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They Love Lucy

by digby

Adam Green notes Mark Warner’s tiresome comments over the week-end about the need for bipartisanship and reminds us that this isn’t the first time the Democratic Charlie Brown’s have fallen for this:

Newt Gingrich on the House floor during the health care debate — March 16, 1994:

Mr. GINGRICH.

I agree with my friend, the gentleman from Missouri [Mr. Gephardt]. I want to reach out in a bipartisan way to pass the bill. I praise the gentleman from Florida [Mr. Bilirakis] and the gentleman from Georgia [Mr. Rowland] for a bipartisan bill. I praise the gentleman from Iowa [Mr. Grandy] and the gentleman from Tennessee [Mr. Cooper] for a bipartisan bill. They are starting in the right direction to reach out.

How did that work out?

I can answer that:

Then minority whip Newt Gingrich (R-GA) led a politically opportunistic and stubborn conservative charge against health care reform. He argued internally that any successful bill would set back Republican electoral prospects in November 1994. At a March 1994 strategy retreat, Gingrich warned GOP senators that “any Republican concessions will be met with more Democratic demands,” and that the GOP should concede nothing.

I doubt the game plan has changed. And sadly, I doubt that these Democrats think it has either.
Adam sez:

Democratic politicians, please — stop playing right into the hands of Gingrich and other reform opponents. Stand on principle. Follow Sen. Jay Rockefeller’s lead. Say that if Republicans won’t do the public’s work, Democrats will do it without Republican votes if that’s what it takes.And if you haven’t yet joined the fight to hold Democratic politicians accountable, you can do so here.


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