving nothing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Querent
I say the things that have to be said.
08:08 PM on 03/26/2011
I think that many of us have gotten what happened in the 2010 elections wrong. The Tea Party didn't mobilize large numbers of voters who had previously not supported Republicans, and Democrats in general did not stay home because they were disenchanted with their party. What really happened was that the Democratic voters made the decision not to support party candidates who ran as Democrats, but voted with the Republicans. The Blue Dogs in Congress were all but wiped out. Only a couple of Progressives lost, and those losses cost the Republicans extremely large amounts of money. The lesson for Democrats should be, run real Progressives candidates, and you will win. Run Blue Dogs, and you will lose. The "apathy" which Democratic voters feel is not toward politics in general, it's toward Blue Dog, DINO, Republican-lite candidates from our party. The next election is going to be a great opportunity for Progressive candidates and organizations, if we have the heart to capitalize on it.
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pursang
Corporate Criminals Playing with Tanks
12:03 AM on 03/27/2011
Unfortunately the leadership of the Democratic party gets the real impact from 2010 wrong and will continue its march to the right. Never let it be said that the money doesn't influence the people behind the scenes. I agree with you assessment but until the top of the DNC etc gets it things won't change.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
bolivare
IT'S SO FLUFFY!!
02:11 AM on 03/27/2011
That's true. But we need to find a worthy leader who will beat him and any republican challenger. But when it comes down to it, like it was between Reid and Angle, Reid would have my vote hands down.
I know what would be happening if Angle had gotten elected. She's just as crazy as Bachmann.
03:28 AM on 03/27/2011
Outstanding Point...
thanks
X
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Querent
I say the things that have to be said.
02:03 PM on 03/27/2011
De nada.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
06:58 PM on 03/26/2011
all the moderate gop folks I know are horrified at what is going on..especially the financial marshal law in Mich....NO firefighter, teacher, public nurse, scientist, police OR their families will EVER vote gop again after they have been burned by this gop STEALTH campaign....and I have talked to hundreds locally....and even the most "not involved" are really angry and ready to get out there to fight this treachery
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
bolivare
IT'S SO FLUFFY!!
02:14 AM on 03/27/2011
Cutting taxes for the corporations and putting that extra burden on the middle class and poor without any plan for job creation other than the old cannard that has proven it never, ever, works...tax cuts create jobs. Didn't work when Bush implemented it and it won't work here in Michigan either.
And being able to get rid of any elected official in any town that he deems in trouble...facsism waiting to happen.
madame48
NO..it's a gop Cookbook !Tempus edax,homo edacior
09:26 AM on 03/27/2011
In 1936 Sinclair Lewis (of "Babbitt" fame) wrote a book called "It Can Happen Here" I read it 4 years ago...and though it was about the rise of Fascism ...was scarry in some ways...he said,
" When Fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross"....Fascism is HERE NOW and if we sit quiet in apathy..the result will be the same