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Obama heads to Capitol Hill, where everything is uphill now

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Today, interest groups are watching every move. The conservative Club for Growth recently released a list of “liberal Republicans” it will oppose in primaries.

In the Senate, Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky already has been battered by both sides. A conservative group labels him an Obama ally, while gun-control interests are on the air charging that he “opposes common-sense reforms.”

2. Lawmakers don’t see compelling reasons to make tough decisions.

When the Great Recession hit in 2007, the blame went to the financial industry and the housing market, not the nation’s fiscal mess.

While there’s a fresh series of calamitous predictions about the eventual impact of the nation’s $16.5 trillion debt, many politicians don’t see much political harm in lurching from crisis to crisis. Voters didn’t punish incumbents much last year, a Pew poll last month found that 59 percent thought the recent automatic spending cuts would have no effect or only a minor effect on their personal finances, and the economy is growing.

3. A lot of Republicans don’t trust the White House.

Granted, some were swept into office as rock-solid conservatives determined to pare the size of government and instinctively opposed to anything Obama likes, but another bloc, the kind whom presidents come to know well, are what Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Ohio, calls “governing Republicans.”

Those Republicans helped Obama win big recent fiscal votes. In January, 85 House Republicans voted for the deal to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff and raise taxes on the wealthy, while 151 voted no.

Tiberi had committed to voting for the deal, even though it meant higher taxes. Then he saw Obama go on national television, surrounded by supporters, insisting that “revenues have to be part of the equation in turning off the sequester” in a few months.

“He lost a lot of credibility with the Republican governing class,” Tiberi said.

4. People don’t know each other anymore.

Lawmakers used to stay in Washington for weeks and months at a time. Today, the congressional workweek is usually 72 hours and most lawmakers go home on the weekends.

That means people often know each other largely by name, title — and reputation. It means that even in something simple, such as a quick CNN interview, they fight. One day last month, Reps. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., and Trey Radel, R-Fla., stood together to discuss the budget.

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