Governing on Empty
The Senate, having struck its compromise, has gone home. The House, controlled by delusional Republicans, has gone home. Payroll taxes are slated to rise, and unemployment insurance is set to expire before they return in January. The compromise wasn’t just between the two parties in the Senate, apparently. According to Wednesday’s Washington Post, House Speaker John Boehner and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor met with Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell on Friday and told him they’d get the votes to pass the two-month extension deal he’d worked out with Harry Reid. But Boehner, who is turning out to be the weakest speaker since the House was first gaveled to order in 1789, couldn’t hold his troops, whose caucus meetings, by numerous accounts, increasingly resemble the pep rallies of cults that have lost all feel for how other humans think.
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Congressional Republicans have released their "Pledge to America," but it is a threat to Americans struggling in today's economy. This slate of proposals will slash needed spending, kill jobs, declare open season on the public's health and safety, and end any hope of growing the economy.
"We need to drive home the fact that anybody who calls themselves an American cannot, in the same breath, declare that they are in any sense entirely 'self-made.'" says Sara Robinson in her latest essay. In our interdependence lies our greatness, and "bringing that interdependence back out into the light and putting it at the center of our politics shifts the entire dialogue in ways that can help progressives over the long haul."
Author Jacob Hacker discussed his latest book, a probe of "the DNA evidence" behind the growing inequality of incomes between the vast majority of Americans and the richest of the rich, at an October 14 talk co-sponsored by the AFL-CIO and the Institute for America's Future. "Winner-Take-All Politics" shows how to take back a political system hijacked by the super rich. 
