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Walk of Shame
National review online ^ | 11/24/2003 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 11/24/2003 3:00:29 PM PST by Cosmo

Walk of Shame Republicans bungle Medicare and have their way with the law.

Imagine election authorities in your town keeping the polls open for an extra two hours and 38 minutes until enough voters adopted a ballot measure that officials favored. Outrage would erupt, and rightly so. Conservatives and free marketeers should be similarly indignant about the way Republican House leaders extracted victory, like impacted molars, from the jaws of defeat.

 

After three hours of debate on the Medicare drug plan, the yeas and nays were ordered at 3:00 Saturday morning. "This will be a 15-minute vote," presiding officer Rep. Richard "Doc" Hastings (R., Wash.) said with a slam of his gavel. While some House votes take just five minutes, most last 15. They may linger for another two to three minutes to accommodate stragglers who arrive tardily on the floor or to let party whips quickly plead with potentially wayward members. This is roughly akin to driving 70 in a 65 mile-per-hour zone.

Saturday morning's action, however, more closely resembled a drag race outside a retirement home.

I turned on C-SPAN at around 5:30 A.M. expecting to learn how the $409.8 billion proposal had fared. Instead, I learned that the vote was 216 yeas to 218 nays. I was thrilled that 26 Republicans had agreed that this bill was too much government (a universal entitlement) chasing too manageable a problem (the 22 percent of seniors without drug coverage). All but about 15 Democrats opposed the bill for not doing even more, thus dooming this proposal to defeat.

So why was the House still voting?

In an extraordinary move which will fuel Democratic paranoia that Republicans break the rules to swipe votes they cannot win, the House GOP leadership broke the rules to swipe a vote they could not win.

"We won it fair and square," said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California, "and they stole it by hook and crook." Pelosi added in a statement that Republican conduct "brought dishonor to this institution." She told Reuters: "I guess it's in their DNA. They just can't play by the rules."

In this case, at least, Nancy Pelosi is right.

GOP leaders stretched until 5:53 A.M. a vote that should have ended at 3:15 A.M. This extra time gave them, Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson (who uncustomarily trolled the House floor for votes) and eventually President Bush (who phoned from the White House) an opportunity to turn GOP representatives C. L. "Butch" Otter of Idaho and Arizona's Trent Franks from nays to yeas. Their flip-flops prompted Ernest Istook (R., Ok.) to reverse himself while David Wu (D., Wash.) finally joined the winning team. The final vote was 220 yeas to 215 nays.

For a party that correctly spent the Clinton years and the Florida presidential-recount saga defending the rule of law, GOP House leaders assaulted it as the nation slept. That they undermined House procedures with this record-breaking vote — not to cut taxes or fund counterterrorism (which would have been bad enough) but to inaugurate the largest expansion in the federal welfare state since 1965 — should enrage rank-and-file Republicans across America.

House Speaker Dennis Hastert of Illinois, Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Texas and other GOP leaders should be deeply ashamed of themselves for exceeding the impropriety of former Democratic speaker Thomas Foley of Washington. On August 19, 1994, he used a 73-minute vote to help fellow Democrats find enough GOP votes to pass a Clinton-backed anti-crime measure. Rather than rise above such shenanigans, top Republicans this weekend sunk to even lower levels of contempt for the House's traditions and practices.

Beyond the perpetrators of this abuse of power, conservatives and free-marketeers should be disappointed by the 204 Republicans who ignored months of warnings about this bill's excessive scope, costs, and complexity. If this bill is enacted, when the grim predictions about it come to pass, these GOP lawmakers will not be to claim they were not cautioned by pro-market commentators as well as scholars and activists at the Heritage Foundation, Institute for Health Freedom, National Taxpayers Union Foundation, Cato Institute, National Center for Public Policy Research, and other organizations that still fight for limited government.

Finally, Americans who lean right should give a standing ovation to several GOP members who defied the statist House leadership and attempted to defeat this bill. Rep. Ron Paul, M.D. of Texas educated his colleagues on this proposal's shortcomings through seminars in his office in the Cannon House Building (including one gathering I addressed).

Rep. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania encouraged members, especially newer ones, to oppose the Medicare bill. Late Friday night, Toomey, Mike Pence (R., Ind.) and John Shadegg (R., Ariz.) sequestered some two dozen of these congressmen at Hunan Dynasty, a Chinese restaurant on Capitol Hill, and later in the House gallery to shield them from the heavy-handed leadership. In this battle, Toomey's independence, tenacity and commitment to free-market principle demonstrated once again why he deserves to replace faux-Republican Arlen Specter as the Keystone State's United States senator.

The 25 members who withstood tremendous pressure and stood with America's taxpayers deserve individual recognition. They are identified below. Interestingly, many are freshmen and sophomores. This underscores the fact that lengthy tenure in Washington too often transforms conservatives into free-spending socialists.

The Senate is considering H.R. 1 and is expected to vote on it today, unless Senator Ted Kennedy's filibuster succeeds. As massive as this bill is, it still is not fat enough to impress the Massachusetts Democrat and many of his party colleagues. Americans who believe in limited government should call their senators at 202-224-3121. Ask them not to repeat the House's needless, profligate, abusive error.

HONOR ROLL These 25 GOP representatives deserve the applause of free-marketeers for courageously defying the Republican House leadership and voting against the Medicare "reform" measure early Saturday morning:

Todd Akin of Missouri Greshem Barrett of South Carolina Dan Burton of Indiana Steve Chabot of Ohio John Culbertson of Texas Jim DeMint of South Carolina Jo Ann Emerson of Missouri Tom Feeney of Florida Jeff Flake of Arizona Scott Garrett of New Jersey Gil Gutknecht of Minnesota John Hostettler of Indiana Walter Jones of North Carolina Jeff Miller of Florida Jerry Moran of Kansas Marilyn Musgrave of Colorado Charlie Norwood of Georgia Ron Paul of Texas Mike Pence of Indiana Jim Ryun of Kansas John Shadegg of Arizona Nick Smith of Michigan Tom Tancredo of Colorado Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania Zack Wamp of Tennessee

— Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: boondoggle; cheeseandwhine; deroymurdock; lyingliar; medicare; prescriptiondrugs; waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Have at it, Freepers
1 posted on 11/24/2003 3:00:30 PM PST by Cosmo
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To: Cosmo
In an extraordinary move which will fuel Democratic paranoia that Republicans break the rules to swipe votes they cannot win, the House GOP leadership broke the rules to swipe a vote they could not win.

No they didn't. The vote always stays open as long as the speaker wants, and the 15-minute window is never anything more than a guideline (as the author noted himself, and then tried in vain to just shrug off). This vote stayed open longer than any other in recent memory, without question, and of course we can argue from now until the end of time as to the merits of the bill, but to say "the GOP leadership broke the rules" is TO LIE, period.

2 posted on 11/24/2003 3:04:47 PM PST by Timesink (I'm not a big fan of electronic stuff, you know? Beeps ... beeps freak me out. They're bad.)
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To: Cosmo; Congressman Billybob
False Reporting On Medicare Vote, by our own Congressman Billybob
3 posted on 11/24/2003 3:06:00 PM PST by Poohbah ("Beware the fury of a patient man" -- John Dryden)
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To: Cosmo
Didn't Teddy Kennedy recently vote "wrong" only to change his vote after a lecture from Daschle as to what the bill really meant?
4 posted on 11/24/2003 3:06:23 PM PST by weegee
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To: Cosmo
GD Butch Otter! The AARP is running commercials in Idaho telling people to call Otter and thank him for raising our taxes.
5 posted on 11/24/2003 3:07:35 PM PST by cruiserman
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To: weegee
"Didn't Teddy Kennedy recently vote "wrong" only to change his vote after a lecture from Daschle as to what the bill really meant?"

True. The esteemed and honorable drunkard from Massachusetts voted in favor of the Partial Birth Abortion ban.

Until Daschle explained to Kennedy's staff what His Stupor had done, of course...

6 posted on 11/24/2003 3:09:47 PM PST by okie01 (www.ArmorforCongress.com...because Congress isn't for the morally halt and the mentally lame.)
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To: cruiserman
AND IT WAS THE DEMWITS REPS WHO CHANGED THERE VOTES,JUST LIKE SEN. SWIMMER DID!!!!
7 posted on 11/24/2003 3:15:10 PM PST by jocko12
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To: Cosmo
"We won it fair and square," said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California, "and they stole it by hook and crook." Pelosi added in a statement that Republican conduct "brought dishonor to this institution." She told Reuters: "I guess it's in their DNA. They just can't play by the rules."

Gee, Nance, you must have cojones the size of watermelons to have the audacity to make that remark! The way the Demos in the Senate have been stonewalling judges...not to mention Texas' very own democrat runaway bunch...seems to me the hook and crook label belongs to YOUR party.

8 posted on 11/24/2003 3:43:20 PM PST by Maria S ("When the passions become masters, they are vices." Pascal, 1670)
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To: Cosmo
Seems like Rush mentioned today that Republican votes didn't change during the extended period.

It was Democrats who switched sides.

9 posted on 11/24/2003 3:45:42 PM PST by chaosagent
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To: Cosmo
The WSJ pointed out that this is a strategically stupid move by the Republicans. Pretty soon the "War on Drugs" will mean the battle to keep Medicare spending under control as the Democrats try to increase it.
10 posted on 11/24/2003 4:08:49 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: Cosmo
"In an extraordinary move which will fuel Democratic paranoia that Republicans break the rules to swipe votes they cannot win, the House GOP leadership broke the rules to swipe a vote they could not win."

REPUBLICANS using DEMOCRAT tactics! UNFAIR!
11 posted on 11/24/2003 4:55:49 PM PST by steplock (www.FOCUS.GOHOTSPRINGS.com)
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