Gulf Today

Manchin is flexing his senatorial muscles. But why?

While the left wing of the party is asking who he thinks made him president and vowing revenge, veterans of the upper chamber aren’t so surprised by the Democratic Senator’s announceme­nt that he won’t vote to confirm Neera Tanden

- Andrew Feinberg,

Approximat­ely 388 times more Americans voted for Joe Biden to become the nation’s 46th chief executive than voted to send West Virginia’s Joe Manchin to Washington for a second full term representi­ng the Mountain State in the Senate.

But with the Senate split 50-50, Manchin is flexing his senatorial muscles by refusing to confirm one of Biden’s key cabinet picks. And while the let wing of his party is asking who he thinks made him president and vowing revenge, veterans of the upper chamber say his most recent break with a president of his own party isn’t going to hurt him politicall­y or harm Democrats’ legislativ­e agenda in the long run.

To many educated observers, Manchin’s announceme­nt that he would not vote to confirm Center for American Progress president Neera Tanden to lead the White House Office of Management and Budget wasn’t exactly a surprise.

A veteran of the Clinton and Obama administra­tions, the very mention of Tanden’s name has reliably drawn scorn from Republican­s — who detest her for her ties to Hillary Clinton and her work drating the Affordable Care Act — as well the Bernie Sanders-backing letist wing of her own party, who have long derided her and the think tank she leads as avatars of the most dreaded flavors of triangulat­ion-happy, corporate-friendly Clintonian neoliberal­ism.

But what doomed Tanden’s nomination in Manchin’s eyes was her extremely online, prolifical­ly combative Twiter persona. Many of her since-deleted tweets — some atacking prominent Republican­s; some atacking Sanders, who presided over her confirmati­on hearing — were picked over at her confirmati­on hearing, during which Republican­s used her nomination to question Biden’s commitment to “unity”.

In a statement, he explained that Tanden’s “overtly partisan statements will have a toxic and detrimenta­l impact on the important working relationsh­ip between members of Congress and the next director of the Office of Management and Budget,” and he could not therefore vote to confirm her.

Manchin’s announceme­nt threw off what has been a plodding yet smooth path for most of Biden’s cabinet nominees. Although his predecesso­r’s refusal to engage with the Biden transition and Republican­s’ failure to confirm any of his nominees before he was sworn in made him the first president in recent memory to not have any cabinet members in place upon taking office, most of his picks have received bipartisan support.

Some progressiv­es — including New York Representa­tive Alexandria Ocasio-cortez — responded to reports that he would also oppose the nomination of Representa­tive Deb Haaland to become the first Native American to serve as Secretary of the Interior by accusing him of misogyny (he announced that he would vote to confirm her on Wednesday.) Meanwhile, Congressio­nal Asian Pacific American Caucus Chair Rep. Judy Chu toldpoliti­co that “there’s a double standard going on” because Manchin voted to confirm Trump nominees in the past who’d made even more caustic remarks.

One aide to a prominent Senate Democrat expressed fears that Manchin’s intransige­nce on the Tanden mater is a harbinger of things to come, citing his opposition to ending the legislativ­e filibuster or manipulati­ng the Byrd Rule to get non-germane provisions into the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Package.

“Who knew that those Georgia voters who voted for a Democratic White House and a Democratic Senate were actually puting Joe Manchin in charge of both?” they said. Manchin’s opposition to ending the legislativ­e filibuster could kill any hope of passing voting rights legislatio­n, they added. That’s important because such voting rights legislatio­n was designed to preclude Republican atempts to restrict voting that experts say would doom Democrats’ hopes of ever holding a majority in Congress ater the 2022 midterms.

But Jim Manley, a former top aide to exSenate Majority Leader Harry Reid, said it’s far more likely that Manchin is playing a longer, smarter game by opposing Biden’s budget office pick. Doing so, he said, lets Manchin demonstrat­e his independen­ce and put up a show of force he can later use to run for re-election in a state that is used to having extremely powerful senators.

“If he wants to burnish his credential­s by taking her down, that’s his right,” Manley explained. He did caution, however, that Manchin’s independen­t streak could come back to bite him if he overreache­s by opposing too many Biden nominees or policy proposals, particular­ly when it comes to his ability to secure funding for West Virginia projects in a green energyheav­y infrastruc­ture package.

While progressiv­e groups might excoriate the onetime-west Virginia University football recruit and former governor over his periodic defections from the Democratic Party line, Manley predicted that none of them will land a glove on him.

“He’s prety good at engaging in jujitsu against these kind of atacks from the let, so he won’t be bothered at all by what’s coming,” Manley said. “In fact, he’ll relish it as part of his ability to sell to the folks in his home state that he’s there trying to get things done and not get caught up in partisansh­ip.”

Another Democrat whose Senate votes oten gave the party’s letward reaches more than a litle bit of agita, former North Dakota Senator Heidi Heitkamp, said it is far more likely that Manchin’s reasons for opposing Tanden are an indicator of his desire to pass big-ticket legislatio­n, not a sign of future opposition.

“I think this, for Joe, is listening to his Republican colleagues that he wants to work with on the other side, saying: ‘Look, you know, we’ve got to be working with people who respect us,’” she said. “At the end of the line, this was more about reflecting his interest in working in a bipartisan way with his Republican colleagues who believe that this was disrespecf­ul behaviour.”

Heitkamp is a moderate Democrat who was part of a previous incarnatio­n of the bipartisan “common sense coalition” that arose during a 2013 government shutdown brought on by hard-line GOP opposition to the Affordable Care Act. She acknowledg­ed that the mater of whether Democrats will support Biden’s nominees is “significan­t” because the president “needs to have [his] team with him.” But at the same time, she lamented the outsized atention such maters receive from the press and progressiv­e activists and said more atention should be given to what unites moderates who might break with the liberal wing of the party such as herself and Manchin, and progressiv­es such as Sanders and Massachuse­ts’ Elizabeth Warren.

“We may not always agree on how you get there, but the concern for income inequality and for the fact that so many people are geting let behind in this economy are exactly what people like Joe and I say when people ask us why we are Democrats,” she said. “Because we believe in investing in people.”

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Joe Manchin during Debra Haaland’s confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources at the US Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
Agence France-presse Joe Manchin during Debra Haaland’s confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources at the US Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.

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