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Showing posts with label Democrat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democrat. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Gay Marriage and Blue Dog Democrat(s)

The US Supreme court has refused to hear appeals from states wanting to ban gay marriage, The Economist sees this as very significant, and Politics students could use this as an indication of where the court stands currently.
A same-sex wedding ceremony.
Picture credit: Marc Love / Wikipedia
essentially meaning that although they won't now be making any sort of decision on it, the lower (Federal) court decisions that saw any ban as unconstitutional will stand.


The Roberts court could have been activist and made a ruling, but it didn't. As the Economist notes there are theories why this is the case - in a politically divided country this would perhaps have made the situation worse. The Guardian sees this as an expansion of gay rights. Helpfully, the Wikipedia page goes into all of this, noting that it is currently legal in 25 states and that many thousands of couples have taken advantage of the new law.

A "conservative" court may find that banning gay marriage at this point would be very tricky.

Elsewhere, the Economist (again) has an interactive map about the mid-term race in the Senate; the short version is that the Republicans may take a 50-48 lead over Democrats with 2 seats being held by Democrat-friendly Independents.


Lastly, the Blue Dog Democrat is almost an extinct species; one of the last conservative Democrat holding a seat in the deep South is fighting a difficult battle in the 2014 House races.

Useful for Unit 3C - Democratic Congressman John Barrow from Georgia is a great example of someone who has kept in the centre while the rest of politics in the US becomes divided.

Monday, 8 September 2014

Presidential Power and the US system

Any G and P student contemplating Presidential power should consider that President Obama has decided to make executive order about the hot-button issue of immigration because it's the right thing to do...  after the mid-terms.

This may show the limits to the President's power, especially given the poor state that the US political system is in; the Democracy in America blog discusses this issue; specifically blaming the two-party system and the lack of 3rd or 4th parties which would encourage compromise. More about it here. A good topic to be on top of for Units 3C and 4C.

Tuesday, 31 December 2013

2013 - Review of the Year - USA

Try this from Andrew Sullivan at the Dish - Gay Marriage, Affordable Care Act (ACA - Obamacare), and the prospects for the two main parties.

Monday, 7 October 2013

13 Reasons why the US government isn't working

Fig 1 - Filibusters and Cloture motions 1917-2012.
Source - washingtonpost.com
I've just come across this article in the Washington Post. It details 13 reasons the US government isn't working. 

Although a round-up of the usual suspects, it is a pretty useful run-down of a variety of causes, including the polarization of the political parties (the graph below shows this pretty well), the Tea Party, gerrymandering in the House and the filibuster.

The conclusion it comes to is pretty startling, but on the whole, a very useful article for anyone contemplating the US government, Congress and the power of the President in unit 4C.
Fig 2 - Average party political position
Source - washingtonpost.com

In a long article in the New York Review of Books, Elizabeth Drew discusses the impact that low turnout has had on US politics - the short version is that it has encouraged the extremist wings of the parties to get out the vote and this in turn has made the political system more polarized. It does have some extraordinary tales of political skulduggery, but in general it has some of the same thrust as the earlier post in the Washington Post.

Esteemed economist Paul Krugman in the Washington Post describes the Republican Party "incompetence", and links to a review of a book by Mann and Ornstein called "It's even worse than it looks". G & P students may have come across the idea of Congress as "the Broken Branch" - these are the two authors who came up with the phrase. They have some very unpleasant things to say about the Republicans:

Today’s Republicans in Congress behave like a parliamentary party in a British-style parliament, a winner-take-all system. But a parliamentary party — “ideologically polarized, internally unified, vehemently oppositional” — doesn’t work in a “separation-of-powers system that makes it extremely difficult for majorities to work their will.”

Food for thought, and probably essential reading for the 2013 exams.

Update - 10th October 2013

RollingStone Magazine has published a very long article putting the current division between political parties into historical context. Essential reading for anyone contemplating the different party positions for Unit 3C, and because it explains some of the finer points of the debt crisis.


Sunday, 29 September 2013

Congress, Government shutdown and Healthcare in USA

There is a possibility that the current budget crisis in the USA will lead to a government shut-down. The Economist has a long piece about it, here (although this may not be available to all). The issue is the Republicans are refusing to sign a new budget for the year ahead with funding for Obamacare. The Democrats are refusing to pay ball and, because both parties control a chamber of Congress, there is gridlock on the issue.

The BBC's Mark Mardell discusses it here.

One of the oddest recent parts of the debate was a 21-hour speech in the Senate by Ted Cruz (R) who was trying to stop a vote. For various technical reasons it was not a filibuster, but is a great example of the genre for G & P students studying Congress for Unit 4C. The highlight (if that's the right word) was the few moments the Senator devoted to reading Dr Seuss's "Green Eggs and Ham".



The BBC has a Q & A about the issue here.

If the issue hasn't been resolved by 1st October, the US government will shut down until a budget is agreed. We'll see what happens.

Thursday, 15 July 2010

US tax & the Tea Party

Interesting stuff about America's attitude to its own exceptionalism and greatness here in The Economist's Lexington column. Interesting stuff, especially about the role of government and spending which has a connection to the problems faced by President Obama.

The Onion has a funnier and clearer take on all of this here in an article titled "Nation demands tax dollars only be wasted on stuff which is awesome".

Another Lexington blog has an interesting take on US politics and it's style here (summary: the different sides really DO hate eachother). Yet another Lexington column makes a good point about the Tea Party (vilified by its enemies as a bunch of racists):

Though I don't share their politics, tea-partiers are mostly decent folk legitimately alarmed by what is happening to the economy and therefore to their own lives. Here in Arizona that includes a sudden collapse in the value of their homes in a state that has gone through a grotesque property-fuelled boom and bust.

Again, we'll see what happens to the Republicans and Democrats and the Tea-Partyers at the mid-terms. If it's any guide, former liberal Republican John McCain has tacked hard to the right to save his seat from a Republican opponent in his Arizona primary, as discussed here and here

Obama's popularity, Immigration and the Supreme Court

Surprising for casual observers of US politics is the news that President Obama's approval has fallen to a very low level, which is surely worrying for his administration as they come closer to the mid-terms in November (rating graph courtesy of Gallop):


It is in stark contrast to Obama's success at getting health-care reform bills through Congress earlier in the year, and his success at passing reform of the US banking system.

I think another graph from Gallop is instructive here:


While support from Republicans has remained low, his support among independents has fallen, as has his support among Democrat supporters. Information from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that in June unemployment was 9.5% at 14.6m. Further discussion of the US economic situation cane be found here and here. A graph which summarises the key problem is here:



Ultimately Obama is paying the price for a sluggish recovery in the US after a very nasty recession despite all the money which has been spent by his government and others in preventing a depression. Useful stuff for anyone contemplating Presidential power and its limits; people are worried about the price which future generations will have to pay for health-care refom, banking reform and the credit crunch.

Immigration reform is on the agenda; good stuff here from the Economist's Lexington column. Essentially while there should be reform along the lines President Obama proposed in a recent speech, he is playing to the gallery hoping to pick up support in time for the mid-terms.

And on another note, while Supreme Court justice nominee Elena Kagan is being probed by Congress, this piece in the Guardian discusses the hearings process. Very useful for anyone contemplating the Supreme Court and it's hearings process in an essay. To quote the final paragraph of the article:

... Kagan's criticism of the process will yet remain. It was vapid, pointless and did little to illuminate anything about the nominee, while doing a lot to illuminate the already well-known political biases of the Senators doing the questioning.

Tuesday, 25 May 2010

Obama, banks and Republicans

Fascinating stuff related to President Obama's reform of the banking system; a long but very worthwhile article by New York Magazine about the relationship between Obama, the banks and the Republican party. Paul Krugman in the New York Times has a very much shorter article about the same subject here. The Democracy in America column in the Economist covers both articles here.

In essence, the Obama administration prevented the collapse of the global banking system in 2008-9 by bailing them out to the tune of billions of dollars through the Troubled Asset Relief Program. The administration resisted calls for radical change from the left, and have proposed changes which are significant, in that it is designed to prevent a repeat of the 2008 experience, but not revolutionary. This has annoyed large numbers of the American people who are bitter because of massive unemployment and a weak recovery, and has also annoyed the banks who wanted to return to business as usual.

After supporting candidate Obama in the 2008 election to the tune of millions of dollars, they have turned to support the Republicans again, to the tune of millions. To quote Krugman:

So far this year, according to The Washington Post, 63 percent of spending by banks’ corporate PACs has gone to Republicans, up from 53 percent last year. Securities and investment firms, traditionally Democratic-leaning, are now giving more money to Republicans. And oil and gas companies, always Republican-leaning, have gone all out, bestowing 76 percent of their largess on the G.O.P.

These are extraordinary numbers given the normal tendency of corporate money to flow to the party in power. Corporate America, however, really, truly hates the current administration.

This is a problem for the GOP because Obama's reforms will be supported by a large number of Americans because the new law will be seen as punishing the banks for their past misdemeanours. The Republicans have a problem because they are traditionally in favour of big business not being stymied by too much government oversight, and are being tarred as being in the pockets of the big banks.

This is why the party discipline that was so much in evidence on the right over Obamacare, and which narrowly came to bring the administration's momentum to a halt at the end of last year, has wilted under the pressure. Populist movements are "anti-socialist" medicine and anti-bank. The GOP has a problem as the November mid-terms, and the 2012-race approach.

I'll quote the last paragraph of the NY magazine article:

...Wall Street, too, is engaged in some seriously perilous (and mildly deranged) thinking, which reflects not just its political naïveté but its all-distorting insularity from … reality. The populism now stirring in America is bipartisan, ecumenical. No politician of any stripe can afford to ignore it. The Republicans running in 2012 will be contending with or catering to it, too; they’re unlikely to offer Wall Street any safer harbor than Obama has. Yet the best barricade against the pitchfork platoons is an improving economy. And if it comes, not only will Obama stand a good chance of reelection, Wall Street’s amnesia may well kick in—just in time to fall in love all over again.

In Krugman's analysis there is also a problem for the Democrats in November too; populist sentiment against them thanks to health-care reform, balanced against the left's annoyance that a revolutionary change in Wall Street hasn't happened. In his analysis Obama has to occupy the middle ground between Wall Street and populist reformers. Fascinating stuff as the mid-term elections approach.

Useful background for anyone contemplating decline or renewal of parties (both are being buffeted by the populist left and right, which are in fact the "base" of both parties, and this has an effect on the policies of both), party discipline in health-care reform and bank reform votes, and in Presidential power.

Monday, 24 May 2010

Obama and healthcare reform - opinions

There were extraordinary scenes when Obama finally succeeded in getting his health-care reform bill through Congress on 21st March this year, and subsequently signed it into law; a major plank of his domestic agenda had successfully been implemented. The vote itself was interesting; as previously noted, the final vote in the House was 219 to 212 – Republicans voting against along party lines, with 34 Democrats voting against too. In the Senate the previous Christmas Eve the vote went 60-39, with Democrats and Independents voting for and Republicans voting against.

All of which demonstrates very clearly how party discipline is a funny thing – on this issue it is strong for the Republicans, but weak for the Democrats in the House. Possibly, it also shows how divided Americans as a whole are about health-care. This is the major issue which is exciting the Tea Party movement. It may just reflect how worried some Democrats in the House are about their chances in the mid-terms in November.

Useful stuff for any question about Congress, party discipline, Presidential power and the like.

In terms of the points of view, two opinions are striking – that of the Democrats who argue that it is only a thorough reform of the health-care system by government that the poor and uninsured will be covered. For Republicans, health-care reform is too expensive and smacks of socialist government (although the latter is possibly a rather extreme casting of the policy).
A useful summary of the two view points here in the Guardian, which characterises the vote as a “monumental achievement”:
… at its heart the story is about the tension in American society between the individual and the community – whether we are just a loose confederation of individuals who should be left alone to pursue self interest, or something more than that, a community of citizens with mutual ties and obligations.

More about the opinions of the two main parties soon.

Sunday, 23 May 2010

Obama and Bank reform

So, Obama has managed to get through his reform of the Banking industry through the Senate, and this bill will go through the reconciliation service following on from a similar, but different, bill passed by the House in December. Ultimately, he has managed a remarkable thing; getting some very radical changes to fundamental parts of American life through Congress in the first few years of his presidency.

Great analysis of the core parts of the bill from Robert Peston here. Interestingly, the Senate vote largely went along party lines, except for 3 Republicans who jumped ship (the vote was 59 to 39). It was close – a vote to decide to end debate and vote on the bill only passed by 60-40. There will be plenty of haggling yet to come, but the most useful part for G&P students will be the points-of-view from the two main sides in the debate – Republicans, largely on the side of the Banks, and the Democrats who claim largely to be on the side of the American public (“main street, not wall street”).

Of course, there is the argument that what benefits the banks, and what give them the ability to make money and grow will benefit the American public in the long-run. Set against that is the problem that these banks have been bailed out to the tune of billions of not trillions of dollars thanks to the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, which was made necessary by the credit crunch.

Banks have been doing their best to prevent the bill from coming in to being effectively (according to this piece in the left-leaning Observer), and Republicans have been saying that Obama’s plan will severely hit bank’s ability to make money in creative ways because government oversight will limit it. This piece by the Wall Street Journal suggests that it’s all a piece of political theatre by the Democrats to shore up their vote in November’s mid-terms, and not really valuable as an exercise in banking reform. Although, arguably, it’s just another strand in the stop-the-bill movement. The extraordinary right-wing commentator Rush Limbaugh claims here that it will drive business out of the country, and also gives regulatory power to the executive from the legislature.

Essentially, big business = good, big government = bad.

By contrast, Democrat Senator for Montana writes in the left-leaning Huffington Post that the Bill is a win for “main street” against the banks too big to fail. He trumpets the benefits of the Bill, and also reveals that he was against the bailouts of the banks (“because I don’t believe in bailouts”) despite the fact that this action possibly saved the global banking system from collapse.

In short, big government = good, big business=bad.

Elsewhere, the NY Times writes that some on Wall Street are phlegmatic about the whole thing, happy that the reform won’t be too punitive and can be softened, while accepting that some reform was inevitable.
All of which is useful for G&P students when answering a question on the opinions of the two different parties, on Congress and the passage of law, and on the power of the Presidency.

Wednesday, 19 May 2010

US political parties - ignoring the centre

Recent news that the Tea Party movement has made definite in-roads into the mainstream Republican party with the selection of Rand Paul as the Republican candidate for the Kentucky Senate seat.
Very good analysis of Dr Paul's policies here and an interesting piece about the implications of the Tea Party movement here by the "Democracy in America" blogger in the Economist.

For G&P students this is all useful stuff because it emphasises how political parties are increasingly relying on very vocal groups and excluding the large number of "independent" and moderate voters. The Tea Party movement may have won the primary, but this does not necessarily translate into a win for the Republican party:

Last year's New York state by-election comes to mind. A conservative populist ousted a moderate Republican, and subsequently lost the Republican seat to a Democrat... All this said, it remains likely that the Democrats will take a whacking in November. But an organised and disciplined Republican Party offering a viable set of alternative policies—think 1994's "Contract With America"—would whack them a lot harder. Instead, populist anger has enraged people against Democrats, with few tangible benefits to Republicans so far.

The Tea-party does not have an organisational centre or a clear set of policies, all of which encourage a wide-range of anti-government types to support it, but does not lead to success against a clear set of policies which could be supported by a significant number of independent voters.

There is a very interesting (if very long) analysis of the state of the parties in the New York Review of Books. A couple of things struck me:

The ideological polarization between Republicans and Democrats that surveys pick up is owing almost entirely to the radicalization of those belonging to the shrunken Republican base. (As of 2009, only a quarter of Americans identified themselves as Republicans, the lowest figure since the post-Watergate years.)

Democrats have edged slightly more left on political and economic issues, whereas the views of independents, the largest and fastest-growing group of voters, have not changed much over the years. While well over half of Republicans say that they would like their party to move further to the right, just as many independents wish it was less conservative or would stay where it is.

All of which is useful for any question asking about the importance of political parties in the US - the decline / renewal argument which we can add into the established information.

Friday, 16 April 2010

Republicans and Democrats

US political blog The Daily Beast has posted three very useful pages detailing the top 25 high-profile journalists and bloggers from across the three main parts of the US political spectrum. They're worth going through to help with any essay question which requires political opinion of the topic (that is, all of them).

The Left's list is here, the Right's list is here and the Centrist list is here.

I'm going to have a very quick scamper through the main ones, specifically with a view to finding articles on the course key topics I've taught. What I find won't be exhaustive, or complete, but hopefully may lead to other pages to help your research. Some, like the right-leaning Drudge Report, are well-known on the Internet, but I must admit I found the web-site hard to navigate, so I'll merely link to it here.

Right-leaning places to look & people to read: Andrew Breitbart, Laura Ingraham, the Wall Street Journal, Rush Limbaugh, Fox News
The Right on:

Healthcare Reform: Andrew Breitbart at a Tea Party meeting; this about costs of the reform; this from "Reason" magazine about State-based reforms; the extraordinary Rush Limbaugh

Supreme Court:
This about the SC's decision to overturn the "McCain-Feingold" campaign finance reform bill; this about the forthcoming battle to replace Justice Stevens

President Obama in general:
This from Laura Ingraham about taxes and Obama
This from "Hot Air" about a recent Obama memorandum; Obama is a socialist.

General pages:
The Mission statement of the Tea Party Movement; a very long article about Right-leaning media from the WSJ.

The Left:

Depending on how complex you want to make it, the left can be sub-divided viciously. Key places to look:

The Huffington Post, The Daily Kos, Talking Points Memo, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, The New Republic, New York Times (esp Paul Krugman)

Centrists:
According to a recent poll, 42% of the US electorate consider themselves centrist and not part of the traditional left / right split.

Start with: The Moderate Voice web-site; Andrew Sullivan (Sunday Times etc); Kathleen Parker is a widely-syndicated journalist who has been Conservative, but recently declared herself as an independent; the Christian Science Monitor