Dr. Who's Reading Room
However the debt limit showdown ends, one thing is clear: under pressure from Congressional Republicans, President Obama has moved rightward on budget policy, deepening a rift within his party heading into the next election.


 


Cute.

JULY 27, 2011 | ISSUE 47•30


WASHINGTON—With lawmakers still at an impasse over increasing the debt ceiling, a special team of 40 eighth-grade civics teachers was air-dropped into Washington earlier today in a last-ditch effort to teach congressional leaders how the government’s legislative process works. “We started them off with the basics, like the difference between a senator and a representative, and then moved on to more complex concepts, like what a resolution is,” Bozeman, MT social studies teacher Heidi Rossmiller told reporters as all 535 members of Congress copied down the definition of “checks and balances” from a whiteboard in the House chamber. “It’s been a bit of an uphill battle, since most of them seemed to have no real sense of how or why a bill is passed, and Sen. [Harry] Reid [D-NV] had to come up to me during a break and ask, ‘Ms. Rossmiller, what happens if Congress can’t reach a compromise?’ But hopefully it will all start to sink in soon.” At press time, an unruly House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) had noisily stormed out of a lecture on bipartisan cooperation, claiming it was “too hard.”



 


brooklynmutt:

President Obama said the word “compromise” in his speech last night 6 times. 
Speaker of the House John Boehner? Nada.
via MSNBC’s Chris Matthews

brooklynmutt:

President Obama said the word “compromise” in his speech last night 6 times. 

Speaker of the House John Boehner? Nada.

via MSNBC’s Chris Matthews



 


So 62 percent of those polled said Republicans should compromise, while the opposite proportion—38 percent—said Democrats should do the same. That translates into a “mixed bag” for both parties—that is, if corporate media are doing the mixing.