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October 30, 2009
Democrats Delusional On Obamacare—Whistling Past Halloween Graveyard On Amnesty
By Joe
Guzzardi
Earlier this week, I spoke with a highly
placed
Capitol Hill lawyer who filled me in on what’s going on
behind the scenes with the
Democrats,
Obamacare and
"comprehensive immigration reform."
He told me that the Democrats are holed up
busily trying to draft a version—any version—of
health care legislation that they think might pass a floor
vote.
Then, according to my confidant, leadership
will turn its attention to
amnesty.
The insider’s thinking:
Majority
Leaders Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi badly want to deliver a
big win for Obama to help his
plunging
poll numbers.
My take: the Democrats are delusional.
While I’m sure they would dearly love to score a major triumph
for
their deity, it will be a struggle for them on
health
care—and on amnesty, it’s just not going to happen.
The status of Obamacare changes almost
hourly. But as of today the Democrats have, in my analysis, only
a 50-50 chance.
Senate maneuvering during the last week
indicates not only discord but chaos. Reid is reduced to
discussing proposals that include the controversial
"public option" that
he knows he does not have the votes for. [Public
Option Push in the Senate Comes with Escape Hatch, By
Robert Pear and David M. Herszenhorn,
New York Times,
October 26, 2009]
Operating
secretly, the Democrats can’t agree. That’s a bad and
possibly fatal sign. (Read S. 1796
here)
Over in the House, one of Pelosi’s
laughable solutions is to change the phrase
"public option" to
"competitive option"—as
if that would fool anyone.
Less amusing is the actual
1,990 page bill with its $1 trillion price tag that Pelosi
introduced this week.
Pelosi’s preliminary version, that she
promises to
actually read, still does not require the immigration status
verification that she’s been loathe
to include since the
health
care debate began months ago. [Democrats
in House Present $894 Billion Health Package, by Robert
Pear, New York Times, October 29, 2009]
The probability that any final legislation
may include a provision that
Americans must have health insurance in some form by 2013
(as Pelosi’s does) could be a killer for the Democrats.
(If you have nothing to do until
Christmas, read Pelosi’s H.R. 3962
here.
The Congressional Budget analysis is
here.)
Federally mandated purchases of any good or
service is universally considered
in legal circles as unconstitutional.
Conventional wisdom says that because
Democrats hold a large majority in the House, health care will
sail through. But House Democratic whip James Clyburn (immigration
grade: "F")
admits he doesn’t have the votes yet and
will only say :
"We’re getting there."
For Blue Dog Democrats, Pelosi’s bill
goes too far; for the ultra-liberal left, not far enough.
Here’s how I see it:
Once the final bill’s details become well
known among voters, especially its
exclusion of E-Verify that will
allow illegal aliens coverage, an outrage similar to what
took place during August
Town Hall meetings is certain.
The Democrats
could choose to ignore public sentiment and ram a bill
through except for the pressing problem they face: the November
2010 election.
According to Ed Rollins, a Republican consultant and
Ronald
Reagan’s former advisor, at this very moment as many as 30
Democratic Congressional seats are at risk. Rollins foresees
that by the time the 2010 campaign season gears up, an
additional 30 seats currently thought safe will be considered in
jeopardy.
That’s potentially sixty Democratic seats
up for grabs.
Nothing will alter a Congressional
representative’s vote faster than if he thinks it will drive his
constituents to the other party.
My instinct tells me that all sixty of
those at-risk Democrats will wish that they never heard of
health care.
What will also influence the House’s
eventual vote are next week’s gubernatorial elections.
Anything less than two decisive wins for
New Jersey’s Democratic incumbent
Jon Corzine
and Virginia’s Democratic candidate
R.
Creigh Deeds are warning shots over Congressional liberals’
heads.
As of October 29, it’s grim for Deeds and
dicey for
Corzine.
In Virginia, a pivotal state that
helped elect Obama, Republican Robert F. McDonnell’s
lead has increased from seven to 13-points during the last
week, despite campaign appearances from Obama on behalf of
Deeds. Only four percent of voters are undecided.
One reason behind McDonnell’s surge is that
he advocates strict immigration control.
As Attorney General,
McDonnell advised
local law enforcement agencies to enter into agreements with
federal agents to detain illegal immigrants, advised revenue
commissioners to deny illegal immigrants business licenses and
demanded in a letter that President George W. Bush curb illegal
immigration.
That’s not all.
McDonnell also repeatedly urged
Governor Tim Kaine to partner with federal agents to allow
agencies to deport illegal immigrants, and asked state police to
look through the Virginia’s sex offender registry to find
foreign-born offenders and turn their names over to the federal
government for deportation. [McConnell
Critics Question Ideology, by Anita Kumar, Washington Post,
October 28, 2009]
In overwhelmingly Democratic New
Jersey, prospects for incumbent immigration
enthusiast Corzine are only slightly better.
Corzine
trails his Republican challenger and former U.S Attorney
Chris Christie by three points. New Jersey has been buffeted by
scandals,
a budget crisis,
excessive
illegal immigration and is generally such
a complete mess that it’s hard to imagine any incumbent
being reelected.
One reason Christie is not doing as well as
his fellow Republican McDonnell is that he holds a
self-proclaimed "soft" illegal immigration stance. Last year
in an interview, Christie had a chance to condemn illegal
immigration as harmful to New Jersey residents.
Instead, he answered in double talk about
whether it is a crime to live in the United States illegally.
In summary, I’ll repeat: if the Democrats
don’t score clear cut wins in both Virginia and New Jersey, then
their states’ angry constituents will have sent all the
Democratic Congressional candidates a frightening and possibly
career-ending message.
Assuming Democratic defeats in Virginia and
New Jersey, it would boil down to whether Congress wants to save
its own skin or make nice with
Obama,
Reid and Pelosi. Their decision won’t be hard to make.
On an Obamacare victory then....only maybe.
If I were you, I wouldn’t
bet the
ranch on it.
But when it comes to
"comprehensive
immigration reform"---go for it! Wager your ranch,
the
horses and the barn that it won’t happen.
If the
Treason
Lobby thinks that the Democrats will
follow up
a bitter fight to the end over health care with an even more
contentious amnesty battle, they are, to use a
Halloween-appropriate expression,
whistling past the graveyard.
The Democrats can’t even deliver on their
minor amnesty commitments.
Senator Chuck Schumer
promised an
immigration reform bill by Labor Day. The calendar reads
October 31st, yet Schumer remains
uncharacteristically quiet.
Ditto for Illinois
Congressman Luis Gutierrez who
pledged a House version of amnesty three weeks ago. But to
date, his bill hasn’t dropped. No one has any idea when it
might—if ever.
My prediction that no amnesty bill will
pass or will even reach the floor this year is
familiar ground to readers.
The reason the
Treason
Lobby can’t sell amnesty to Congress or to America is
simple: No sale—because the merchandise is damaged. No matter how it’s
repackaged, no one can be persuaded to buy it.
In the best case, Obamacare, the Democratic
Congress and gubernatorial candidates and amnesty will all take
a licking.
Wouldn’t that be a great way to start
Campaign 2010?
Joe Guzzardi
[email
him] is a California native
who recently fled the state because of over-immigration,
over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He
has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the
growth rate stable. A
long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School,
Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It
currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel. |