logo

Speaker Boehner: Senate Dems Need To 'Get off their Ass and Do Something'

image
Created: 11 February, 2015
Updated: 15 October, 2022
1 min read
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-IRAYXRio8Q

U.S. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) says House Republicans have won the fight over DHS funding and ending the president's executive actions on illegal immigration. The problem is that Senate Democrats are just not doing their job.

"The House has done its job!" Boehner exclaimed. "Why don't you go ask the Senate Democrats when they're going to get off their ass and do something other than to vote no!"

Sound familiar? It seems like only yesterday when the speaker declared that Congress was in a hopeless stalemate over the budget showdown. His definition of a stalemate, however, relies heavily on the notion that gridlock is the product of one side not accommodating the partisan agenda of the other.

In other words, compromise is a one-way street. Any objection to what leaders in the U.S. House want is the only roadblock preventing legislation from getting to the president's desk.

Boehner mentioned small books in the capitol's gift shop that explain how a bill becomes a law, but it is highly unlikely that those books say that laws must only conform to the will of the House leadership, or the House majority, or only the majority party in Congress.

Cloture exists in both chambers of Congress in some form and has since the early days of the republic. The filibuster has always been a viable political tactic -- a tool for the weaker side of a debate to slow down the political process.

Speaker Boehner demands Senate Democrats to get out of their chairs and do something, and they have. No one said passing a bill was going to be easy because compromise is a two-way street. It requires a little give and take from everyone involved. Until both sides are willing to acknowledge this and act accordingly, the stalemate in Congress will continue.

Latest articles

Kennedy
DNC Loses Its First Attempt to Kick RFK Jr Off the Ballot
Independent presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr will officially appear on the Hawaii ballot after a ruling Friday blocked an effort by the Democratic Party to disqualify him from ballot access. It marks the first loss by the DNC in its legal strategy to limit voters' choices on the 2024 presidential ballot....
22 April, 2024
-
3 min read
Asa Hutchinson
Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson Declares His Support for Ranked Choice Voting
In a recent episode of The Purple Principle, a podcast that examines democracy and polarization from a nonpartisan lens, former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson said that while he was skeptical of ranked choice voting at first, he now sees it as a meaningful solution to elect candidates with the broadest appeal....
19 April, 2024
-
2 min read
electoral college
How Maine Started a Voter Revolution, And Is Now Going Backwards
Election reformers have looked to Maine for several years now as a pioneer in adopting policy solutions that put voters first in elections. Maine voters have taken it upon themselves to enact better elections – and have won major victories....
17 April, 2024
-
7 min read