Originally
posted by
[IX]Mobster:
Mitt worked with a 84% democratic led government in Massachusettes and led his state to a surplus, #1 in education in the US, and health care reform that worked for their state. Obama is the divisive one, any of his major bills that passed were rammed through by all Democratic votes and no Republican votes. Obama is just as to blame as someone that fails to work across the isle.
Also, Obama's proposed budgets were shot down 99-0 and 414-0 in the congress, a flawless victory. He, if anyone, doesn't know how to work across the isle.
Wow, you hit all the main talking points. Let's go through them and think logically:
1) The working with Democrats thing: Of course he did. He was in Massachusetts. He was a Republican governor who knew he could be overridden on everything he wanted if he didn't work with Democrats. This is similar to how Clinton actually pretty successfully worked with Republicans from time to time. The problem is that he now is pushing himself further and further to the right to placate the Tea Party contingent. So which Romney would show up in January if he wins? The one that's actually a pretty centrist governor or the one who panders to the far right and doesn't seem to care about working with Democrats (after all, he did say during the primary debates he'd turn down a 10:1 ratio of cuts to revenue raising).
2) I've been unable to find how Massachusetts ranked prior to Romney, but it's a wealthy state with some of the best universities in the world. I'm going to bet that Massachusetts was probably pretty sound educationally beforehand. If you find something to refute that, please post it. I'm actually very curious.
3) Obama as the divisive one: I present to you Mitch McConnell, who pretty much immediately after PRes. Obama was elected (with an impressive margin of victory that at the time could certainly be considered him having a "mandate" to change things), stated his biggest goal was to make Pres. Obama a one-term president. From there, the GOP filibustered everything they could to kill legislation.
http://www.mediaite.com/...important-political-goal/
Ultimately, I'm disappointed in the first term of Pres. Obama, but I think that's due to Obama's naivete that the Republicans had any desire to work with him to make things better and the Republicans (at least McConnell and his ilk) being asshats who were dedicated to defeating Obama more than they were to fixing the problems of the country. I figure things will be better after this election either way because either 1) They'll have Obama for four more years and they won't have to worry about defeating him in the next election, nor defeating his VP (because let's be serious, Uncle Joe's not the same threat that Obama is to win an election); or 2) They'll have their own guy in there.
Either way, I figure things will get done. However, I'm still of the belief that Pres. Obama has actually done some good things and with a Congress that has nothing to lose by working with him, hopefully he'll be able to do a lot more.