Posted on 04/28/2009 8:17:49 AM PDT by ma bell
The answers reveal a Senate with surprising alliances, close friendships and some personal resentments.
After Kennedy, the most bipartisan Democrats are Sens. Tom Carper (Del.), Chris Dodd (Conn.), Evan Bayh (Ind.) and Tom Harkin (Iowa).
Following Collins on the GOP side are Sens. Olympia Snowe (Maine), Orrin Hatch (Utah), Richard Lugar (Ind.) and John McCain (Ariz.).
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) did not make the top five despite voting for President Obamas economic stimulus package. Collins and Snowe were the only other Republicans in Congress to back that bill.
Sens. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) and Mary Landrieu (D-La.) regularly buck their party, but neither cracked the top five.
Obama has vowed to change the tone of Congress, urging members of both parties to put childish politics aside. The presidents call for bipartisanship has generated mixed results, with partisanship flaring during the recent budget debates in the House and Senate.
Working across the aisle sometimes depends on ideology, but not in every case. For example, New York Democrat Charles Schumer will, at times, join forces with South Carolina Republican Lindsey Graham. And staunch conservative Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) said he misses working with Obama in the Senate.
Kennedys affability was cited by some of the Senates most conservative Republicans, including Hatch, Jeff Sessions (Ala.) and Minority Whip Jon Kyl (Ariz.).
Id love to co-sponsor every piece of legislation with Ted Kennedy, said Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.). When Ted says hes going to do something, hes committed to it.
Democrats hailed the two centrist senators from Maine.
They are Republicans who want to get something done, said Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.).
Shes reasonable, principled and doesnt get scared off by peer pressure, Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) said of Collins.
Discussing Snowe, Landrieu said, Shes strong in her opinions and shes not easily swayed, but she is sway-able, which makes her open-minded. Landrieu and Snowe are the top members of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee.
Leahy attracted widespread criticism from GOP senators. Vice President Cheney famously told Leahy to go f- yourself in 2004.
Aside from Leahy, the other Democratic senators deemed the hardest to work with are Schumer, Majority Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.) and Dodd (Conn.).
Theyre guys that like to wield their positions, said one GOP senator.
Dodd was the only senator who made both the bipartisan and partisan lists. Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) is the fifth most partisan Democrat, according to the survey.
Democrats singled out Bunning, David Vitter (La.), Tom Coburn (Okla.) and DeMint as the most difficult. One Democratic senator called them a bunch of 4-year-olds.
Several Democrats said Bunning in particular is so irascible that they dont even try to speak to the Hall of Fame pitcher unless its about baseball.
Jim just makes it difficult, said one Democrat. Sometimes you have a sense of where your bipartisan outreach maybe wont be successful, so you tend to not even engage.
Senate Republican Conference Chairman Lamar Alexander is the fifth most partisan GOP member, according to The Hills survey. However, several Democrats praised the Tennessee lawmaker as a cooperative legislative partner.
Many senators said working well with a member of the opposing party often depends on reasons outside their control committee assignments that pair a chairman with a ranking member, for example, or the fact that a home-state colleague may be from the other side of the aisle.
But many also pointed to personality.
There are some members of the Senate that you may disagree with 90 percent of the time, but theyre looking for that 10 percent and so are you, said Graham. Part of it is attitude. Some senators have a better attitude about finding that 10 or 20 percent than others.
Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), who was elected in 2006, said, Its partly about, Who wants to work together? instead of Whos likely to agree with you on issues? Thats why some are easier than others.
Brown revealed he keeps track of all the Republicans with whom he works: I keep a notebook that I dont share with anybody, and I mark in there who Ive worked with. I have a goal of working with almost every Republican on a major issue.
The chambers two leaders named each other as their across-the-aisle favorite. Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said he works best with Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) because I have to and McConnell said much the same of Reid. Kansas Republican Pat Roberts said Reid was a favorite of his when both men led the Ethics Committee. Durbin named several centrist Republicans but said he is trying to work with more members of the GOP.
At the end of the day, if I give a great Democratic speech and end up with 58 votes, I dont win, Durbin said. So I try to find some way to leave the door open for Republicans to join me.
Theres an old saying about the Senate: Theres no permanent friends, just permanent issues, Ensign said. You have to work across the aisle if youre ever going to get anything done.
Among the surprise findings from the poll: Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) has struck up a friendship with Sen. Roland Burris (D-Ill.). Burris, meanwhile, is a fan of Hatchs wardrobe.
Conservative Sen. Sam Brownback (Kan.) misses the late liberal Sen. Paul Wellstone (Minn.) one of the funniest guys Ive worked with.
He added, He was just passionate. Wed call each other names for a little while and then wed go work with each other
He was once upset at some ranking that had just come out that said he was the second most liberal senator here. He said, You did this to me! I was the most liberal one here, and because Ive been working with you Im now in second place.
Click here to read the Republicans' responses and here for Democrats' responses.
THE MOST, AND LEAST BIPARTISAN MEMBERS OF THE SENATE
Whos the easiest senator to work with across the aisle? Whos the toughest? The Hill asked all 99 seated senators about their colleagues bipartisanship, and the following names arranged by frequency, from top to bottom were cited the most.
MOST BIPARTISAN
DEMOCRATS
1. Edward Kennedy (Mass.)
2. Tom Carper (Del.)
3. Chris Dodd (Conn.)
4. (tied) Evan Bayh (Ind.)
4. (tied) Tom Harkin (Iowa)
REPUBLICANS
1. Susan Collins (Maine)
2. Olympia Snowe (Maine)
3. Orrin Hatch (Utah)
4. (tied) Richard Lugar (Ind.)
4. (tied) John McCain (Ariz.)
LEAST BIPARTISAN
DEMOCRATS
1. Patrick Leahy (Vt.)
2. Charles Schumer (N.Y.)
3. Chris Dodd (Conn.)
4. Dick Durbin (Ill.)
5. John Kerry (Mass.)
REPUBLICANS
1. Jim Bunning (Ky.)
2. David Vitter (La.)
3. Tom Coburn (Okla.)
4. Jim DeMint (S.C.)
5. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.)
When is Utah ever going to rid itself of Orin Hatch?
I always liked Tom Coburn.
If we agree with the moron’s schemes, then we are Bipartisen, if we disagree with the America hating scum we are racists.
“Obama has vowed to change the tone of Congress, urging members of both parties to put childish politics aside.”
Which is code for “stop fighting and fall in line with *my* view.”
Also - keep up the good work Jim DeMint. You make me proud!
Finally - anyone notice how Dodd is on the best AND worst list? That makes him a really polarizing figure. Kick him out, CT.
I don't even see how that's possible.
I got a RNC senate fund letter addressed from Hatch. The questions were for border security and such, and just tossed in the trash.
Vitter, DeMint and Coburn have been stalwarts at opposing the worst bills in Congress.
It's good be on such a list.
It’s possible because he’s either paid you off with political favors or he hasn’t and you resent the way he operates.
We need to fix the labels to accurate define what they mean ...
DEMOCRATS GOOD AT GETTING REPUBS TO SELL OUT
1. Edward Kennedy (Mass.)
2. Tom Carper (Del.)
3. Chris Dodd (Conn.)
4. (tied) Evan Bayh (Ind.)
4. (tied) Tom Harkin (Iowa)
RINO SELLOUTS
1. Susan Collins (Maine)
2. Olympia Snowe (Maine)
3. Orrin Hatch (Utah)
4. (tied) Richard Lugar (Ind.)
4. (tied) John McCain (Ariz.)
HYPER-PARTISAN DEMOCRATS
1. Patrick Leahy (Vt.)
2. Charles Schumer (N.Y.)
3. Chris Dodd (Conn.)
4. Dick Durbin (Ill.)
5. John Kerry (Mass.)
STALWART CONSERVATIVE REPUBLICANS
1. Jim Bunning (Ky.)
2. David Vitter (La.)
3. Tom Coburn (Okla.)
4. Jim DeMint (S.C.)
5. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.)
Right.
If you sell out principles, you can get along with Dodd.
If you have principles, then Sen Dodd treats you as a threat (which you are to his corrupt, venal, big-govt ways).
Best post of the day.
thanks!
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