Republicans were so certain that if they allowed the
Koch brothers to buy them control of Congress, no matter how extreme
their new allies were, they would show Americans what it means to govern
Republican style. Thus far they have failed miserably due to ceding
control of the party to Koch-funded extremists who are more than willing
to endanger the homeland and the American people to prove they hate
President Obama.
There has been no dearth of commentary on the
ineptitude of House Speaker John Boehner’s attempt to lead House
Republicans, but it is important to note that Boehner himself continues
to incite the extremist wing to jeopardize the safety of the homeland.
One has to wonder if Republican leaders in both the House and Senate
regret making a deal with the devil (Kochs) to gain control of Congress,
and although there are some Republicans complaining they are
squandering a golden opportunity to show Americans they can govern,
there does not appear to be any sane conclusion to a dangerous
situation.
This latest manufactured crisis is due to xenophobic
conservative opposition to President Obama’s immigration action in
November. It is apparent that they are more than willing to let funding
for Homeland Security lapse to demonstrate their rejection of the
President, or as Republican Representative Walter B. Jones of North
Carolina said, to “show that the Constitution still matters.” If Jones was not an imbecile, he would understand that primary duty of Congress according to the Constitution is “to lay and collect taxes to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the American people.” Withholding funding for Homeland Security is in no universe “showing that the Constitution still matters.”
This crisis has nothing to do with the Constitution
and everything to do with continuing Republican opposition to anything
an African American President does that was constitutional and legal
when white Republicans did it; and Boehner is just as guilty as the
anti-immigration maniacs in his caucus. Maniacs, by the way, serving due
to the Koch brothers heavy spending to buy the epitome of dysfunction;
a Republican majority in Congress.
This most recent Republican dysfunction began long
before this week. It started the day the President issued his executive
order on immigration enforcement and was solidified in December when
Boehner’s teabagger caucus set themselves up to fail by funding the
government for a year except for Homeland Security. The plan, advertised
by Ted Cruz shortly after Obama’s immigration order, entailed funding
DHS for only two months and then holding funding hostage for the rest of
the year unless the President’s immigration actions were abolished.
Boehner cannot possibly blame the extremists in his
caucus for the House’s dangerous actions. From the moment the President
announced his immigration enforcement order, Republicans did exactly
what they naturally do with Boehner leading the pack of fools; claim it
is overreach, unconstitutional, and illegal. In fact, despite the
humiliation of only funding Homeland Security for seven days, Boehner
went on television and blamed
the President for “unconstitutional overreach” that prevented his
caucus from protecting Americans homeland security for more than a week.
Whether Boehner will admit it or not, he knows the President’s actions
were not unconstitutional or overreaching according to the Roberts’ Supreme Court.
When the conservative Supreme Court struck down Arizona’s immigration law, two of the Court’s Republican justices disagreed
with Boehner’s assertion that Obama is overreaching. Still, the
extremists are willing to shut down the DHS over their claim the
President acted illegally issuing his immigration enforcement order. It
is possible the Koch-funded extremists are unaware that the President’s
actions are identical to those both conservative demigod Ronald Reagan
and George H.W. Bush took without Republican outrage. When the Roberts’
Court struck down most of the provisions of Arizona’s controversial
immigration law, SB 1070, Justice Anthony was joined by fellow
Republican Chief Justice John Roberts in writing for the majority
opinion citing the President’s “broad prosecutorial discretion”
in deciding enforcement of immigration laws. Kennedy wrote language
into the Arizona decision laying out the breadth of the executive
branch’s discretion that Boehner knows full well is within the
President’s purview as head of the Executive Branch.
As Justice Kennedy wrote for the conservative majority; “A
principal feature of the immigration removal system is the ‘broad
discretion’ exercised by immigration officials. Federal officials, as an
initial matter, must decide whether it makes sense to pursue removal at
all.” It is precisely what Obama did, and in 1987, it was exactly what Reagan did in issuing an executive order granting relief from deportation to minor children of parents benefitting from the 1986 “sweeping amnesty”
immigration legislation; even though the legislation did not apply to
immigrants’ children. Within three years, another Republican president,
George H.W. Bush, granted precisely the same relief to approximately
1.5 million “family members living with an immigrant who were in the U.S. before passage of the 1986 law.”
Obviously, many Republicans are aware that not
funding Homeland Security over executive action Republican presidents
enacted is an ill-advised action. Senator Mark Kirk (R-IL) lamented that
“We should have never fought this battle. In my view, in the long run,
if you are blessed with the majority, you are blessed with the power to
govern. If you’re going to govern, you have to act responsibly.”
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said on Friday
that “2015 is about us, but there’s nobody to blame but us now. If we
can run the place more traditional, like a business, so to speak, I
think we flourish. If we self-inflict on the budget, and the
appropriations process, and we can’t get the government managed well,
then I think we’re in trouble.” Well said, and if this latest debacle is
any indication, they are in serious trouble because if the extremists
can jeopardize something as crucial as defending the homeland over a
presidential action Republicans countenanced since Dwight D. Eisenhower,
there is little this Koch Congress will accomplish.
Even a House Republican, John Fleming of Louisiana
said Friday that, “Our leadership set the stage for this. Finally at the
last hour we hear, ‘O.K., well give us three weeks and we’ll try to
fire the base up and get something done.’ Well what have we been doing
for the last eight weeks? We’ve not been doing anything.” But you did
Representative Fleming, you demonstrated to Americans that the best you
had to offer was funding Homeland Security for seven days; not a shining
example of devotion to protecting America or governance.
Fleming is not completely wrong, but he is certainly
missing an important aspect of what Republicans have been doing for the
past eight weeks; coddling the extremists and in great part inciting
them to endanger Americans by claiming the President’s immigration
action is overreaching, unconstitutional, and patently illegal. And
Speaker John Boehner has been as vocal as any of the extremists in the
House; including yesterday when he blamed the Republican dysfunction on
President Obama’s immigration enforcement directives.
Republicans, including John Boehner and Mitch
McConnell, so desperately wanted a majority in their respective Chambers
that they embraced whichever fanatics the Koch brothers could fund to
victory. The Republican establishment made a deal with the devil by
agreeing to take every possible opposition stance against President
Obama regardless how beneficial it is to the country. It is worth
reiterating, that when Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pledged to
the Koch brothers that if they bought control of Congress, Republicans
would “go after the federal government, all of it.” That is the deal
they made with the Koch brothers and John Boehner has dutifully held up
his end of the bargain by inciting Koch extremists to hold Homeland
Security hostage.
Boehner
has no-one to blame but himself. In fact he has taken the lead in
antagonizing the extremists to threaten homeland security. Americans
should be terrified at what Republicans will impose on the country over
the next two years because if they are willing to endanger every man,
woman, and child in America over one legal executive action, there is
little chance they will fund the government or pay the nation’s debts
which is actually exactly what the Koch brothers likely planned all
along.
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