American politics is ugly these days
On being partisan
BY PAUL KRUGMAN NEW YORK TIMES
American politics is ugly these days, and many people wish things were different. For example, Barack Obama recently lamented the fact that “politics has become so bitter and partisan†—which it certainly has. But he then went on to say that partisanship is why “we can’t tackle the big problems that demand solutions. And that’s what we have to change first.†Um, no. If history is any guide, what we need are political leaders willing to tackle the big problems despite bitter partisan opposition. If all goes well, we’ll eventually have a new era of bipartisanship—but that will be the end of the story, not the beginning. Or to put it another way: what we need now is another FDR, not another Dwight Eisenhower.
Posted on January 30th, 2007 by George Sand
Posted in National Politics. | EMail This Post
Comments
Comment from LWood
Time: January 30, 2007, 10:19 am
It cannot be anything but partisan so long as a majority of Republicans insist upon replacing our Constitution with the Bible
and concentrating the nation’s wealth into the upper 2% of Americans and fighting wars that 68% of Americans want ended. Go figure. There will always be bipartisanship, in fact, it’s rather mild compared to what existed 150 years ago. Compared to the armed attempt to overthrow the White House by Wall Street Bankers in 1934 today’s bipartisanship is indeed mild
_

Write a comment