Budget wonks everywhere were counting on the select six to pull a grand bargain out of their talks. What happened?
In my experience, gangs don’t do well in the Senate and for a few good reasons:
- 1) They wear the wrong tattoos. Street gangs make sure you know who’s friend and who is foe. Party ties are the only real gang tattoos that matter in the Senate.
- 2) The task is always hard. Independent, bipartisan “gang” agreements are not easy to reach on tough issues.
- 3) The gangs are trying to usurp the legislative process and that creates tension with the real gang leaders who can actually cut deals.
- 4) Gangs are often used for cover — to show bipartisan leanings, without actually acting on them.
Of all these, the key reason the Gang of Six failed is #3. When it comes time to declare whether you are “in or out,” senators go with the biggest gang there is — their party.