Obamacare obstructionism was obstruction that communicated (mostly) falsehoods. The 'reward', if you believe that the democratic platform is better policy-wise to the republican / Turmp platform, is that by obstructing you both limit the power of the majority to implement bad policy and limit the amount of time that they have to do it (because you shorten the legislative clock and because you win elections sooner that way).Kurth wrote:Except . . . "Grouch" Gorsuch isn't controversial or outside the mainstream. It's obstruction that's communicating a falsehood. How does that really "reward" anyone? If that's the goal, what's the point?El Guapo wrote:Yelling about Gorsuch being outside the mainstream (and other things), holding a filibuster (and forcing McConnell to kill it) and then having Gorsuch confirmed on a mostly party-line vote communicates to people that Gorsuch is controversial, outside the mainstream, etc. If he's confirmed 80 - 20 people get the message "ok this guy is probably pretty reasonable". Not to mention that each instance of obstructionism contributes to running out the legislative clock. This is what I mean when I say that our system rewards obstructionism in and of itself.
To take an extreme example, Republicans couldn't stop Obamacare from being passed, but you better believe their obstructionism was worthwhile.
Unfortunately this is the reality of the system that we have at this point. Democrats can also choose to take a more high-minded / noble approach to this, but all the evidence of the past decade suggests that they'll be punished, not rewarded, for it (and again, if you believe that democratic policy is better, the country will similarly suffer for it).