Friday, August 14, 2009

Krugman on Grassley

Uber-economist Paul Krugman is taking on the disloyal opposition to Obama's health care reform and the futility of his attempt at bipartisanship (NYT today):

Yet the smear [the 'death panel' lies] continues to spread. And as the example of Mr. Gingrich shows, it’s not a fringe phenomenon: Senior G.O.P. figures, including so-called moderates, have endorsed the lie.

Senator Chuck Grassley, Republican of Iowa, is one of these supposed moderates. I’m not sure where his centrist reputation comes from — he did, after all, compare critics of the Bush tax cuts to Hitler. But in any case, his role in the health care debate has been flat-out despicable.

Last week, Mr. Grassley claimed that his colleague Ted Kennedy’s brain tumor wouldn’t have been treated properly in other countries because they prefer to “spend money on people who can contribute more to the economy.” This week, he told an audience that “you have every right to fear,” that we “should not have a government-run plan to decide when to pull the plug on grandma.”

Again, that’s what a supposedly centrist Republican, a member of the Gang of Six trying to devise a bipartisan health plan, sounds like.

So much, then, for Mr. Obama’s dream of moving beyond divisive politics. The truth is that the factors that made politics so ugly in the Clinton years — the paranoia of a significant minority of Americans and the cynical willingness of leading Republicans to cater to that paranoia — are as strong as ever. In fact, the situation may be even worse than it was in the 1990s because the collapse of the Bush administration has left the G.O.P. with no real leaders other than Rush Limbaugh.

The question: does Obama have the fire in the belly to fight this? The time for calm reason has passed; this hysteria from the right cannot be reasoned away. A passionate counter-argument that keeps the focus on the real issues, in simple terms, is what's needed.

He can do it -- and Bill Clinton can help, as he did yesterday speaking to a convention of progressives. But he's got to give up on his idea of making nice with the nasties.

Ralph

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