January’s
congressional game-playing resulted in a brief government shutdown followed by
an extension of funding only to February 8th. A second shutdown was
averted at the last minute and now the U. S. is facing a March 23rd
deadline. Here we go again.
As
usual, it starts out with a game of “chicken” with each party daring the other
to pull the plug on government financing. Usually one party blinks before the
deadline and the money issue is resolved. This time, however, the only thing
clear is that all sides will be playing even more games. Games like:
Pin
the blame on the Democrats (Republicans)
This one’s a favorite game at and for
parties, in this case the Democrats and the Republicans. Watch as leaders like
Mitch McConnell, Paul Ryan and Chuck Schumer try to recast this whole mess and
blame it on each other.
Broken
telephone
The Republican Congressional leadership
and selected Cabinet members are lined up in a room with President Trump. One
leader whispers a legislative solution to another leader who then passes it on
to one or more Cabinet members and the White House Chief of Staff. It finally
reaches the ear of the President who manages to completely misunderstand the
original solution.
Spin
the media
Members of both parties sit in a circle
with assorted media reporters and take turns spinning tales of how theirs is
the best funding plan. A party member may select one of the reporters to join
him in a separate room for “seven minutes of hell” followed by a rowdy session
of “fake news.”
Twenty
questions
Traditionally a game requiring creativity
and deductive reasoning, “twenty questions” as played by politicians is a whole
different animal particularly when the person answering the questions doesn’t
know the rules of the game. That person is President Trump who often forgets
that you’re not supposed to lie.
Musical
seats
Patterned on the old game of musical
chairs, “musical seats” includes the entire Congressional membership circling
their assigned seats until the music stops. Depending on an incumbent’s
electoral chances this coming November, he may withdraw from his seat and join
the likes of Bob Corker and Jeff Flake on the sidelines.
Donald
says
This modern version of the children’s game
“Simon says” has legislators from both sides trying to reach a bipartisan goal
by taking cooperative steps. The problem is that they can only take those steps
if “Donald says” and it turns out he rarely does.
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