General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDo you think Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema are committed to passing Joe Biden's agenda?
34 votes, 1 pass | Time left: Unlimited | |
Yes | |
2 (6%) |
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No | |
32 (94%) |
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1 DU member did not wish to select any of the options provided. | |
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Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll |
BlueTsunami2018
(4,086 posts)Otherwise there would be none of this open refusal to do so. It looks like they dont give a fuck at all about anything except corporate interests.
lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)Putin and their other large donors are smiling.
lark
(24,372 posts)They are hurting their political fortunes, especially Sienema, so there has to be something else in this for them. It's coming from the Big Oil/coal guys & that is their priority.
lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)And incidentally, Putin is Big Oil.
The only good news here, is we know that Manchin and Sinema do have a price. Theoretically, we could find a way to outbid their donors.
2naSalit
(93,787 posts)PortTack
(34,897 posts)temporary311
(957 posts)She voted to impeach Trump 2x.
PortTack
(34,897 posts)lark
(24,372 posts)TreasonousBastard
(43,049 posts)And I am conflicted over the concepts of "loyalty".
Should a legislator show primary loyalty to constituents, constituents who voted for him/her, the party, the party leader, or some "higher" authority?
If not just one, in what order.
lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)And, per a poll that came out yesterday, 77% of Manchin's constituents support the reconciliation bill. So why doesn't Manchin support it? (Rhetorical question. We all know the answer).
Caliman73
(11,767 posts)So we have polls showing that constituents support, in large majorities, the exact two bills he is determined to keep.
We also know that there are other "constituent" groups to whom Manchin is beholden who apparently have more sway than 77% and 69% of the people of the state of West Virginia, respectively.
BlueCheeseAgain
(1,983 posts)... there's no way 77% of WV voters support Biden's agenda. They might say they support individual elements of it when phrased the right way, but once they know it's Biden's agenda, they'll say they oppose it in a heartbeat.
lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)They want these benefits. We just have to let them know that Manchin is keeping those benefits from them, to benefit himself. No need to emphasize that it's Biden's idea when advertising on Fux or Falsebook. Just tell them to contact their Senator and demand this stuff.
brooklynite
(96,882 posts)They support some or most of it, but will have differences on policy and politics.
Caliman73
(11,767 posts)Problem is that the very bills that Sinema and Manchin are standing in the way of, are critical to Biden's and the vast majority of the Democratic party's agenda.
These aren't just things that came off the top of Biden's head. These are things that have been negotiated, that have the support of Progressives and most moderates. Information available shows that opposition to the bills in both the House and Senate are being coordinated through Manchin at least. Sinema seems to just be a rouge operator at this time. The 9 moderates who were stalling the bill in the House were in communication with Manchin.
The Democratic Party is a big tent and there are always differences. As Will Rogers said, "I am not a member of any organized Political Party, I'm a Democrat".
This is not that. This is two Democrats who are completely blocking the two most critical pieces of legislation for their party, at a time when they are most likely to be able to pass them, in a time when politically, it would put forth the major ideological and policy difference between Republicans and Democrats and which would be the difference for campaigns in the 2022 AND likely 2024 elections.
Walleye
(36,548 posts)I think we need to find out exactly whom she is showing loyalty to
IMO, she's using her senate seat to secure a more profitable position when she loses her next election. Manchin's probably in it for the money, too.
Publicly funded elections would go a long way toward fixing this country, but how do you get the people who benefit from the status quo to change the status quo?
Walleye
(36,548 posts)I hate to think this of elected Democrats, but I dont see any other explanation
brooklynite
(96,882 posts)They support some or most of it, but will have differences on policy and politics.
Mad_Machine76
(24,784 posts)Flat out refusing to name specifics or what they would like to see changed or modified is something else. Why are Sinema and Manchin being so "cagey"?!
Mad_Machine76
(24,784 posts)I think Manchin seems to be more malleable than Sinema, though, but both seem more committed to being a thorn in the side of passing Joe Biden's agenda for their own reasons.
Patton French
(1,202 posts)Only if it aligns with their agenda.
msfiddlestix
(7,879 posts)Who isn't able to understand this?
qazplm135
(7,541 posts)But not reconciliation.
If the BIF fails or gets moved it will depend on how important the former is to them.
If it's more important to pass one than block the other than you'll suddenly see progress. If blocking is more important to them, you won't and then progressives will be left to decide what happens next
I really don't understand why they don't just say 1.5 trillion take it or leave it. Progressives would be furious but they'd vote for it and no one is losing an election on the moderate side for what is effectively 150 billion a year over ten years.
It's political malpractice by the moderates and it's going to lose us 22.
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)said he's completely clueless about what's happening. He's never seen anything like it. Which is basically what most observers are saying.
Once again some people are acting so bizarrely and without rational explanation that I'm once again forced to wonder if someone's being blackmailed. Seriously. An explanation that would at least explain. Like tRump himself and a slew of people who destroyed their reputations with massive personality swings, turning into agents for the RW, gig employees as alternative-fact purveyors on Fox if they're lucky.
I agree, blackmail
And if someone as experienced as O'Donnell can't find a credible theory to explain it....
BlueCheeseAgain
(1,983 posts)I think Manchin wants to pass something. He'll want changes and concessions, but he'll be there in the end.
Sinema is the one I'm worried about. She's just completely unreadable.
48656c6c6f20
(7,638 posts)I think I misunderstood the poll question.
andym
(5,735 posts)Simena is a wild card-- it's difficult to understand what she wants-- perhaps just to have a significant moderating effect and be seen as a player.
DLevine
(1,789 posts)iemanja
(54,984 posts)That is obvious.
DFW
(56,937 posts)Manchin is 74, Sinema is 45.
Manchin gets a comfortable retirement whether he runs for another term or not. He's set for life. He can compromise or not, go along or not, and he'll be fine. I think he's in it for the ego at this point. I think he'll ultimately go along, after "making his point" along with the appropriate headlines to paste on his wall.
Sinema is another species. She is only 45, and is no idiot. Maybe not the greatest strategist in the world, but I've heard her speak, and she is no fool along the lines of Sarah Palin. Maybe she has some hotshot private sector post waiting for her, but maybe she just wants to make some kind of big splash that will somehow prove she was "right all along," and make a great comeback in the AZ Democratic party. If she makes enough of Biden's agenda ultimately happen, she will be able to say, "I kept a lid on the excesses, and made everything happen anyway," and she'll give any challenger a hard time proving her wrong.
They may say the same things for now, but it seems to me that they are saying them with very different motivations.