By Jim Geraghty
Wednesday, April 11, 2018
I noted during the frustrations of the John Boehner years
that the easiest thing in the world to do in a legislature is complain about
your leaders negotiations and insist that if you had been in charge, you would
have gotten a better deal. Passing big, consequential pieces of legislation is
hard. Coalitions are difficult to keep together. Everyone who benefits from the
status quo lines up against you, with institutional advantages and the power of
inertia. Oh, and the clock is on their side, too.
Now Paul Ryan is announcing that he’s retiring — after
saying “I ain’t going anywhere” in December — and the outlook for Republicans
is grim, both in the 2018 midterms and beyond. Back then, our former colleague
Tim Alberta reported, “Ryan has never loved the job; he oozes aggravation when
discussing intraparty debates over ‘micro-tactics,’ and friends say he feels
like he’s running a daycare center.” The House GOP was always fractious and
divided at the best of times, and since January 2017, Ryan’s been trying to
work with a Senate that requires 60 votes. By July, the House of
Representatives had passed a slew of big bills, only to watch them slowly die
in the Senate. He’s also trying to work with a president who flips from
priority to priority (DACA! Guns! North Korea! Syria! Opioids! Infrastructure!)
and a constantly-changing White House staff. It’s hard to generate any
sustained momentum for key legislation.
At least some of this year’s mass GOP retirements stem
from a sense that little can really get done in Trump’s Washington, so you
might as well do something else more lucrative.
Ryan is like a perennial All-Star who never quite enjoyed
the ideal circumstances to shine. He always seemed to attract a
disproportionate amount of mockery and disdain for what he was actually trying
to do. Those scoffing “good riddance” to Ryan now probably ought to look back
at John Boehner and Dennis Hastert. Ryan’s younger, a better communicator, more
telegenic and even more of a policy wonk than his predecessors and most of his
potential successors.
Comments
The guy who liberals depicted throwing granny off the
cliff . . . was also the kind of man goes into drug treatment centers, touches
the scars from the “track marks” of heroin addicts, and prays with and for
them. He was portrayed as some sort of heartless Ayn Rand acolyte when he
emphasized how conservatives needed to find solutions for poverty. He was
civil, well-informed, polite, and firm, the opposite of a table-pounding,
demagogic extremist, and that probably just aggravated his critics on the left
even more. As The New Republic put it
in a 2015 headline, “Paul Ryan’s a Good Guy. So What?”
Well, a lot of people in politics aren’t “good guys,” and
so we ought to salute those who are. When we act like all politicians are
indistinguishable liars and crooks for a long enough time, the public starts to
believe it, and becomes willing to simply vote for the most charming lying
crook.
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