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Tipsheet

Delicious: AOC Gets Owned on Filibuster Hypocrisy

AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

As Matt covered over the weekend, former Democratic Senator Kyrsten Sinema teed off on many of her former colleagues, and deservedly so.  She was one of a tiny handful of Senate Democrats who were willing to save the filibuster when her party held the upper chamber majority, arguing that it would be short-sighted to jettison a tool that Democrats would inevitably want to use again in the future.  They dragged her, hard, and ultimately drove her out of the party.  In fact, the two Senate Democrats who most publicly held the line on maintaining that key leverage point for the minority -- Sinema and Joe Manchin -- are both out of Congress.  Sinema made the argument at the time that even if she supported some of the agenda items Democrats wanted to pass by eliminating the filibuster, they'd come to regret doing so as soon as they were back in the minority.  This was obviously true and a sound argument, but it largely fell on deaf ears.  She was treated like a pariah and a traitor.  

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But, guess what?  She was correct, and her vindication didn't take very long to materialize. Now that Democrats have been relegated back to minority status, their enthusiasm for the filibuster has returned.  No longer is it a racist 'Jim Crow' relic, you see.  It's once again an essential mechanism to 'save democracy,' or however Democrats try frame their current priorities.  Sinema made sure the Democrats who'd savaged her on this front just a few short years ago heard about it.  One of them, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, tried to claim that she's always been consistent in opposing the filibuster, arguing that Democrats don't use the tool.  Not only was AOC loudly demanding that Senate Democrats filibuster the Trump-backed Continuing Resolution last week (this gambit ultimately failed), Democrats have undeniably exploited the filibuster -- sometimes promiscuously -- to block Republican-supported bills.  Her tantrums are both incoherent and fact-challenged.  Who's surprised?

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Sinema didn't let this one slide, either:


She's got these shameless hypocrites dead to rights, and she deserves to take this victory lap.  Democrats are adrift, engaged in venomous infighting, as they seek some path to effective opposition.  Some want full-throated, deranged "resistance." Others want a different approach.  "Everyone is mad at everyone."  Even as Donald Trump's approval rating slides across various aggregators, his troubles (some of which people see as self-inflicted) pale in comparison to, well, this:

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Some of this is attributable to Democratic voters being livid with their own party, believing they're ineffective, or not fighting hard enough.  But a lot of it is an overall electorate that sees an extreme, shambolic, petulant, obnoxious political party that has lost the plot.  Are Democrats on a path to restoring trust and coming across as more sensible and aligned with America's values?  It does not appear so:

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If voters don't think economic conditions have improved markedly -- or have even deteriorated -- in the coming few years, Democrats will bounce back politically, by default.  But right now, the opposition party looks like a motley crew of angry lunatics, and voters are justifiably repulsed by what they see.

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