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Congress seeks clarity from November election for agenda

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The difficulty for lawmakers is the presidential election of 2008 and the congressional contests of 2010 contradicted each other.

“The electorate has sent us, has sent the country two very different messages over the last two elections,” said freshman Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C. “They elected the most liberal president in a long time and then the most conservative group to the House of Representatives two years later. That is the conflicting message.”

The upcoming election — “You sort of look at this as the tiebreaker. I have no difficulty with the big issues of the day being solved at the ballot box,” Mulvaney said.

Voters on Nov. 6 will chose a president and decide control of the House and Senate. Republicans say a Romney victory, an increase in their House majority and a majority in the Senate would be a mandate to begin making the changes embodied by the budget of Romney’s running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, in their postelection session.

Ryan’s spending blueprint remakes Medicare, reduces personal and corporate taxes, targets spending on safety-net programs for the poor and drives down the deficit to a manageable level. Republicans insist it is the only way to get a country deep in debt back on track.

The election choice, says freshman Rep. Allen West, R-Fla., is a “huge philosophical difference. It is based upon will America be a constitutional republic or will it be a socialist, egalitarian, welfare nanny state. I think the choice is pretty simple.”

If the election restores the status quo – an Obama win, a Democratic Senate and a Republican House – Democrats are optimistic that the GOP would be more willing to compromise, with establishment Republicans prevailing over the wishes of their tea party brethren.

“We shouldn’t have to wait for an election for the two sides to come together,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “But for the Republicans, it just might do the trick.”

Even the most hidebound lawmaker wouldn’t want the alternative, said Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt.

“Do people want to slog through four more years of dysfunction?” Welch asked. “I think even members of Congress have their limits.”


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