Close enough . An R and a D are both letters of the alphabet. Both are  
political parties.
Both operate in the United States. I mean, what else are you gonna demand  ?
 
Accuracy ?
 
Billy  :-/
 
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Curious how McKinnon, well known in Texas as a  DEMOCRAT, is billed as a 
Republican by Politico. 

David 

 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 


On 10/12/2011 2:40 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
     (http://www.politico.com/)    
If the parties won't  solve problems
By: Mark McKinnon
October 12, 2011 02:04 PM EDT     
Support for the two major political  parties in America is hemorrhaging. It’
s not hard to see  why. 
The politerati point to the 1992  presidential campaign as the last time 
public dissatisfaction with the  political environment was so pervasive that a 
disruption to the status  quo was even possible. Third-party independent 
candidate Ross Perot  briefly led incumbent President George H.W. Bush and 
challenger  Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton. If he had maintained credibility, Perot 
 might well have won. 
But discontent today is far deeper.  In 1992, just 39 percent of the public 
was dissatisfied with  government. Today, a record high 81 percent is 
dissatisfied.  Satisfaction has plummeted from 59 percent to just 19 percent. 
We 
are  in uncharted waters. 
If we were ripe for disruption in  1992, today most Americans must be damn 
close to grabbing their  pitchforks and storming the barricades of the nation
’s capital. King  George was more beloved. 
This thirst for dramatic change  isn’t just Republican voters unhappy with 
the Obama administration’s  policies. Democratic guru James Carville told CNN
’s Erin Burnett last  week: “There is a real yearning for something 
different in this  country. It is going to produce something, I have no idea 
what, 
but  something is coming here, I promise you.” 
What accounts for this dramatic  shift? Obviously, there is deep concern 
about a terrible economy and  long, costly foreign conflicts. But there is 
something more dangerous:  a fundamental breakdown in trust in government. 
We send our representatives to  Washington to fix problems. Yet every day 
offers examples of  opportunities lost. We’ve gone from statesmanship to 
brinksmanship.  Compromise means victory for the opposing party. Consensus 
means 
the  loss of political leverage. And scoring political points seems more  
important than progress on policy. 
Americans now have largely negative  views of both parties. The public sees 
little difference between the  effectiveness of either party when it comes 
to tackling the economy.  And only 9 percent of likely voters rate Congress’ 
performance as good  or excellent. 
Republicans in Congress refuse tax  increases, labeling them job-killing. 
(It’s hard to negotiate when  you’ve signed a pledge, as most Republicans 
and a few Democrats have,  binding you to no new taxes and linking subsidy 
elimination to rate  decreases.) Democrats refuse spending cuts, also labeling 
them  job-killing. 
Yet, by a 2-to-1 margin,  Americans support doing both, increasing taxes 
and cutting  spending. [ BF emphasis added ] 
Unable to negotiate the policy  changes necessary to avert the next 
financial crisis, Congress has  deferred responsibility to a supercommittee. If 
an 
agreement is not  reached there, automatic and dramatic across-the-board 
cuts kick in.  The public is not hopeful: 74 percent think the committee will 
not  reach agreement. 
Voters feel increasingly  disenfranchised. No party represents them. Fringe 
groups with  microphones dominate the conversation. Super PACs with 
unlimited  funding exert unlimited influence. Powerful political advocacy 
groups  
skirt disclosure rules. 
I helped co-found No Labels to  fight back against the hyper-partisanship 
and special interests now  holding the system hostage. What we hear from 
voters is they want  members of Congress to put their labels aside — and work  
together. 
Often it’s not policy  outcomes that are problematic — the very nature of 
the debate is  contributing to the loss of confidence. [ BF emphasis added  
] 
The debt-ceiling debate caused the  consumer confidence index to collapse 
to its fourth lowest level since  first measured in 1952, according to the 
pollster Bill McInturf,. The  index today sits at 55. That’s more than 20 
points below the average  when a sitting president loses reelection. 
The debt-ceiling debate was just  one in the seemingly never-ending 
examples of the parties’ inability  to forge consensus on anything — from 
contentious stimulus spending  and health care reforms, to simple continuing 
budget 
resolutions.  Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), by triggering the “
nuclear  option” in the Senate this week to block GOP amendments, only  
escalated the party standoff. 
If the Republicans and Democrats in  Washington cannot set aside their 
party loyalty, then the people are  most likely to declare their independence 
again. Almost a third of  voters today do not affiliate with either party, and 
55 percent of  Americans say a third party is needed. 
Skeptics cite all the usual reasons  why a third-party or alternative 
nominating process won’t work. But  it’s mostly just pattern recognition. It’s 
the same reason they said  we’d never elect an African-American president. 
Because we hadn’t,  they said we wouldn’t. 
These are different times. I don’t  know how it’s going to happen. It 
could be the Americans Elect  platform, or it could be in a self-funded 
independent candidacy, or a  tea party candidate. 
But, I’m with Carville on this one:  Something is coming. 
Mark McKinnon, a co-founder of  No Labels, a trans-partisan organization, 
is a Republican strategist  who served as chief media adviser for George W. 
Bush and John  McCain.
--  




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