Maryland’s slippery ultra-liberal governor, Martin O’Malley, has
a history of making vicious, irresponsible, and inflammatory
statements that only a Democratic politician could get away
with.
A case in point is O’Malley’s nasty attack on Republicans who
dare to insist on fiscal responsibility. From
FoxNews.com:
At this weekend’s meeting of the National Governors Association,
O’Malley has said Republican governors should urge GOP lawmakers to
make a deal with Obama to increase the government’s borrowing limit
before the Aug. 2 deadline when U.S. faces a financial default.
The Republicans seem to be led by uncompromising hard-liners, he
said, singling out House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., for
criticism.
“I think that there is an extreme wing within their party who
have as their primary goal not the jobs recovery, but the defeat of
President Obama in 2012,” O’Malley said in an interview. “They know
that their formulations, their policies of less revenues and less
regulation badly failed our country and plunged us into this
recession. So their only way of evening the playing field is to
keep the president from being successful in the jobs recovery.”
He contended that key Republican members of Congress,
“through their intransigence, cleverly set up a situation for
America’s economy to fail, either by needlessly driving us to
default, or needlessly driving us into massive public sector
layoffs.”
“I think that they are disgracefully cynical,” said O’Malley,
who has a prominent profile as head of the Democratic governors’
group. [emphasis added above]
In 2005, O’Malley, at the time mayor of Baltimore, likened President
George W. Bush to bin Laden’s operatives.
Back on September 11, terrorists attacked our metropolitan
cores, two of America’s great cities. They did that because they
knew that was where they could do the most damage and weaken us the
most. Years later, we are given a budget proposal by our commander
in chief, the president of the United States. And with a budget ax,
he is attacking America’s cities. He is attacking our metropolitan
core.
The context here is worth noting. At the time President Bush
was trying to reduce spending by a piddling $2 billion (on
so-called community development programs).
O’Malley, by the way, is just one of the many players in my new
book, Subversion Inc.
(Buy the book at Amazon. Visit
the Subversion Inc. Facebook page. Follow me
on Twitter.)