By Noah Rothman
Friday, October 03, 2025
Nothing so offends quite like unwelcome reality. It’s,
therefore, unremarkable that Democratic partisans tore at their garments and
pounded the table when Politico reporter Rachael Bade confronted them
with it.
This unobjectionable observation about the causes of the
ephemeral political crisis in Washington that everyone is presently trying to
“win” provoked manic fits in those who count on social media to ratify and
reinforce their fantasies.
“This is not Karoline Leavitt’s account. This is supposed
to be a reporter’s,” Center for American Progress president Neera
Tanden sneered. “I guess those White House tips don’t come for free. Gotta
earn ’em.”
Michael Linden, a senior policy fellow at the Washington
Center for Equitable Growth and onetime Office of Management and Budget
official, agreed. Bade wasn’t just advancing Republican talking points; she was
promulgating false talking points. “If we had insisted on a partisan
[appropriations] bill, with no negotiations, that we knew Rs couldn’t support,”
he wrote, “does anyone think for a second that Rachel Bade
would have blamed Republicans for the ensuing shutdown?”
“Wrong,” documentary filmmaker and executive director of
American Family Voices, Lauren
Windsor, declared. Republicans “control all branches of government,” she
wrote. “They can pass a budget if they want to.” Her previous
advocacy for abolishing the 60-vote threshold preserved by the legislative
filibuster suggests she was at one point familiar with the obstacles Democrats
have put before the Republican majority. Maybe she just forgot.
Dozens of the other lesser-known groundlings who populate
this Pit hurled similar invective in Bade’s direction. Her views exposed the
closely guarded fact that “media
is secretly Republican.” She was castigated for overvaluing “the
chess moves” in Washington (“and by extension,” herself) rather than
focusing on the grand moral arc of American politics. And there were countless
internet sleuths who congratulated themselves on sniffing out Bade’s latent fascist
and white supremacist sympathies. Surely, their relative
anonymity and irrelevance are cold comfort to Bade, given their numbers. The
response was overwhelming.
And it was delusional. Bade was, of course, covering her
beat, and she was covering it not just truthfully but in ways to which
Democrats on Capitol Hill did not object.
“People hate shutdowns. And I hate shutdowns,” Vermont
Senator Peter Welch told Semafor reporters this week. “So why are we doing it?”
he asked, “It’s because, essentially, the whole Obamacare healthcare success we
have is being unraveled.”
Indeed, by refusing to vote for a “clean” continuing
budget resolution that makes no changes to last year’s budget save for funding
additional security for federal constitutional officers (a necessity given the
heated climate, of which the reaction to Bade’s post is illustrative),
Democrats invited the shutdown so they could relitigate the fight over this
summer’s reconciliation bill — a fight they lost the first time. It’s a risky
move, Welch admitted. “If it seems about health care,” he posited, “then this
will have been worth the effort.”
How else are we to interpret the point-blank admission
that “we” are “doing it” so that it “seems” like we’re demanding the extension
of Obamacare subsidies? That sure sounds like Democrats don’t mind if you blame
them for the shutdown. They and their partisans only mind if you blame them for
the shutdown and don’t like it.
They are perfectly content to take ownership of this
impasse if you approve of it. And Bade’s critics got the sense from the tone of
her post, not its content, that she betrayed a troubling lack of enthusiasm for
their fraught project. Whose side are you on, Rachael?
It was a revealing reaction — one that is as attributable
to Democratic partisans’ belief that legacy media outlets should be team
players and that muscling dissenters into silence might change how we
perceive our shared reality.
Bade shouldn’t feel too bad. The bitterness she encountered is a feature of the story she’s covering. Democrats started this fight to satisfy a base that is spoiling for one regardless of the prospects for victory. The subjects of her reporting on Capitol Hill are responding to the demands of that very cohort — hallucinatory though they may be.
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