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Compromise Fetishists: How Secret Deals Obscure Accountability, Subvert Democracy
There is nothing inherently good about compromise. The ability to form a good compromise, when it is necessary, is an important skill. But you should compromise only when you can't completely achieve what you want without it. If you have sufficient votes or support for your position and think it is the best choice of action, then you should pursue it. Compromising in that instance is stupid.
The problem with Washington is the fake "compromise fetish" (which is similar to the "bipartisan fetish") that turned compromise into the desired goal-without regard to policy value or whether there is a need to compromise in the first place. What is the source of this fetish? Compromise destroys accountability. Politicians hate being held accountable and so they have a vested interest to support this fetish and those who share it.
The worst part is that this is not even a fetish for proper compromise. When two or more groups publicly state their positions and reasoning and then try to reach a middle ground while no side holds a majority, that is a proper political compromise. What dominates Washington is a fetish for backroom deals, which is dressed up in language about the virtues of compromise and bipartisanship. This "backroom deal fetish" lets politicians hide and lie about their positions. Senators don't publicly state their positions, so no one can ever be held responsible for the watering down. At its core, this fetish for secret compromise is an attempt to undermine accountability. As a result, it also undermines the principle of democracy.
Take a look at how this accountability-destroying fetish works with the real "Audit the Fed." It has already passed the House, so we know it has the votes there. Based on the fact that the amendment had a significant number of Republican co-sponsors, it would only fail if a lot of Democrats voted against it. Which Democrats are actually against it? I would really like to know, because that could definitely affect my vote in the next election.
I do not know if the original, stronger version of the amendment would have passed (and I never will), but given past votes and the willingness of Chris Dodd to compromise on it, the chances seem pretty good. Of course, I and the rest of America will never get to know, thanks to a secret backroom compromise. No one was ever forced to go on the record, so no one can be punished for standing against it.
This is how you kill accountability. The proper response to secret backroom deals to water down the amendment should be: "Why did we need to compromise at all? Who were the senators who planned to stand against this?" We have a right to answers, and unless we know where legislators stand, how can we attempt to elect a better Congress?
Instead, the backroom deal fetishists' accountability destroying response was: "What a wonderful compromise! I don't even know if it is good policy, but I love compromises because they are compromises." Oh, and by the way, that means that they feel that it is perfectly fine if we never know who stood in the way of something we support when we consider the midterm elections.
The fake compromise fetishists give cover to lying politicians who speak out of both sides of their mouths. It encourages them to lie by creating a system in which they will never need to fulfill their promises. In fact, not fulfilling their promises will even be hailed as a virtue because they "trade" them away as part of secret compromises.
We could not get a real Audit the Fed passed in the Senate because there were claims that 41 senators were against it. We will never know who they are because there will not be a vote. We could not get a health care public option in reconciliation because of a mystery group of at least 51 senators, and the fear that it might disturb the secret compromise. As for who actually stood in the way of the public option, the voters will forever be kept in the dark, despite promises by the President, the Speaker of the House, and the Senate Majority leader. On the biggest issue in the health care fight, backroom deal fetishists helped justify most senators hiding their actual stance.
A similar big promise on direct Medicare drug price negotiation was never put to a vote by Democrats. Despite its being part of the Democratic platform, and despite Democrats being in full control of both branches of Congress, it needed to be traded away as part of a compromise to PhRMA. Once again, we get a compromise when we were all falsely led to believe we elected enough supporters of the measure so that a compromise would not be needed. Who do we need to replace to actually achieve this goal? Our not having the answer to that question is a great way for PhRMA to prevent it ever happening. We are still working to repeal Don't Ask Don't Tell, and yet we don't know who is prepared to vote against the LBGT community, or if compromise is even necessary.
The list goes on and on. Like hiding behind the filibuster, using fake compromise fetishists to justify secret deals is how accountability is being drained from our democracy. Voters deserve to know exactly where their representatives really stand. Open, transparent compromise is fine when needed, but this disgusting process of creating secret, backroom deals without ever letting the voters know who stands for or against anything is detrimental to democracy.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllAsking them to audit the fed is like asking raccoons to investigate who raided the cooler while you were out hiking.
1. We do not have a democracy.
2. Bipartisanship and compromise are only possible if you have at least two parties. We have one corporate party which wears as many masks as it deems necessary to maintain the necessary illusion of democracy.
3. So-called "Free Market Capitalism" is the state religion of the United States of Global Domination (as well as most other "nations") and it is based upon and depends upon inequality and injustice.
4. The majority of people in this nation support "Free Market Capitalism" above all else.
5. We have not ever had a democracy.
Well, there's a kind of U.S. dollar-based version of democracy that serves its actual constituents quite well. It just has nothing to do with any democratic representation of natural persons.
It's one thing to compromise but to the point of conceding is just crossing the line. I feel like one of those few among the practical liberals who actually gets it. The trouble is, and I base this on my past naivety, that people are lulled into a sense of feeling neutral about things thanks to feeling powerless and/or being given empty promises of "it'll happen next time" again and again. At what point do we put our foot down and say "Enough already !" ? I guess some of us catch on sooner than others and if only that some of us were the majority and the others the minority.
Right on ! :-)
Trying to work within the system if futile. There is no system, just corruption. They make the rules as they go.
The deals with Big Pharma, and the medical insurance companies happened in the early weeks of the Obama Administration.
Yet no one seems to hold him accountable for how he sat back and pretended (he is the Great Pretender after all) that the Public Option was an option to begin with. He sat back and watched the whole circus without having to purchase a ticket.
I've learned to despise Obama, and "centrists" and the liberal-bashing "progressives" who have turned principle into absolute mush.
I, too, am amazed that people haven't called for Obama's resignation for his secret meetings. I'm pretty sure they'd be having a cow if President Hillary Clinton had pulled something like that.
People are not doing the math on what Obama did in those meetings. He was betraying the principles of his party and everyone who voted and worked for him.
As if that weren't bad enough, this sneakiest of all Presidents then pretended to be in favor of the public option, letting thousands of people work their asses off--and spend untold amountsd of their own money--to realize a dream Obama had already destroyed. This is party treason.
Hopey Changey:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xQZtiZNEX0
They would not call for Obama's resignation for being in secret meetings that had to do with keeping the corporate and military elite cronies "happy". The Republicans never asked Clinton to resign for pushing NAFTA. The only time Obama will be asked to resign is if he is involved in a sex scandal and/or the elites perceive him to be a "threat" to the status quo.
Fantastic editorial. Is there any doubt why the Compromiser in Chief was allowed into the presidency?
Since the House and Senate make their own rules for conducting business, nothing will change.
This author and other commenters have nailed it. Instead of democracy we have the civic version of fake wrestling. We can invest our emotional energy seeing the opponents debate and posture, but the outcome is pre-ordained.
But something is indeed shaking loose. As the Misery index grows, more people just aren't buying these fake compromises, and the problems that spawned the debate just fester and grow. That is giving rise to a burgeoning well of populism out there. Despite the mainstream media's attempts to steer this populism to break in the direction of the teabaggers, that's not happening.
The doctrine of Meaningless-compromise-to-preserve-the-status-quo worked when unemployment was 4% and you could see a doctor. But the wealth-class and their Punch & Judy legislators have now eaten their seed corn - the cupboard is bare, the jig is up, and the wheels are coming off. So the old tricks aren't working. Halleluiah.
"Open, transparent compromise is fine when needed, but this disgusting process of creating secret, backroom deals without ever letting the voters know who stands for or against anything is detrimental to democracy."
George W. Bush, followed by Barak Obama, along with the "do-nothings" on Capitol Hill, have made it perfectly clear that the "executive branch" of this government will do all the bidding for the corporate elite and not "We the People". Congress is concerned with winning elections every two to four years, not with upholding the Constitution of the United States.
“No currency system in the U.S. is going to work unless the fiscal conditions that drove it into oblivion are also addressed.” –John Williams
http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page72068?oid=103698&sn=Detail
Be prepared for the worst while hoping for the best!
ACCOUNTABILITY IS OUR BASE PROBLEM!! No one is accountable for their decisions. Once upon a Time, you knew your local Banker. He knew you! If he was a sleezy person, then you knew that and went elsewhere. If you were not dependable then he would not loan you money. Your WORD was like Gold.
Now Big Pharma and (too)Big Corporations make decisions that are motivated by profit only. The people that actually make the decisions to destroy elderly person's retirement pensions, or to charge unpayable health insurance premiums, are not afraid of being found out and held accountable,they are given bonuses instead.
The cry for less regulation is based on a bygone era. Having less regulation is like telling the Bank Robber not to rob a bank, but having no jail or other form of punishment if they continue to rob. They are paid to do crime,quite an incentive!