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How the Corporate Lobbyist party cost the Government $10 Billion - Time magazine

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JohnWxy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-04-10 06:48 PM
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How the Corporate Lobbyist party cost the Government $10 Billion - Time magazine
Edited on Thu Mar-04-10 06:49 PM by JohnWxy
During the Clinton administration the REpublicans drqamtically increassed the use of the filibuster but, as this article points out, this was just the warm-up for the Obama administration. But one thing that is truly incredible is this little gem mentioned in the article:


"In one case, GOP Senators successfully filibustered changes to a 122-year-old mining act, thus forcing the government to sell roughly $10 billion worth of gold rights to a Canadian company for less than $10,000. In another, Republicans filibustered legislation that would have applied employment laws to members of Congress — a reform they had loudly demanded."


This is a GREAT article by Peter Beinart about how the Republicans are using the filibuster to derail any and all progress toward solutions while campaigning against incompetent 'can'- get-anything-done' 'big' Government. Of course, the Corporate (tv) M$M is helping this con by not talking about what the GOP is doing or that they are using the threat of filibuster so much more than it has ever been used (mostly by them) before.

Why Washington's Tied up in Knots - Beinart, Time Magazine


In the Clinton years, Senate Republicans began a kind of permanent filibuster. "Whereas the filibusters of the past were mainly the weapon of last resort," scholars Catherine Fisk and Erwin Chemerinsky noted in 1997, "now filibusters are a part of daily life." For a while, the remaining GOP moderates cried foul and joined with Democrats to break filibusters on things like campaign finance and voter registration. But in doing so, the moderates helped doom themselves. After moderates broke a 1993 filibuster on campaign finance, GOP conservatives publicly accused them of "stabbing us in the back." Their pictures were taken off the wall at the offices of the Republican Senate campaign committee. "What do these so-called moderates have in common?" conservative bigwig Grover Norquist would later declare. "They're 70 years old. They're not running again. They're gonna be dead soon. So while they're annoying, within the Republican Party our problems are dying."

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The Endless Filibuster

All this, it turns out, was a mere warm-up for the Obama years. On the surface, it appeared that Obama took office in a stronger position than Clinton had, since Democrats boasted more seats in the Senate. But in their jubilation, Democrats forgot something crucial: vicious-circle politics thrives on polarization. As the GOP caucus in the Senate shrank, it also hardened. Early on, the White House managed to persuade three Republicans to break a filibuster of its stimulus plan. But one of those Republicans, Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter — under assault for his vote and facing a right-wing primary challenge — switched parties. That meant that of the six Senate Republicans with the most moderate voting records in 2007, only two were still in the Senate, and in the party, by '09. The Wednesday lunch club had ceased to exist. And the fewer Republican moderates there were, the more dangerous it was for any of them to cut deals across the aisle.




In 2009, Senate Republicans filibustered a stunning 80% of major legislation, even more than during the Clinton years. GOP leader Mitch McConnell led a filibuster of a deficit-reduction commission that he himself had demanded. The Obama White House spent months trying to lure the Finance Committee's ranking Republican, Chuck Grassley, into supporting a deal on health care reform and gave his staff a major role in crafting the bill. But GOP officials back home began threatening to run a primary challenger against the Iowa Senator. By late summer, Grassley wasn't just inching away from reform; he was implying that Obamacare would euthanize Grandma.

By October, the process had dragged on for the better part of a year, and the public mood had grown bitter. According to an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, the percentage of Americans who said Obama had done a "very good" job of "achieving his goals" was less than half the level of January 2009, and significantly fewer people believed he was successfully "changing business as usual in Washington."


( Portions of this article (with reference to source, Time magazine, with date) ought to end up by the 'water cooler' in offices accross the country.)

http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1964778-2,00.html




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