Last week, for example, it was revealed that the Obama administration's corporate compensation overseer, Ken Feinberg, had given his "blessing" to a $10.5 million bonus for the AIG CEO. Republicans already plan to run on the charge that health care reform will result in millions of middle class taxpayers paying more for health care. Even though Feinberg's decision was within social and political norms, it's the type of thing that the party in power gets blamed for, and will therefore make for a great Republican TV ad in the Midwest, in the Rocky Mountains and in the South. Add to this combustible mix a broad anti-government sentiment a frustration with Democratic insularity, solid GOP recruitment and relative fundraising parity.
And who, again, will be overseeing a broader tax reform effort next year? Whose committee will oversee the tax changes resulting from health care? Rangel, who is being investigated for failing to pay taxes on income and property he did not disclose, among other things.
Many Democratic consultants think that, at some point, if the drip-drip about Rangel continues, the pressure to oust him as chairman will precipitate the sort of late-September pre-midterm panic that has the potential to cascade into a bigger problem for Democrats. At this point, Speaker Nancy Pelosi may have to choose whether loyalty (to her friend Jack Murtha, for example) is too important a value to sacrifice.
Believe it or not, some very senior Democrats refuse to accept that their party might have a corruption problem, or that, at the very least, the public may not believe that Democrats are inherently honorable and Republicans are essentially corrupt. Republicans hope that the 2006 and 2008 elections removed the low-hanging corruptibles from their conference in the House -- although they have a significant problem in the Senate, where one senator, John Ensign, is facing an ethics investigation and is almost certain to face other legal challenges as the year goes on.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/10/how-democrats-may-be-helping-republicans-create-a-corruption-narrative/27678/
