Guest Column - Congressional Democrats Have Failed to Lead
This week is the one-year anniversary of Democrats
winning Congress. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid probably aren't in a celebrating mood. The goodwill they enjoyed
after their victory is gone. Their bright campaign promises are unfulfilled.
Democratic leadership is in disarray. And Congress's approval rating has fallen
to its lowest point in history.
The problems the Democrats are now experiencing begin
with the federal budget. Or rather, the lack of one. In 2006, Democrats
criticized Congress for dragging its feet on the budget and pledged that they
would do better. Instead, they did worse. The new fiscal year started Oct. 1 --
five weeks ago -- but Democrats have yet to send the president a single annual
appropriations bill. It's been at least 20 years since Congress has gone this
late in passing any appropriation bills, an indication of the mess the
Pelosi-Reid Congress is now in.
Even worse, the Democrats have made clear all their talk
about "fiscal discipline" is just that -- talk. They're proposing to spend $205
billion more than the president has proposed over the next five years. And the
opening wedge of this binge is $22 billion more in spending proposed for the
coming year. Only in
Let's also be clear about what it means to roll back the
president's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, as the Democrats want to do. Every
income-tax payer will pay more as all tax rates rise. Families will pay $500
more per child as they lose the child tax credit. Taxes on small businesses
would go up by an average of about $4,000. Retirees will pay higher taxes on
investment retirement income. And now we have the $1 trillion tax increase
proposed as "tax reform" by the Democrats' chief tax writer last
month.
Beholden to MoveOn.org and other left-wing groups,
Democratic leaders have ignored the progress made in
After promising on the campaign trail to "support our
troops," Democrats tried to cut off funding for our military while our soldiers
and Marines are under fire from the enemy. For 19 Senate Democrats, this was
simply a bridge too far, so they voted against their own leadership's proposal.
Democrats also tried to stuff an emergency war-spending bill with billions of
dollars of pork for individual members. Now the party's leaders are stalling an
emergency supplemental bill with funding for body armor, bullets and
mine-resistant vehicles.
After pledging a "Congress that strongly honors our
responsibility to protect our people from terrorism," Democrats have refused to
make permanent reforms of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that the
Director of National Intelligence said were needed to close "critical gaps in
our intelligence capability." Their presidential candidates fell all over each
other in a recent debate to pledge an end to the Terrorist Surveillance Program.
Then Senate Democratic leaders, thinking there was an opening for political
advantage, slow-walked the confirmation of Judge Michael Mukasey to be the next
attorney general. It's obvious that this is a man who knows the important role
the Justice Department plays in the war on terror. Delaying his confirmation is
only making it harder to prosecute the war.
The list of Congress's failures grows each month. No energy bill. No action on health care. No action on the mortgage crisis. No immigration reform. No progress on renewing No Child Left Behind. Precious little action on judges and not enough on reducing trade barriers. Congress has not done its work. And these failures will have consequences.
Democrats had a moment after the 2006 election, but now
that moment has passed. They've squandered it. They have demonstrated both the
inability and unwillingness to govern. Instead, after more than a decade in the
congressional minority, they reflexively look for short-term partisan advantage
and attempt to appease the party's most strident fringe. Now that Democrats have
the reins of congressional power, their true colors are coming out and the
public doesn't like what it sees.
The Democratic victory in 2006 was narrow. They won the
House by 85,961 votes out of over 80 million cast and the Senate by a mere 3,562
out of over 62 million cast. A party that wins control by that narrow margin can
quickly see its fortunes reversed when it fails to act responsibly, fails to
fulfill its promises, and fails to lead.






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