Thursday, November 06, 2008

Obama's "Team of Rivals"

There's a lot of pundit talk about whether President-elect Obama (sounds pretty good, eh?) will include any Republicans in his Cabinet. Personally, I think he'd be stupid to do so--why would you want to include anyone who still wants to affiliate him/herself with a massively discredited political entity that stands for nothing if not partisanship before country? Most who take the line that Obama will do so anyway make much of his apparent liking for Doris Kearns Goodwin's book Team of Rivals, which covers Abraham Lincoln's Cabinet.
Lincoln stunned insiders when he chose his most hardened political foes (if not outright enemies) for prominent positions in his Administration. But here's the thing: all of them were from his own party--they were still all Republicans (when they were the good guys)! He did not give any offices to Stephen Douglas, or John Bell, or Horatio Seymour, or anybody who wasn't a Republican already. The modern equivalent would be for Obama to give Cabinet positions to Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Chris Dodd, Mike Gravel, Dennis Kucinich, Bill Richardson, and Tom Vilsack, not Chuck Hagel or Paul O'Neill (although in O'Neill's case, he seems to have gone off that reservation), or even Colin Powell, despite his endorsement.
It is certainly possible Powell might be tabbed, given his supposedly centrist/moderate attitudes, but remember, this is the guy who lied his a$$ off to the UN for Smirky's war. That alone should disqualify him from holding any federal office ever again. Ever. He might be a good candidate to be a witness for the prosecution in the war crimes trials, but that's as far as I'm willing to go. Powell's a disgrace to his uniform. Chuck Hagel's only--and I mean only--stance that has him even under consideration for anything but scorn from a Democratic President is that he became a vocal opponent of Smirky's war, but only after he had decided to retire, and after a long career of enabling Republican crimes. Thanks, but no thanks, Chuck.
I hope Obama's claims of wanting unity mean that he wants to convince Republican voters of his overall concern for their well-being, which I believe is quite sincere. I hope his claims of wanting bipartisanship means that he wants to convince Republicans that if they stand in the way of Democratic platform-derived legislation, they are thwarting the will of the country unpatriotically, and for their own good they should support those bills if they want to remain employed. We already know what Republican policies have done; there is no reason we should ask for their input in crafting anything.
The Republicans have earned their downfall; let them bask in its fetid glow . . .

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4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm sorry you feel that way. Interestingly, your stance is that only Democrats have clean hands which is certainly not the case. For Obama to succeed he will ahve to work "across the aisle." Personally, I would love to see him build an historic, bi-partisan cabinet. That would demonstrate some real leadership, IMO.

6:31 PM  
Blogger bryduck said...

Name me one Republican left "with clean hands" that is qualified to be a Cabinet-level member of a Democratic Administration. I'll wait . . .
I disagree wholeheartedly, by the way, that he "has to work across the aisle". If you hadn't noticed, Democrats control both the House and the Senate, and for good reason--the voting public almost all over the country finally realized that Republicans in office were either corrupt, self-centered, incapable of governing, did not have their/the country's best interests at heart, or were completely untrustworthy (and some were all of those), and voted them out, for the most part. Obama would be going against the will of the country if he were to work with Republican input, let alone with Republicans in his Cabinet. Real leadership? More like abdication of leadership, which demands taking us where we've never been before. Democrats have tried being bipartisan, and doing what Republicans wanted, ever since 1994, and received nothing but scorn, a shrinking presence in Congress, and losses in power everywhere. (And the country has suffered both internally and internationally to boot!) When we started fighting back, we started winning. Coincidence? Tell me another one.

8:01 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

geez. bitter?

9:43 AM  
Blogger bryduck said...

Sure. 28 years of eating right wing crap and being told it's pie--sometimes by my "own side"--has made me bitter and angry, and giving them back any power whatsoever would be a sincere betrayal of what I voted for.
If you aren't upset, you haven't been paying attention . . .

9:57 AM  

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