In any event, if, through some combination of White House pressure and magic the House CAN pass the Senate health care bill within the next few days, the circumstances surrounding its passage will not redound to the benefit of Democrats. Liberals will be angry -- and they'll be even angrier at the White House's austerity budget that's due Feb. 1. And they'll be even ANGRIER when they realize that the White House will redouble their efforts to make peace with Republicans on budgetary and spending issues.
I'm not in the habit of predicting what the circular firing squad is going to sound like on Wednesday should Brown win, but it is certainly no understatement to call the race a true upset, to call it a definite sign of trouble for the majority party, to question whether Democrats can really get anything done before November. The White House's clumsy but necessary economic populism platform is wafer thin; the truth is -- and the White House knows this -- the quickest way out of the Great Recession was for the government to spend a lot of money and use its power to prevent big institutions from failing. These were unpopular decisions, and they can't be rectified by a few bones here and there.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2010/01/ma-sen-will-the-house-pass-the-senate-bill/33718/
