In theory, when an administration is facing a series of controversies, the political fallout carries consequences — a president’s policy agenda, for example, can be derailed by scandals as the media shifts its attention, allies put some distance between themselves and the administration, and foes push policy proposals to the backburner to make room for hearings and investigations.
The ongoing uproar surrounding the Obama administration, however, is a little different. For one thing, Congress was already largely ignoring President Obama’s proposals, and it’s a short walk from being indifferent towards an agenda to ignoring it altogether. For another, for all the talk about a White House “in crisis,” none of the current controversies seem to directly relate to President Obama or anyone else in the White House.
And so, though much of the political world seems to have its hair on fire, things really aren’t that different than they were a week ago (or a month ago, or two months ago).
As she headed into meetings on Tuesday, Maine Sen. Susan Collins was talking to reporters about the possibility of a grand bargain on entitlement spending, something to replace sequestration cuts. I asked whether the new scandals would up-end that.
“I do not believe that the IRS scandal,” said Collins, “serious and troubling though it is, will forestall negotiations on the budget and immigration and other issues.”
Roll Call added that the recent uproar “could have many consequences for a White House on the defensive — but imperiling a comprehensive immigration overhaul likely isn’t one of them.” BuzzFeed reported that immigration reform is probably even more likely now since opponents are focused on perceived scandals, not destroying the legislation.









