The Benefits of Intransigence
By SAM TANENHAUS
Published: October 4, 2013
IF the government shutdown has shown us anything, its that the 80 or so House Republicans driving the crisis have emerged as the most unified force in politics: tightly organized, highly disciplined and ideologically firm.
But wasnt their plan to make the budget a vehicle for defunding President Obamas health care legislation doomed from the start? And even if this small band has the backing of voters in their safely drawn red districts, as well as Tea Party support, havent their unyielding tactics antagonized a majority of the public?
In fact, this minority faction the suicide caucus, as the conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer has called it may be less shortsighted and self-defeating than it appears. At a time when so many officials in both parties still invoke the virtues of compromise and perpetuate the ideal of common ground on which conservative pragmatists can meet moderate Democrats, these more combative Republicans may be in the vanguard of a new post-consensus politics.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/06/sunday-review/the-benefits-of-intransigence.html