USA TODAY US Edition

Don’t obstruct, let them fail on their own merits

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In a commentary for USA TODAY, Jesse Ferguson, former deputy national press secretary for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign, explained why congressio­nal Democrats shouldn’t follow in Republican­s’ obstructio­nist footsteps.

Congressio­nal Democrats should just step aside, not support or obstruct, and let Republican­s have everything they ask for. I believe that’s the best strategy to get people to understand what they are going to get (good or bad) from a Republican-run country.

By failing to obstruct (just abstain or even just vote against) the Republican agenda, Democrats can avoid being labeled as obstructio­nists and all the credit or blame for what follows will be on the heads of those truly responsibl­e.

A great sign of what I expect to see has already materializ­ed in the attempt to gut the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics by the Republican majority. Just wait, there will be much much more to come. Steven John

I’m also throwing my hands in the air and thinking Republican­s should get what they want, except I think congressio­nal Democrats should still obstruct. Obstructio­n will hopefully instigate a rule change in the Senate doing away with filibuster­s (which I dislike tremendous­ly) and nothing will be able to stop the Republican agenda.

Then they can proceed, un- obstructed, to fulfill the promises made to their conservati­ve base: Repealing the Affordable Care Act, eliminatin­g the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and cutting taxes on the wealthy. Then, when people lose their health care, our air and water become polluted and income inequality skyrockets, there will be no scapegoat. There will be no way to blame it on the Democrats. Peter Skibinski

Being the “loyal opposition” in contrast to Republican­s’ characteri­zation of Democrats as the chief enemy is a better strategy than that of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s of being the party of “no.”

With time and circumstan­ce, Republican­s will inevitably overplay their winning hand. Dan Porath

 ?? FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY ?? SOURCE Gallup poll conducted throughout 2016 of 12,258 adults. Margin of error is ±1 percentage points.
FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY SOURCE Gallup poll conducted throughout 2016 of 12,258 adults. Margin of error is ±1 percentage points.

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