As Grover Norquist watches his “Taxpayer Protection Pledge” abandoned by Republicans who swore never to raise taxes, he’s resorted to using incendiary language to keep himself in the spotlight (if no longer relevant or powerful). Norquist was on C-SPAN on Thursday morning with the Washington Journal, and discussed the ongoing fiscal cliff negotiations.
“We got lots of things Obama claims to be for, and we will make–we, the Republicans in the House and Senate–will make him actually make those spending restraints, in order to get the continuing resolution out a week, two weeks, a month. Obama will be on a very short leash, fiscally speaking, over the next four years. He’s not gonna have any fun at all. He may decide to go blow up small countries he can’t pronounce because it won’t be any fun to be here, because he won’t be able to spend the kind of cash he was hoping to.”
msnbc’s Lawrence O’Donnell immediately noticed that “a very short leash” is an uncommon phrase in this kind of situation.
“I don’t want to think that Grover deliberately used that phrase to create the imagery of Barack Obama as a dog or a slave. But Grover specializes in deliberately vicious hate speech. Hate speech against anyone who takes a reasonable approach to financing the federal government, and so I’m sorry to say Grover is not above suspicion on that phrase about the short leash.”
O’Donnell also responded to Norquist’s line about “countries [Obama] can’t pronounce” in his rewrite Thursday night.









