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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWatching the rules of politics change (and not for the better)
Posted with permission.
http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/watching-the-rules-politics-change-and-not-the-better
Watching the rules of politics change (and not for the better)
12/01/17 03:56 PMUpdated 12/01/17 05:03 PM
By Steve Benen
When it comes to defeating major legislative initiatives, theres no sure-fire script to follow thats guaranteed to work, but there are certain rules that tend to be effective.
To defeat a regressive Republican tax plan, for example, opponents would start by trying to convince the American mainstream that the GOP proposal is a bad idea and organize a series of public protests. Critics of the plan might also hope to persuade opinion leaders and powerful advocacy organizations.
Once those tasks were complete, opponents of the Republican bill might ensure the facts on their side, paying careful attention to reports and analyses from the Congressional Budget Office, Joint Committee on Taxation, Tax Policy Center, and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The plans critics would then take that data and make a bullet-proof case that the GOP proposal is a dangerous and misguided idea.
Over the last couple of months, opponents of the Republican tax plan did each of these things quite well, in fact. The bills progressive proponents checked every box, completed every task, and proved that this legislation deserved to be rejected. In short, they created a winning coalition. By the rules of American politics, GOP lawmakers had every reason to vote against one of the least popular major proposals in decades.
But when it mattered, Republicans linked arms and supported it anyway. When push came to shove, they simply didnt care about the data or the polls or the protests or the facts.
In other words, the rules didnt much matter and thats probably because new rules are emerging.
Voxs Matthew Yglesias had a good piece along these lines this week, explaining that the recent developments on the GOP tax plan are at odds with the shared understanding of sophisticated journalists and political scientists of how Congress works, which may ultimately bring huge consequences to the whole universe of legislative possibility.
The Republican tax bill is none of those things.
The fact that the rules of American politics are under strain isnt entirely new. There was, of course, no way Donald Trump could win the Republican nomination, just as there was no way hed overcome the series of controversies that seemingly made his candidacy so ridiculous, just as there was no way hed actually win the presidency.
Two years ago, the University of Virginias Larry Sabato, a prominent political scientist, co-authored a piece on Trumps electoral prospects. If Trump is nominated, the analysis said, then everything we think we know about presidential nominations is wrong. History has shown that presidential nominations tend to follow a certain set of rules.
That was absolutely true at the time, but we now know Republican voters had no use for the rules.
More recently, the rules seemed to make a brief comeback when the Republican health care gambit failed, but lets not forget the details of that fight. It was a bad bill, written in a bad way, based largely on falsehoods and broken promises, which drew opposition from the public, doctors, nurses, insurers, hospitals, patient advocates, and governors from both parties.
But even in this case, the far-right GOP gambit just barely lost. A similar dynamic unfolded when the party pushed its tax plan, and later today, Senate Republicans are going to pass it, the rules notwithstanding.
Republican politics are changing in dramatic ways, as a consequence, the standards of American politics are starting to defy the norms and standards that have driven our modern history. Buckle up.