That quote came to mind when I heard that the House
Republicans had voted to abolish or amend the Affordable Care Act for the 33rd time.
Brainy Quote credits Albert Einstein with saying that.
If their goal was to appeal the Act, then Einstein's words would apply. There was no chance of getting what they passed through the Senate.
But while they may tell us that is their goal, we all know that the intent was probably a combination of other things. If I acted like a House Republican, I'd try, with a straight face, to pin that quote on the House Republicans. But I don't and I won't.
First, just because Einstein said it, doesn't make it true. And if it is true, we don't know what results they are expecting. Clearly, they know their bill won't pass the Senate.
Presumably they are expecting other results, results they've gotten in the past over this. They want to force some Democrats to vote 'no' so they can use that vote to campaign against them. And they want to force some Democrats to vote 'yes' so they can embarrass Obama and make claims for bi-partisan support. They want television attention on their anti-health care sound bites.
And I suspect that like abortion and gay issues for some preachers, this is a topic that bumps up contributions among the rabidly anti-ACA.
But they took up two days in the House for this gimmick. These are folks who complain loudly about the cost of government. But they spent two days on what appears to be a PR campaign instead of solving the problems facing the US. But then, their goal has been to do everything to obstruct solutions - because they don't want anything good to happen on Obama's watch.
A
Rollcall article last November calculated that it costs the taxpayers "roughly $592,000 per legislative day on
Members’ salaries." Just counting member salaries and nothing else, their PR campaign has cost US taxpayers almost $1.2 million. If we we give them a break on their first two attempts on repeal ACA, that leaves 30 more times they spent time on this. I don't know how many hours the other debates took, but it does raise questions about how serious they are about saving taxpayer money.
Of course, I'm taking a certain amount of license here too. After all, I suspect that most of the Congress members were not on the floor of Congress most of those two days. (Steve, you say, why do you keep poking holes in your argument? Because this blog is about 'how we know what we know' and I'm simply using my own argument to demonstrate what every citizen should be doing with everything they hear from politicians, corporate spokespersons, marketing in all its forms, and your religious leaders, and teachers. I'm not saying reject what they say, just keep raising questions until they prove it.)
Besides, when those Congress members weren't on the floor,
they were probably on the phone calling donors to raise money for their reelections.
[UPDATE Friday 13, Turns out that an hour after I posted this,
Huffington Post had something up about a
story on the cost of the Republican ACA repeal on CBS that is dated four hours earlier than mine. CBS, using a Congressional Budget Office estimate of $24 million a week to run the House, said the cost of the repeal votes was just under $50 million. That's a lot more than my estimate, which only included representatives' salaries, and it didn't factor in the issues I raised, such as most representatives probably were doing other things most of those days anyway. I'm not making light of this as a waste of time and money, but I am trying to focus on the simplistic reporting of such things.]