If Mitt Romney is victorious, it will be payback time for the Democrats when his appointments and agenda go to Capitol Hill.
By DOUGLAS BLOOMFIELD
Chances for the partisan gridlock in Washington to get even worse next year improved last week with the victory in Texas of the Tea Party-backed candidate for the Republican Senate nomination.Ted Cruz, heavily favored in November to win the seat being vacated by Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, said he isn’t going to Washington to compromise with the Democrats. That synchs with Indiana GOP Senate candidate Richard Mourdock, who declared his approach will be “confrontation” and not “working with the other side,” and bipartisanship means Democrats must support Republican measures.That is the theme of the Tea Party movement, whose unofficial leader in the Senate is Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina. He expects Cruz to strengthen hardline conservative ranks in the Republican caucus when he joins like-minded senators Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Marco Rubio of Florida.At least a third of the GOP candidates in 18 contested Senate races this year have Tea Party backing, which was instrumental in giving Republicans control of the House two years ago, driving it even farther to the right.As their ranks grow it is possible Tea Partiers will challenge Sen. Mitch McConnell for leadership, either directly by taking away his job or, as they did to Speaker John Boehner in the House, by forcing him to follow their lead.The 112th Congress, currently on an extended recess to campaign for an undeserved reelection, has been one of the most unproductive in history thanks to a Republican party that puts extremist ideology ahead of the national interest and a confused, ineffective Democratic caucus.GRIDLOCK HAS been exacerbated by a Democratic president reluctant to use his vaunted skills as a communicator and the power of his bully pulpit to effectively advocate for traditional Democratic positions.A freshman Republican Congressman, Richard Hanna of New York, last week excoriated his colleagues as “incapable of governing” and said Democrats have “less anger” than Republicans toward the other side, Politico reported.“We render ourselves incapable of governing when all we do is take severe sides. I have to say that I’m frustrated by how much we – I mean the Republican Party – are willing to give deferential treatment to our extremes in this moment in history,” he told the Syracuse Post-Standard editorial board.Five-term Ohio Republican Steve LaTourette, one of the vanishing breed of moderate Republicans, unexpectedly announced his retirement last week, blaming “the current” climate of deadlock and rancor in Washington.