Kicking Ass: The Democratic Party's Blog

Senate Republicans Vote No on Ethics

Posted by on January 18, 2007 at 12:26 PM

Despite being voted out of power by an American public sick of corruption, the Senate Republicans don't seem to have learned their lesson. Yesterday, they voted against strengthening the body's ethics rules. Yup, the Republicans joined together to vote down being more accountable.

From the Washington Post:

Senate Republicans scuttled broad legislation last night to curtail lobbyists' influence and tighten congressional ethics rules, refusing to let the bill pass without a vote on an unrelated measure...But its [the ethics bill] unexpected collapse last night infuriated Democrats and the government watchdog groups that had been pushing it since the lobbying scandals that rocked the last Congress. Proponents charged that Republicans had used the spending-control measure as a ruse to thwart ethics rules they dared not defeat in a straight vote.

Republicans are becoming a parody of themselves. As Gob used to say on Arrested Development - oh, come on!

Comments (8) «

THEY LISTEN...

January 18, 2007

Seattle, Washington 98103

Dear Olivia:

Thank you for your recent communication. I appreciate the
time you have taken to let me know your opinion. Since
November 7th, the volume of constituent mail I'm receiving has
increased at least tenfold. It's exciting and makes it clear that
Americans expect the new majority in Congress to work hard and
deliver. Unfortunately, it also limits my ability to supply the in-
depth responses I would like to give.

I would encourage you to continue to access my Home
page on the Internet at http://www.house.gov/mcdermott for up-
to-the minute information about issues and what I'm doing to
address them. In addition, the Library of Congress hosts a web site
at http://thomas.loc.gov that is useful to research past and present
federal legislation. It includes records of how Representatives
vote, what bills we sponsor and cosponsor and the entire text of the
Congressional Record.

Again, thank you for contacting me. As your
Representative in Congress, it is critical that I understand the views
of my constituents. I look forward to hearing from you in the
future, and hope that, as things calm down a little, I can return to
providing more detailed responses.

Sincerely,
Jim McDermott
Member of Congress

1
Olivia on January 18, 2007 at 01:18 PM

Just make sure we are keeping track of Republicans' votes, so when next year election comes around, we can remind the voters exactly what the Republicans are made of!!

2
PamB on January 18, 2007 at 03:12 PM

Amen!!! This is especially necessary because if this last election is any indication, the Republicans will conduct another dirty campaign, with lying, harassment of voters, and anything else they can think of to slime their way into power.
The campaign that the Republicans conducted against Tester was the most dirty and underhanded campaign I'd seen, AND TESTER STILL WON!

3
Butte on January 18, 2007 at 04:42 PM

The regressive republicans are CORRUPT!

4
pee-wee on January 18, 2007 at 07:28 PM

Its beyond me how anybody can sleep at night knowing they call themselves a Republican. And how can anyone vote for a Republican. They don't like the poor. They don't like clean air. If your not rich and love war your a stupid liberal. Well, I'm a stupid liberal and proud of it.

5
usahope1 on January 18, 2007 at 07:56 PM

For DEMOCRACY, Primary Elections are of utmost importance

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2007/01/19/EDGC7N75D81.DTL

San Francisco Chronicle - 1/19/07

What They Said, And When They Said It

By David Sirota

In 2005, former U.S. Sen. John Edwards said about his vote for war in Iraq: "I was wrong [and] I take responsibility."

This statement, so simple, has been all too rare from politicians and leading media voices. Instead, as the war rages on -- a war itself originally based on lies -- our political arena still teems with icons more interested in hiding the truth. That's no small matter. As the saying goes, the first step to recovery is admitting the problem. Sadly, though, the flip side is also true -- refusing to admit a problem will perpetuate that problem indefinitely.

President Bush said just two months ago that "we've never been for stay the course." This, when for the last three years he has batted down any questions about his Iraq policy by saying "stay the course."

Similarly, consider U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman (Independent-Conn.). Facing a difficult Democratic primary challenge, Lieberman said of Iraq in July that "the sooner we are out the better," and that, by the end of 2006, he would support efforts to "begin to draw down significant numbers of American troops." He later said that "no one wants to end the war in Iraq more than I do and bring our troops home." But weeks after being re-elected, Lieberman is now leading the charge for military escalation, sending a letter to President Bush last week saying, " strongly encourage you to send additional American troops to Iraq."

Pundits and news analysts are employed to expose this sort of nonsense so that our democratic discourse -- and the policy choices that come out of it -- are grounded in fact. But that has not happened. Instead, we have seen a furious stampede by the most prominent media figures to cover their own hides with either more lies, or more out-of-the mainstream bluster.

Time Magazine's Joe Klein, for instance, last week claimed he has "been opposed to the Iraq war ever since 2002." Readers were expected to forget about his nationally televised declaration in late February 2003 -- the critical days just before the invasion was ordered.

"War may well be the right decision at this point," Klein told NBC's Tim Russert. "In fact, I think it probably is."

This followed venerated New York Times columnist David Brooks who, rather than admitting the failure of his Iraq war cheerleading, lashed out at anti-war challenges to pro-war incumbents, writing that "primary voters shouldn't be allowed to define the choices in American politics" (apparently, democracy and elections are no longer an acceptable way to run our country). Weeks later, the Washington Post's Richard Cohen justified his support for the war by flippantly writing that he thinks "the prudent use of violence could be therapeutic."

All of this might be fine if those spewing this rhetoric faced some form of public rebuke that made clear such behavior is objectionable. But there has been nothing of the kind.

The president was barely bothered by reporters about why he denied he ever said "stay the course." Lieberman continues to be invited on Sunday talk shows as a credible guest discussing Iraq, and no one asks him about his hypocrisy. Meanwhile, Klein, Brooks and Cohen are still prominent news analysts for the largest publications in America, playing key roles shaping a political debate they now distort.

In other words, all of this is accepted without question, as if such behavior should be treated like just another staple of American politics.

Of course, dishonesty, anti-democratic salvos and caustic statements about violence are not new in politics -- but the ho-hum reaction to it is. And that should trouble anyone interested in making sure America never again embarks on another misguided military adventure that leaves thousands dead and our national security in tatters.

How can we expect to change course in Iraq, if a president is given a pass to claim he has never stayed the course in the first place? How can we expect to hold lawmakers accountable if they are never questioned about their efforts to deliberately mislead us? How can we expect the media to be a watchdog if its leading analysts and news framers face no public sanctions when they disrespect the truth or give credence to fringe ideologies?

A country whose national political conversation is dominated by voices that deny their own complicity in national security tragedies; downplay human casualties, and generally make dishonesty mundane, is a nation prevented from reflecting on its bad decisions -- and thus is doomed to repeat such bad decisions in the future.

6
_MarthaA on January 19, 2007 at 10:23 AM

Don't forget what politics is when your listening to REPUBLICAN rhetoric.

Politics is leadership of constituents in their best interest and leadership of non-constituents against their best interest.

WE THE PEOPLE are not constituents of the REPUBLICAN PARTY, therefore the REPUBLICAN PARTY will never actually represent WE THE PEOPLE. The REPUBLICAN PARTY'S constituents ARE big business, big corporations, corporate interests and the interests of capital, which is not WE THE PEOPLE working for a living at whatever level, or the poor.

WE THE PEOPLE are Republican Party non-constituents. To retain democracy, WE THE PEOPLE need to learn this really well.

7
_MarthaA on January 19, 2007 at 10:42 AM

I received a message to send comments to respond to the state of the union address. The note said to send you comments to http:\\democrats.org/stateoftheunion I tried this and changed the //'s to \\ backslashes and
rechecked the address. When I tried to get in it told me no such address. So here are my comments. I desire the economy to continue as it is growing, I want wages to continue not go down with an inflated economy: I like what is happening with the stock market, I desire no one fiddle with it: I like the taxes as they are, I do not want you to raise them by repealing the previous tax cuts: I believe the minimum wage should not be changed, there are jobs that are not worth the minimum wage but entry level for people to get some experience, it is not meant to sustain a family: I like the growth that has occured with my 401K plan and some of the changes you are proplsing will cause uncertainty in the market and this could cause a drop in the market: although a registered democrat I am displease with the direction of the party in America today. I support more troops in Iraq and doing what it takes to get the job done. We should not leave that country at this critical time even if civil war is possible. We erred in Vietnam and lets not make the same mistake now. Eulan Tucker.

8
doer on January 23, 2007 at 08:42 AM


« Hide Comments

Comments are now closed for this entry.