http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/06/opinion/sunday/the-surreal-world-capitol-h
ill.html?pagewanted=2
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/06/opinion/sunday/the-surreal-world-capitol-
hill.html?pagewanted=2&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130106>
&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130106
 
The Surreal World: Capitol Hill
 
Maureen Dowd
NY Times Op-Ed: 1/6/2013
 
IT was hard not to feel sorry for John Boehner, wounded, weepy, mercilessly
flogged by Chris Christie. The miserable-looking Boehner was even scaring
small children. 

After squeaking out re-election as House speaker when crazed conservatives
rebelled on Thursday, Boehner summoned gruff bonhomie as he presided at a
ceremonial swearing-in for House members. 

But some of the kids posing for pictures seemed a little alarmed at
Boehner’s awkward pats, brusque small talk and barked orders when someone
posed the wrong way. 

The speaker opened his arms to help out Sean Duffy, a Republican congressman
from Wisconsin who was juggling five small children and two stuffed animals.
Duffy, who met his wife, Rachel, through MTV after they were on different
seasons of “The Real World,” tried to hand over his young daughter, who
recoiled. 

“No?” the rejected speaker asked her, muttering sardonically, “You could be
a member of our caucus.” He followed the girl as she rolled away on the
floor, trying to tickle her and making Donald Duck quacking noises. That
kind of thing may work on Michele Bachmann, but Miss Duffy was having none
of it. 

It was a day for old-pol shtick. And if Boehner was the nicotine-stained
prince of darkness in the House, Joe Biden was the garrulous white knight
over in the Senate. Fresh from his deal-making triumph with Mitch McConnell
— no Tickle Monster, he — Biden presided over the Senate ceremonial
swearing-in and lived up to his reputation for “bringing sexy back to the
Medicare-eligible set,” as Politico once put it. 

Every time Biden spied a member’s mom, he called out with utter delight,
“Mom!” as though she were his own, enfolding the glowing woman in a tender
embrace. 

“Mom, I’ll see you in a little bit,” he flirted with the mother of Senator
Bob Casey of Pennsylvania. “I hope I’ll sneak over and see you.” To the
mother of Senator Deb Fischer, a new Republican from Nebraska, he cooed,
“You’ve got beautiful eyes, Mom.” 

The bouncy, irrepressible Biden also had better karma with kids, persuading
one little boy to raise his hand to take the oath with his father, the new
Connecticut senator, Chris Murphy. It turned into a YouTube moment so
adorable it even melted the hearts of jaded journalists who usually prefer
videos of Ukrainian pols fistfighting. 

The prolix vice president had his off-kilter moments, of course. He made a
risqué frisking joke to the husband of Senator Heidi Heitkamp of North
Dakota, and he gushed over a brunette accompanying Senator Robert Menendez
of New Jersey: “You are so pretty. God love you, holy mackerel.” 

But it was hard not to fall for his daffy charm — a rare 86 minutes of
feeling good about a Congress that has now officially entered Ionesco
territory as the most absurd place on earth. 

When the young daughter of Senator Ted Cruz, the new Tea Party hotshot from
Texas, began crying, the vice president reassured her, noting that he was a
Democrat but that “it’s O.K.” 

When Tim Scott, the first black senator from South Carolina, came up with
his muscular brother, a former football player, to pose, the 70-year-old
Biden deadpanned, “Need any help with your pecs, let me know.” 

The vice president has come in for his share of mockery by late-night
comics. But fox-trotting in to save the day on the fiscal cliff as the
“dancing partner” of McConnell, Biden seemed more like an indispensable
partner to the detached president who loathes dealing with Congress — a
capable, genial Captain Kirk balancing out Obama’s brilliant but rigid
Spock. 

As the presidential historian Michael Beschloss said on Twitter, “Biden did
for the president on Capitol Hill what J.F.K. was always too wary to let the
experienced L.B.J. do for him.” 

A petition even popped up on the White House Web site suggesting that the
Obama administration create a reality show around the vice president. C-Span
ratings would go through the Capitol dome, giving Julia Louis-Dreyfus’s
“Veep” a run for its money. 

It was sweet justice for a man who was the victim of friendly fire from
White House aides after he blurted out his support for gay marriage during
the campaign while the president was still dithering, spurring Obama to do
the right thing. From the beginning of their alliance in 2008, Biden felt
passionately that he needed to interpret the dispassionate Obama for regular
folk. It was an attitude that probably annoyed Obama, who does not like to
feel dependent or beholden, having fought his way up in the world mostly
under his own steam. 

But when Obama let Biden take over the cliff talks, and when he noted with
asperity that he would not debate Congress again over paying its bills, he
dug into his revulsion at playing the game, his reluctance to even fake the
flattering, schmoozing and ring-kissing needed to coax Congress into doing
what he wants. 

Even members of his own party have lost faith in his ability to use the
White House as a social lubricant to get his agenda passed, or to use that
big brain of his to become a more clever negotiator, rather than a scolding
lecturer. 

“His inability to engage the politicians here has been a real liability,”
one Democratic lawmaker complained. It’s odd, given that he was renowned for
making a group of egotists feel that they were being heeded at The Harvard
Law Review. 

The vice president was in the Senate for 36 years while the president merely
breezed through. Obama radiates contempt at Congress for not being a bunch
of high-minded, effective people, and for expecting him to clean up its
mess. He thinks reasonable people should see things his way in a reasonable
amount of time, and gets impatient when ideology, ego, identity politics and
pork-project whining hold up progress. 

Biden is a realist. He understands lawmakers’ limitations, motivations and
needs. He leans right in and speaks — and speaks and speaks — their
language. That’s who he is. And he believes, as creaky and unwieldy as the
system is, that it still has integrity. More Rocky than Spocky, Biden can
spread everything out on the table and negotiate his way through all of his
former colleagues’ shortcomings, weaknesses, fears and frailties. 

It’s actually fun for him, while Obama seems so often to be pulling back,
aggrieved by the need to engage. The president and his staff seem clueless
about what Republicans on the Hill are thinking. And Obama ignores those who
urge him to be less insular and — like Jefferson, Lincoln, L.B.J. and Reagan
— socialize more with political players, combining fairy dust, elbow grease,
intimidation and seduction to get his way. 

Joe Biden has a valuable skill: He knows how to stoop to conquer. 

 
  _____  

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