To say that the 112th
US congress was unpopular would be an understatement. One of the most polarised
congresses in US history it is no surprise that it is also one of the most
unpopular. While Democrats must of course share some of the blame, the majority
of it, must fall at the feet of the
current house majority, the Republican Party.
A party which seems to
be on the verge of collapse, with the vocal Tea Party minority, forcing the
majority moderates to the right – through a combination of filibusters, and the
threat of primary challenges – the Republican Parties attitude this congress
can best be summed up by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell that the job of
this congress “must be to deny President Obama a second term.” That’s right,
folks. The jobs of Republicans in the 112th Congress was not to debate
legislation, or pass laws or represents the people who voted for them. It was
to deny the President a second term.
But nowhere was the
political polarisation of the last congress more apparent than during the “fiscal
cliff “ negotiations at the end of the last year. The fiscal cliff for those of
you not obsessed with US politics was a set of tax rises and spending cuts that
would kick in on the first of January if a deal was not reached. Was a deal
reached in time?
Well yes. But it was a retroactive deal. The deadline
went sailing merrily by without a House vote, due to the unwillingness of the
Republican Caucus to accept any deal put across by Democrats. Despite the fact
that going over the fiscal cliff would most directly and adversely affect the
middle and low income voters who put them in their seat, the Caucus refused any
deal that meant higher taxes for millionaires and big businesses. They
preferred letting America go over the fiscal cliff than doing right by their
constituents.
The job of any
politician be they an MP, a Representative or a Senator, or whatever is to
serve the general public. It’s not a case of they elect you, and then you get
to do what you like until the next election. You have to serve your
constituency and vote and act according to both your conscience and what will
affect those you serve.
In short unless you’ve
actually been elected as the Representative for Koch Industries, your job is
not to serve them. Your job is to serve the people of the Washington 1st
or the Colorado 5th or whatever. While there may be times when
voting with your party is the right thing to do, you should never vote in
lockstep. If you think what your party is doing is wrong, then vote against
them. Don’t worry about what your whips will say. Think about what you will be
able to say during the next election season.
I would like to think
that the 113th Congress will be a little less partisan and a little
more sensible. Unfortunately just three days into the term that seems unlikely.
But we’ll see what happens.
I just want to say I think you expressed the duty of a representative very eloquently. America has very loose party discipline, compared to many places (the UK, yes, but Australia even more), but it seems to be hardening, at least among Republicans. I was also very happy that you emphasised voting with one's conscience and with the community's best interests at heart, not voting according to popular opinion, since populism is one of my pet hates.
ReplyDeleteThe 113th Congress will be ugly, I bet. The Republicans don't even have a proper mandate (they only won a majority thanks to gerrymandering), but I bet they act like they do. I mean, the gun stuff alone will be bedlam.