Spending bill fallout: Elizabeth Warren now Ted Cruz of the left?
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| Washington
Is Elizabeth Warren the Ted Cruz of the left? That鈥檚 Friday鈥檚 soup du jour of Washington punditry. It鈥檚 a tasty subject, too, as Senator Warren (D) of Massachusetts does seem to be using tactics employed by Senator Cruz (R) of Texas in his (successful) effort to shut down the government last year.
Let鈥檚 run through the similarities. Warren, like Cruz, opposes a big spending bill on a point of principle. In her case, it鈥檚 a provision that loosens trading restrictions on big banks. In his case, it was continued funding for the Affordable Care Act, aka 鈥淥bamacare.鈥
Warren, like Cruz, has meddled with House politics by urging lawmakers from her party to reject said legislation. That made House passage of the bill much more dramatic than chamber leaders had predicted.
Warren, like Cruz, defied her party鈥檚 top elected official with her opposition. (President Obama had to call around Thursday night to whip up support for the bill in question, the so-called cromnibus 鈥 a hybrid term referring to both "continuing resolution" and "omnibus" spending bill.)
Most importantly, Warren thrilled the leftward edge of the Democratic Party by speaking out as she did. That鈥檚 reminiscent of last year, when Cruz solidified his standing as the hero of the right by mounting a doomed filibuster against continued Obamacare funding.
Warren/Cruz 2016! Or the other way round, Cruz/Warren. It鈥檚 the partisan wings against the middle ground.
鈥GOP House member: 鈥楨lizabeth Warren clearly now a Democratic Ted Cruz. She has set off a stampede among Dems,鈥 鈥 of CNBC and The New York Times last night.
Ah, comparisons! They鈥檙e all invidious, amiright? This one鈥檚 got some Democratic top knots in a twist, given the left鈥檚 distaste for Cruz.
So we鈥檒l point out some of the ways this match-up doesn鈥檛 really hold.
First, Warren鈥檚 not really a Cruz-level rogue. She鈥檚 worked within the party leadership to get where she is today 鈥 which is in the Senate party leadership, as a strategic advisor.
It鈥檚 true she bucked President Obama when she spoke about the CRomnibus. But House minority leader Nancy Pelosi opposed the bill too. (Of course, if Representative Pelosi had really, truly wanted the bill defeated, it would have been. But that鈥檚 another story.)
Second, Warren shows no signs of going as far as Cruz did last year. Cruz angered Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell by mounting an effort in the Senate to stop the bill鈥檚 passage. The resultant government shutdown got laid at the GOP鈥檚 door.
Will Warren filibuster the "cromnibus?" Stay tuned.
Finally, Warren鈥檚 presidential plans aren鈥檛 as advanced as Cruz鈥檚. She keeps saying she won鈥檛 run in 2016, though liberals keep begging her to oppose Hillary Rodham Clinton. Meanwhile, Cruz is running now. He may decide he can鈥檛 win, and stop. But, at the moment, he鈥檚 pretty much a declared non-declared White House hopeful.
In the end the most important takeaway here may be about parties, not individuals. What this shows is that both Democrats and Republicans have a restive faction that considers party leaders sell-outs and is willing to risk a government shut-down to make its point.
Progressives, meet the tea party. In some ways the US political spectrum is a curve, not a straight line. You can travel so far right you become left. And vice versa.