First let me just say that I am not really picking on Rep. Boehner so much individually, as I am picking on both him and his GOP cohorts, collectively. That is to say that President Obama will be re-elected to a second term in 2012 because… well, because he’ll be running unopposed… essentially. If you’re someone generally predisposed to vote for the GOP’s candidate, or if you’re just someone who feels major disappointment over what has transpired during Obama’s first term and is therefore ready to jump ship in ‘12, do you not see that as being the case? If not, I would only suggest it’s a case of willful blindness. Obama will win because the guys on the right side of the aisle are no longer a “political party,” in fact, they’re barely an “informal get together.” The GOP has degenerated into a divided-you-fall group of confused ideologues, unsure of what’s right and what is politically expedient. In plain terms, you guys on the right are a mess... an embarrassing mess. Anyone who reads me regularly knows that I have been no fan of the Democrats or the Obama Administration’s attitude, acts or even attempts at solving our nation’s significant economic issues. As administrations go, Obama’s has been anything but transparent, and that alone is offensive enough, but his decision to flat out ignore the housing and mortgage crisis has placed this country in real economic danger going forward, and that is, in my mind unforgivable. And yet, here I sit, prepared to ignore the upcoming political season, at least as far as the contest for president is concerned, because there’s nothing to be gained one way or the other by attending to it. Unless Obama is caught on video wearing his own “blue dress,” he’s our prez for another four. The Debt Ceiling Debacle… Watching the debate over the debt ceiling was emblematic of the situation we face. The whole thing was maddening, there’s no question about that, but beyond that… well, it was stupid. I mean, if Goldman Sachs and Bank of America were “too big to fail” in ’08, then why wouldn’t the United States in its entirety fall under the same sort of policy in 2011? Our banks are too big to be allowed to fail, but our nation’s treasury… nah, let it default? Oh, come on… stop it right now. Speaker Boehner, telling Congress and the American people that he had worked his way into the top spot in the House in order to do more than just go to fancy meals and play golf, leapt into action. I don’t know what it looked like to you, but to me it appeared that he contacted the White House and asked for a tee time. Next thing I knew, Mr. Speaker and the Prez were out on the links hammering out a bi-partisan save-the-world type of deal. And they did… for a few hours, anyway. According to Carl Hulse, whose writing for The New York Times in July, the deal they fleetingly struck was “transformational,” and I think it’s safe to say that right about now, “transformational” would be a good thing. Obama and Boehner’s compromise would have cut our government’s spending by up to $4 trillion over the next 10 years, made significant changes to the tax code, and taken steps toward the shoring up of Medicare and Social Security. Of course, that “bi-partisan compromise” came apart at the seams one Saturday night when Speaker Boehner, citing the White House’s insistence on tax increases, walked away from the deal. Listening to him explain why he was backing out, I could have sworn that I heard beeping in the background. Clearly, the Republicans in the House are never going to be okay with allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire, and it doesn’t matter what that means to the nation in other areas. The tax cuts I’m referring to should be seen as a relatively minor issue… allowing the top bracket to return to paying roughly thirty nine percent instead of thirty five percent, as they did during the Clinton administration would hardly signal the end of the world as we know it… and there’s no question as to whether the rich, and by “rich” I do mean the top one percent… have disproportionately benefited from their largesse. But, to the GOP’s leaders, allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire would drive a stake through the heart of the economic recovery that’s not occurring by not allowing them to expire. If the whole thing makes no sense to you, that’s only because it makes no sense… period. The GOP likes to refer to those that benefit most from the tax cuts as “job creators,” which when you look at the unemployment numbers over the last four years plus, is just laughable. But yet, Speaker Boehner was quite clearly told over that weekend by others in his “party” that he would not be supported as long as the Bush tax cuts were expendable. Clearly… and incredibly… the GOP would rather see anything else get cut, including Medicare. And on the other side of the aisle, the Democrats would rather see the tax cuts expire than anything else. It’s very much as if the unstoppable force has met the immovable object… and we… you and I… are paying the price as our nation continues to circle the drain in a race to the bottom. Republicans viewed Speaker Boehner’s ideas as a harbinger for political disaster. First and foremost, they saw the deal as having the potential to hand the Democrats what could be seen as a major victory by extending the Bush tax cuts ONLY for the middle class. That horrific reality, they believe, would end up costing House Republicans the majority in 2012 by throwing out the tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans. And to that I can only say, shut up, shut up, shut up. Look, I’ve been an “employer” for some 20 years, and I’d just like to assure everyone that breaking the collective back of our nation’s middle class is precisely what is stopping America’s employers from spending the massive amounts of cash in their coffers on plans to expand and grow. I don’t care what you do about corporate taxes, Best Buy isn’t expanding until America’s middle class can afford to shop there again. Capisce? Speaker Boehner must know this to be the case as well, after all, it’s not exactly a sophisticated concept, but his party’s unity on this and other issues is akin to shattered crystal being held together with superglue. The Republicans, if there even is such a thing as “the Republicans,” and I would argue there is not, have made it clear that they will do anything to maintain the status quo for big business, too-big-to-fail bankers and the wealthiest Americans. Now there’s a platform I’m sure will do very well in 2012… not. What we should all have learned from watching the debt ceiling debates and our House Speaker run from a deal of his own making, is that we need politicians willing to take political chances, and in that regard we are woefully lacking. Mr. Boehner is but one example of where we’re coming up short, but if we the people don’t start speaking out soon, demanding that decisions be made in our country’s interest and not to appease the banking class, the price we will be forced to pay will exceed our available balance. And so I give you this month’s rear… House Speaker John Boehner… and our next President of the United States, Barack Obama. Martin Andelman is a staff writer for The Niche Report. He also writes an almost daily column on ML-Implode called Mandelman Matters. He also publishes a Monthly Museletter and you can follow “Mandelman” on Twitter. Send your responses to [email protected].