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There is no bipartisanship 

 
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Karl Rove and Howard Dean held a “spirited” debate at the University of Colorado at Boulder on Monday night, about an hour’s drive from my office. A beyond-capacity crowd of more than 2,000 attended while another 500 who couldn’t get in reportedly watched a video feed in a nearby auditorium. People were clamoring to see these two heavyweights wage a war of words.

Rove, former senior advisor and chief of staff to President George W. Bush, and Dean, former Vermont governor and Democratic National Committee chairman, apparently hold these debates around the country from time to time, each earning upwards of $25,000 per appearance. This one caught my eye because Rove – sans Dean – will be the keynote speaker at the upcoming Benefits Selling Expo (April 19-21 in Washington D.C.), the annual event sponsored by one of Life Insurance Selling’s sister publications, Benefits Selling.

While the media was not permitted to record Monday night’s debate, reports I heard about it on local television stations and in the newspaper all mentioned that it was, predictably, a highly partisan dialogue where multiple attendees said the partisanship made it “difficult to support either side.”

Rove talks about “mistakes made by President Obama,” including proposed health care reform and increasing the national debt. Dean counters that Obama is trying to fix the previous eight years of “foreign and domestic mess.” Imagine that – a Republican and a Democrat sticking to the blame game, just like we hear relentlessly from Congress.

On the same day as the Rove-Dean debate, Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) announced he was fed up with Congress and would not seek re-election, becoming the latest in a series of senators announcing retirement due to frustration with dysfunction in Congress.

“There is too much partisanship and not enough progress; too much narrow idealogy and not enough practical problem-solving. Even at a time of enormous national challenge, the people’s business is not getting done,” Bayh said during his press conference. Like him or not, it’s hard to disagree with that.

Is he just another Democrat crying that they couldn’t get a health care reform bill passed? Perhaps. But the problem goes much deeper than the health care debacle. Campaign statements notwithstanding, congressional politicians swear by either red or blue – not red, white and blue.


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    • 2/17/2010 3:50:56 PM
    • John Fontenot
    • partisanship
    • The two parties are 180 degrees apart on almost all of our current problems so there cannot be non partisin agreement. You pickum but they are 100% different and may the best win. Most of the economic problems were created by government so now like it or not we get the tea party as it represents a huge amount of folks.
    • 2/17/2010 4:20:05 PM
    • Rodney Cruz
    • bipartisanship is gone for the time being
    • Part of the reason for the partisanship is because of the speed at which information is disseminated. Now each side can mass educate (indoctrinate?) the population, and respond to each other’s attacks and point of views faster. The result is large chunks of the population making their minds, having an opinion, picking a side and sticking with it as each side mass distribute all the talking points that makes it easier to each person to justify his/her opinion.
    • 2/18/2010 8:35:35 AM
    • Stephen Isenhour
    • Partisanship?
    • Disagreement over ideas is not partisanship. Distorting or even making up "facts"; shutting out the other party from participation; blocking the other party's rightful judicial nominations; taking credit for another's success and blaming them for what you had a big hand in messing up - that is partisanship. I long for honest debate - where did we go wrong, where are we missing it now. I'm sick of the hyperbole and hypocritical partisanship.
    • 2/18/2010 12:54:49 PM
    • Murray Seward
    • Opinion on Rove and Dean
    • Both are partisan as can be. Today the country is being run by a party not the people. Will not change for it is the younger generation. The older boys would have a room filled with cigar smoke , no camars or newspeople and cuss each other back and forth but come out with an aggreement. There now is hard to find a person of either party even with greying hair. No MEN left just a buntch of will educated dummies that couldn't fight their way out of a kidneyguarden group. We Marines use to call these peoplesP/s..God Bless America.
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