By Charles C. W.
Cooke
Monday, January
10, 2022
From Axios this morning:
President
Biden, Democratic leaders and their emissaries are trying to convince Sen. Joe
Manchin (D-W.Va.) to pass a sweeping federal elections bill with a menu of
filibuster alternatives. The problem is speaking with him is “like negotiating
via Etch A Sketch,” sources with direct knowledge of his recent meetings tell
Axios.
Is it? Because it seems to me that both
Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema have been entirely consistent, and that if
anyone deserves to be compared to an “Etch A Sketch” it is the Democratic party
and the press that enables it.
As Axios goes on to note:
To date,
Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) haven’t wavered in their opposition
to lowering the 60-vote threshold for passing major legislation or creating a
one-time carve-out to bypass the filibuster.
This Axios concludes, has
“made the conversations largely futile.”
Who is the Etch A Sketch in this scenario?
Is it Joe Manchin, who has given the same answer on the filibuster every time
he’s been asked for a whole year, or is it the media, which forgets this and
asks him every single day as if the question is new, and the Democratic party,
which knows full well what Manchin thinks on a whole host of questions but
keeps pretending that it won’t matter in the end?
Axios confirms that Democrats “are trying to sway their colleague by
discussing possible limits to a filibuster carve-out,” but that “Manchin has
made clear he doesn’t believe in carve-outs, something he reiterated to
reporters last week.” It notes, too, that “many Senate Democrats” “think the
White House and Senate leadership are underestimating the size of their
challenge with Sinema,” who presents “a bigger challenge to altering Senate
rules than Manchin.”
Or, put another way: Even now, at this
late stage, neither Manchin or Sinema is remotely like an Etch A Sketch.
On the contrary: Despite overwhelming
pressure to cave, Manchin and Sinema have held firm. On the question of the
filibuster, we can sort our politicians into two groups. In the first group,
there is Mitch McConnell, almost every Republican senator, and Joe Manchin and
Kyrsten Sinema — all of whom have maintained the same position as they held in
2017. In the other, we have every Democratic member of the Senate, and Donald
Trump — all of whom have shifted their position since 2017 at the first possible
opportunity.
Joe Manchin as an Etch A Sketch? Projection,
as usual.
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