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Lazarus

Joined: 07/05/2002 Posts: 12238
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News You Can Use: "rinky-doo’d" & why Republicans oppose medical benefits


for veterans.

Quite a story ...

For years, Democrats have watched Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell deploy ultra-partisan legislative tactics to outmaneuver them on everything from fiscal cliff negotiations to filling a Supreme Court seat.

But this week, Senate Republicans may have gotten a taste of their own medicine—and it didn’t go down smoothly.

On Wednesday, McConnell and 13 Republicans joined with all Democrats to pass a sweeping bill investing in U.S. high-tech manufacturing, a major bipartisan win.

Barely an hour later, after more than a year of halting negotiations, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) announced he had reached an agreement with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) on a package of climate investments, tax hikes for the rich, and prescription drug reforms.

McConnell said in June that Republicans would hold the manufacturing bill hostage if Democrats moved forward with their broader bill, which would pass through a party-line vote process called reconciliation. After that, Manchin threw cold water on the idea of passing a sweeping bill, and Republicans expected Democrats to pursue a pared-down package only containing drug pricing reforms.

Clearly, Manchin never left the table. And Republicans, along with the rest of the world, found out when the senator released a statement announcing his support for a party-line bill—minutes after the GOP relinquished its leverage.

“I think that could be something you call ‘getting rolled,’” Sen. Mike Braun (R-IN) told The Daily Beast on Thursday. “There had to be a little bit of trust. I guess, someone, it looks like they either misunderstood or it didn’t work out the way it should have.”

“It’s a sour taste,” Braun continued, “for some of us.”

The Senate GOP’s Oxford-educated dispenser of folksy wisdom, Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA), was characteristically more blunt in an interview with Politico. “Looks to me like we got rinky-doo’d,” he said. “That’s a Louisiana word for ‘screwed.’”

To Democrats, the GOP meltdown is befuddling. Schumer and his caucus never made an agreement to give up on their plans for a party-line package in order to pass the high-tech manufacturing bill.

Democratic lawmakers questioned how they could have rolled Republicans on a deal they never actually cut.

“I literally have no idea what they're talking about,” said Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT). “Nobody in the Republican conference should be surprised that we want to pass legislation cutting drug prices and addressing climate change.”

But the timeline of events has a distinctly Machiavellian twist. To some Democrats, it smacked of something their longtime GOP tormentor in the Senate might have gladly pulled off.

Rep. John Yarmuth (D-KY), who has alternately worked with and fought McConnell for years, said he was “certainly pessimistic” about ever seeing the day that Democrats would outflank McConnell.

“I was glad to see it, and I’m glad to see they are acting very pragmatically and intentionally,” Yarmuth said. “You’d think after watching him for so many years they might pick up something.”

McConnell’s office declined to comment for this story. But asked by a reporter on Wednesday if he was duped, McConnell mostly ignored that question and instead attacked the deal that Manchin and Schumer had reached.

“What’s happening here is that Manchin and Schumer have reached an agreement which is absolutely horrendous and totally unnecessary given the inflation the Democrats have already created,” he said. “So that’s the issue we’re heading toward, and it’s an unmitigated disaster for the country and we’re going to fight it as hard as we can.”

Intentional or not, the fallout of Wednesday’s events will reverberate in a number of key ways for both parties.

In the span of 24 hours, Democrats went from mourning their agenda to touting a major bipartisan win on the economy and speeding toward the legislative landmark on climate and tax policy that has eluded them for over a year.

Republicans, seemingly caught flat footed, decided to retaliate by opposing bills that many of them had previously supported. In June, for instance, nearly all Republicans voted to advance long-awaited legislation to expand health care benefits for veterans exposed to toxic substances on the job.

After Manchin released his statement on Wednesday announcing a deal, the Senate held a vote on final passage of that bill—and 41 GOP senators revolted, blocking the legislation at its final hurdle.

Democrats, along with veterans and their advocates, were left flabbergasted that Republicans—many of whom had already supported the bill—would vote down health care for servicemembers seemingly as a response to Democrats’ maneuvering.

“Republicans now are basically holding the veterans hostage because they're mad,” Manchin said on Thursday.

Courtesy the Daily Beast

Link: Full Article linked for completeness


Posted: 07/29/2022 at 06:09AM



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Current Thread:
  The QOP cynicism knows no bounds. -- Chuck Taylor 07/29/2022 07:17AM
  Cult not Country.....yup ** -- 79 Wahoo 07/29/2022 09:54AM
  Lol, nope. As you well know. ** -- southdenverhoo 07/29/2022 08:50AM
  Just look what the Dems made the Pubs do NOW -- Hoo TV 07/29/2022 06:51AM
  Their casual cruelty is the point ** -- Hoo TV 07/29/2022 06:44AM
  How do you explain Romney’s no vote? He’s not a -- BocaHoo91 07/29/2022 07:42AM
  Good info, bro. ** -- Shenhoo 07/29/2022 10:12AM
  Ok thanks. Makes sense. ** -- BocaHoo91 07/29/2022 08:03AM
  And, as a RepubliKKKunt, ze is literally Hitler. ** -- ResistHoo 07/29/2022 08:13AM
  Yes. ** -- hooshouse 07/29/2022 08:18AM
  That is a great analogy ** -- WahooMatt05 07/29/2022 07:56AM

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