• hallettj
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    9 months ago

    I’m finding this mess interesting: the MAGAs vote and debate like a third party, which kinda gives us a House with no majority party which is something we usually don’t get to see in America. And we’re getting the deadlocks that come from a chamber that isn’t willing to form a coalition - or at least not a reliable one.

    I just hope the next speaker candidate doesn’t try for the same Republican-MAGA coalition. Although I’m prepared to be disappointed. Do you think there’s any chance a Republican would offer to sideline the MAGAs to get support from Democrats?

    Under this analysis the Democrats have a plurality. How does that tend to work out in governments with more than two parties?

    • UngodlyAudrey🏳️‍⚧️
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      489 months ago

      Honestly, any Republican that tries to work with the Democrats at this point is going to get eaten alive. Even if it’s a “moderate” one. They have completely gone off the deep end.

      • @[email protected]
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        229 months ago

        Exactly, the only way to govern in a multi party system is bipartisan. Most Republicans cannot put anything above the party line anymore.

      • Querk [they/them]
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        89 months ago

        Well, the far right faction of Republicans did already side with Dems to oust the speaker.

      • @[email protected]
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        49 months ago

        Which given the composition of the Senate and that whole executive branch thing this means they’ll never get anything done.

      • @[email protected]
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        249 months ago

        This is objectively false. One party deals entirely in culture warfare with no idea how to govern. The other at least tries to interface with real world problems.

        All this “we” shit smacks entirely too much of cis het white middle class privelage

        • P03 Locke
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          209 months ago

          All this “we” shit smacks entirely too much of cis het white middle class privelage

          Nah, it’s just the usual “both sides are bad” false equivalence bullshit.

          • @[email protected]
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            119 months ago

            Both sides are bad, but they are not equivalent, and we indeed shouldn’t flatten the landscape.

            In the interest of being constructive, what do you propose is the best way to voice this opinion off-handedly?

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          It smacks of a belief that to pull through this, the majority of us need to figure out how to get along.

        • Zorque
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          39 months ago

          Yes yes, mustn’t criticize the lesser evil, mustn’t criticize.

          • SleightWryder
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            29 months ago

            @Zorque @chloyster @hallettj @downpunxx But is it? Why must we vote for evil in degrees every time? Why can’t we say “let’s look into these perceptions without having to agree with them wholesale?” Why are we killing and dying for ideas?
            We’re more than just pawns on this socio/economic/political chessboard. But who am I to demand that things be any different. What am I even contributing?

          • @[email protected]
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            169 months ago

            Caring for the people? Sounds like woke radical leftist Marxist propaganda (actual shit I hear on a daily basis).

            The Republican party could stop trying to hurt people at any moment. Hell, I’m in a red state and our last Republican governor wasn’t too bad. But it’s all just hate now. And anyone who opposes that hate gets more hate from people like you.

      • @[email protected]
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        129 months ago

        The Republican party can stop denying women the right to control their bodies, stop denying science, stop censoring history, and stop othering anyone but Christian Cis Het White people any time they feel like it.

        But they won’t, because that’s their entire political identity. I ought to know; I was one of them for 20 some odd years.

        • SleightWryder
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          19 months ago

          @CylustheVirus No, that isn’t their entire history. I’m sorry you’ve been convinced by corporate and blasphemous malcontents within the economical and religious underbelly of the many American cults within.

          • Vodulas [they/them]
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            29 months ago

            Their history matters exactly zero compared to what they are doing now. Knowing that Republicans used to be the less shitty party but then it switched is academic.

    • @[email protected]
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      99 months ago

      I just hope the next speaker candidate doesn’t try for the same Republican-MAGA coalition.

      Any speaker who agrees to the absurd demand that 1 person can motion for removing the gavel is a fool and won’t be speaker for long. We all knew that when McCarthy agreed to it that he was on borrowed time. Hell he lasted longer than I thought.

  • @[email protected]M
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    319 months ago

    I’m not gonna lie, I didn’t expect the vote to succeed. This is surprising, shocking, and even a bit sad. Not for McCarthy, but more for the country. That this is where we’ve gotten to.

    • @[email protected]
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      229 months ago

      McCarthy needed Dem votes to maintain a hold on the speakership, but the concessions he would have needed to make in order to get them would have meant making himself incredibly vulnerable to a career-ending primary challenge. The political incentives don’t line up.

      • Jaysyn
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        9 months ago

        He dug that grave when he lied to the Democrats.

      • pbjamm
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        109 months ago

        After his shitshow of a speakership does he have any realistic chance of reelection? He looks pathetic and weak and will probably be defeated by a conspiracy blogger.

        • @[email protected]
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          49 months ago

          He’s already decided that he’s out of the speakership entirely, meaning that getting the speakership will likely turn into another John Boehner-style Cold War where the most right side of the party gets exactly what they want and the more “moderate” side will get flushed again unless the “moderates” turn it into an actual civil war. Best case scenerio is that Dems get 5 votes and just make one of their own the speaker for the rest of the session.

          • pbjamm
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            79 months ago

            I meant his chances of reelection to the House, not as speaker of it.

  • @[email protected]
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    169 months ago

    I’m surprised Dems decided to join in ousting him instead of voting present and letting him stay. But I guess watching GOP flail in another month-long speaker election can only help contrast them.

    • @[email protected]
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      449 months ago

      Democrats didn’t vote to vacate because they like to watch chaos. They simply will not support McCarthy unless he offers something in return. Their vote is a bargaining chip and they aren’t throwing it away.

      • TommySalami
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        539 months ago

        Especially after he backtracked on the compromise with Biden and then loudly announced he would not concede anything to Dems. The guy went to Home Depot and bought the rope himself. Like, it wasn’t going to end well for him either way, but it isn’t sad. He constructed this situation, he shouldn’t be surprised it blew up in his face.

    • @[email protected]
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      09 months ago

      It’s not a good look and they should have left him in. They are supposed to be the adults who do what’s best for the country, and instead of leaving a guy in place who has shown at least some inclination to break with the nut jobs and do what’s right, they are letting the entire chamber shut down until who knows when and some equivalent or worse republican is stood up in his place.

      • M. Orange
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        9 months ago

        The Dems have TRIED being the adults, and it hasn’t worked; it’s only gotten the country to where it is now. Might as well sabotage the party and let them wallow in their misery for another couple weeks.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          Lol. As an adult myself, I have yet to give up even though my kids have been acting like children for years now. You’re not actually that responsible if it’s only in small bursts when you feel like it.

          • M. Orange
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            69 months ago

            That’s… not a very good analogy. You chose to have kids. None of them chose to have evil/idiocy incarnate for coworkers.

            • @[email protected]
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              19 months ago

              You absolutely choose to be a member of the House of Representatives and the Democratic Party. Way more so than most parents choose to have kids. It can be shockingly easy to have a kid, but it’s a bit of A Thing to be elected to the House.

      • @ReallyActuallyFrankenstein
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        99 months ago

        Sorry, I hard disagree. Democrats have nothing to gain by and no responsibility for gratuitously voting for McCarthy. Republicans claim they have the majority, and that is how they control the chamber. But in fact, they do not, because an even more extreme right-wing third party is operating in bad faith under the GOP banner.

        So the GOP wants the benefits of chamber control (speakership) without the responsibilities (voting majority). To not hold them to a voting majority is to give them a windfall of power without the votes to justify it.

        • @[email protected]
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          9 months ago

          They would have effectively owned him and forced him to act as a proper Speaker and not a political Muppet.

          I can only assume this was offered and McCarthy would rather go down in flames than serve on his knees.

          • @ReallyActuallyFrankenstein
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            69 months ago

            They would have effectively owned him and forced him to act as a proper Speaker and not a political Muppet.

            They have no reliable leverage, unfortunately. After this vote, Gaetz and his merry band of misfits may change their mind. Similarly, their only “leverage” would be McCarthy honoring whatever agreement they came to prior to the vote.

  • @[email protected]
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    129 months ago

    You know guys, you don’t have to actually outdo the UK for unhinged politics. I mean, our lot just won’t have that and things are bad enough here already.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 months ago

        Don’t what? Comment on the dire straits of both countries with an attempt at humour? Seems that part failed here.

  • bedrooms
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    9 months ago

    I prefer Dems be honest and say they like chaos, if that’s really the motive. I prefer that because they are effectively shutting down the government longer and potentially contributing to another chaos, which is the Ukraine aid.

    If they want to be trusted, do it without hiding behind an excuse.

    Edit: I’m not blaming it on the Dems. I’m just saying they should not hide their motives if that’s what they are doing.

    Edit 2: I stroke through the sentence that triggered you guys. Hopefully that would make my point clearer.

    • pbjamm
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      149 months ago

      The GOP sets itself on fire and you are trying to lay blame on the Dems?

        • pbjamm
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          49 months ago

          That did not clear anything up for me.

          • bedrooms
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            19 months ago

            Alright, so I think we agree that

            1. what you complained was not my point (it’s written)
            2. you don’t understand my point

            At this point, you’re replying to a text you don’t understand. Why do you do that?

            • pbjamm
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              49 months ago

              An excellent question. At this point I have no idea why I should continue trying to engage with you on this discussion platform.

              Good Day.

        • @[email protected]
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          99 months ago

          I see your point. It’s just kinda… Not true I think.

          As I see it: They never wanted McCarthy anyway, he was too extreme for them from the beginning. They realized pretty soon that they would rather see him go then stay, since it would just be too difficult to get on board with his shenanigans. He was not being a Speaker of the House, the whole house, he was trying to be the lackey for the Republicans.

          And using the shutdown as a way to pressure them was a republican thing. Not the Dems. The Dems just called their bluf. Which in the end… turned out to be just that.

          In the end, republicans are doing this to themselves, they are (rather) quickly destroying the party from within. Fascinating to see.

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            Thinking about it more… It would have been an interesting tactic of the Dems to “cooperate” with some more level headed Republicans and sideline the Chaos Caucus from having anymore influence. It could have had major impact on the effectiveness of the house going forward.

            As I understand it, they actually tried this. Sort of. But McCarthy was very ANTI-DEMS towards it. So they voted the way they did.

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEj9pnkXei0

            • bedrooms
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              29 months ago

              I think that’s fair. My comment was a reaction to the opinion in the article that implied Dems enjoy the chaos for political advantage. As you probably understood, I don’t like it if that was really the case.

              • @[email protected]
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                9 months ago

                Agreed, that would not be beneficial to anyone really. Basically a “shitty move”.

                Seems like Republicans really did not leave them any other option though.

                Also: the reporting of the New York Times has really nose-dived in quality the last few years.

          • bedrooms
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            19 months ago

            That’s because I got basically the same reply multiple times. What am I supposed to do? Waste time paraphrasing the same text?