I don't enjoy being lectured to. Especially about politics. And especially from someone who has no political experience whatsoever.
I respect a Harvard Law Degree as much as the next guy. And a Harvard degree, and 26 years at the Washington Post is swell. But it doesn't mean squat about how much you actually know about passing legislation. To wit: Washington Post columnist and editorial board member Ruth Marcus.
How many bills has Ruth Marcus ever written? Zero. How much legislation has she ever helped shepherd through Congress? Zero.
I ask this because Ms. Marcus is the latest Obama apologist to have self-appointed herself queen bee expert on all that is legislating. Obama apologists have a short repertoire of greatest hits. The most common one is that anyone who criticizes their boyfriend-in-chief is a hopeless idealist who is clearly not an expert on politics. Or in the case of Marcus, we're now apparently "deranged" for expecting the President to at least
try to keep his promises.
I don't to mean to knock Marcus personally. I'm sure she's a lovely person. And we actually have a few things in common. We both graduated from east coast law schools in the same decade. She's written for the Post. I've written for the Economist. But when it comes to our relative political experience, especially legislating in Congress, she has none, while I've had five years as a legislative attorney in the Senate, and many more years involved in making legislation happen from the outside.
When I criticize the President for not being more aggressive with the stimulus, and for not pushing for the amount that he knew was actually needed, I speak from actual legislative experience. And when I write about how the Hill reacts to a weak president versus a strong president on issues like health care reform, I'm writing about what it's actually like to be on the ground, on the Hill, trying to make things happen. Because I was there. I've been in all-night conference committee meetings, whispering in Senators' ears at 4am in order to nail down a legislative deal. I somehow doubt Marcus has done the same.
It's not clear what basis of knowledge Ruth Marcus is using, if any, when she talks about our expectations of the President as being "deranged." She's been a reporter for a few decades, and that's groovy. But observing politics, like some kind of passive, objective academic, is not the same thing as actually working as a politico. (It's a bit like the tale of the
blind men and the elephant.)
I will say this. For an editorial board member of the Washington Post, to be found unable to enunciate a more nuanced criticism than simply calling someone "deranged," speaks rather poorly of the Washington Post.
More from Mediaite:
During an appearance on Chuck Todd and Savannah Guthrie’s Daily Rundown, Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus may have one-upped Robert Gibbs‘ “Professional Left” comments. Having already written a column agreeing with Gibbs, she told Chuck, Savannah, and Anita Dunn that the left and the blogosphere are “deranged.”
While it is true that a great many liberals have too-high expectations of President Obama, and little patience, the example that Marcus cites is the worst one possible. On health care, the left has an indisputably valid point. In her column, Marcus wrote “Can these people count to 60?”
As a matter of fact, we can, but apparently, the Democrats can’t. Instead of pressing the advantage while they had that filibuster-proof Senate majority, President Obama went on a pointless consensus-building exercise that resulted in a weaker law that barely passed after Scott Brown upended that 60-seat majority.
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