The Daily Escape:
Frozen waterfall, Westcave Preserve, near Austin TX â taken last week during the Texas cold snap. Photo by BusyRunninErins
Neera Tandenâs nomination to serve as Bidenâs director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), appears to be on life support. There is growing concern that she may not be confirmed by the Senate.
It seems that Senators object to her history of mean tweets, many of which have been directed at a few Senators whose support she needs. So far, Joe Manchin (D-WVA), Susan Collins (R-ME), and Mitt Romney(R-UT) have announced their opposition to Tanden.
Without Manchin, Tanden will need to not only hold onto all other Democrats, but also pick off one of the two Republicans who havenât announced how theyâll vote: Lisa Murkowski or Shelley Moore Capito.
According to Politico, Tanden has tweeted over 88,000 times in the decade since she joined Twitter. Thatâs about 30,000 more than Trump has tweeted over a slightly longer time span. Over the years she has gotten into Twitter fights with many on the political scene. Sheâs been very anti-Republican. But the question is whether her tweets should be a barrier to public service.
Much, but not all the opposition to Tandenâs nomination is coming from Republicans. itâs certainly hypocritical of any Republican Senator who stood by Trump despite his daily Twitter outrages, to raise these objections to Tanden â the double standard is obvious.
Sens. Susan Collins and Mitt Romney announced Monday they would oppose Tanden. Said Collins:
âHer past actions have demonstrated exactly the kind of animosity that President Biden has pledged to transcend…â
Itâs notable that Tanden in the past called Collins âthe worstâ.
Still, Democrats control the Senate, and thereâs no reason why Manchin, for instance, needs to stand up for his Republican colleaguesâ honor by rejecting a Democratic cabinet nominee. But he did:
âI believe her overtly partisan statements will have a toxic and detrimental impact on the important working relationship between members of Congress and the next director of the Office of Management and Budget….â
This is despite Manchinâs previously voting for polarizing Trump nominees. He voted to confirm Richard Grenell to the post of US ambassador to Germany, despite his toxic partisan tweets. Manchin also voted to confirm Jeff Sessions as AG, when Sessionsâ racist past was well-known. He voted to confirm Bill Barr as AG and Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.
As Wrongo wrote yesterday, Congressional Democrats under-performed in the 2020 elections. Now, in a 50-50 Senate, Manchin is a pivotal vote and has real power. Heâs in a position along with other moderate Democrats Kyrsten Sinema (AZ) and Jon Tester (MT) to set the terms of the Democratic Partyâs agenda.
At 73, many think that Manchin wonât run again in 2024. Since heâs in control of West Virginiaâs Democratic political establishment, he doesnât need to bend to pressure from inside or outside West Virginia. So, why wonât he get on board with Biden?
While Democrats can get angry at Republicans, they seem to keep a supply of outrage on hand for their fellow Democrats. They have low expectations for Republicans, but they demand better of Democrats. But after four years of Trump, the double standard over Tandenâs nomination to lead President Joe Bidenâs OMB is beyond ridiculous for Manchin, and even more so for Republicans.
The Right-wing wonât let go of Manchin easily, because they think heâs a rollable Senator.
Heâs facing heat from Americans for Prosperity, a Koch-backed group. Theyâre launching a six-figure mail, radio and digital ad campaign to have him oppose President Joe Bidenâs $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package.
Republicans have returned to their old argument from the 2020 election, that Biden is a âradical.â
They say Bidenâs foreign policy is âradical.â That his immigration policy is âradical.â That Bidenâs climate change policy is âradical.â
They say that Bidenâs nominees are âradical.â His Covid relief bill is a âpayback to the radical left.â That Biden is the âmost radical left wing president in history.â
But most Americans donât see Biden that way.
They may not particularly like him or his policies, but the âradicalâ tag just hasnât stuck. It didnât work during the campaign; it hasnât worked during his first month in office. Biden just doesnât give off a radical vibe.
There may be things to criticize Biden for, but yelling âradicalâ at every turn isnât going to work.
And Manchin ought to listen up: Biden should get the cabinet nominees that he wants, even if some of them tweet mean things at Republicans.