Lott’s resignation moves Republicans even further to the right

By any reasonable measure, outgoing Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) hasn’t exactly been a moderate.

Lott was forced out of his Majority Leader seat in disgrace in late 2002, after heralding the segregationist platform of former South Carolina senator Strom Thurmond. Speaking at a Thurmond’s 100th birthday bash, Lott said, “When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We’re proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn’t have had all these problems over all these years, either.” Lott’s history of intolerance is well-documented. In 1981, Lott declared, “Racial discrimination does not always violate public policy.” In 1998, he likened homosexuality to “personal problems as alcoholism, kleptomania and ‘sex addiction.'” He maintains an affiliation with the Council of Conservative Citizens, described as a hate group by the Anti-Defamation League. In June 2007, Lott likened securing America’s borders to an “electrified goat fence,” stating that “there’s an analogy there” for immigration reform.

And that’s just on questions of tolerance and diversity. On practically every question of domestic and foreign policy, Trent Lott has been a consistent and predictable conservative Republican.

And yet, many reporters are noting that his abrupt resignation from Congress manages to move to the Senate Republican caucus even further to the right. Oddly enough, that’s true.

The departure of Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott will cost Congress one of its premiere deal makers and opens the door to a further shift to the right by Senate Republicans.

Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl appears all but certain to get the whip post now held by Mr. Lott and would bring a more confrontational style to the No. 2 leadership job. Skirmishes were already taking shape yesterday between younger Senate conservatives and the Republicans’ increasingly isolated moderate wing, which is trying to hold onto a place in the party leadership.

Yes, moderate Senate Republicans — all three of them — had come to rely on Trent Lott as an ally.

The point isn’t that Lott harbored some centrist sympathies — he never has — it’s that he seemed to enjoy the art of the deal. He relished pragmatism, and was willing to occasionally strike compromises.

Lott’s departure from Capitol Hill in the coming weeks after 34 years in Congress — 16 in the House, 18 in the Senate — is further evidence that bonhomie and cross-party negotiating are losing their currency, even in the backslapping Senate. With the Senate populated by a record number of former House members, the rules of the Old Boys’ Club are giving way to the partisan trench warfare and party-line votes that prevail in the House. […]

“The Senate is predicated on the ability of people being able to work together,” said former senator Don Nickles (R-Okla.), who was majority whip for much of Lott’s years as majority leader. “I’m not throwing rocks at anybody, but there’s just been a lot less of that.”

Former majority leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) agreed: “Senator Lott’s resignation means the loss of one of the few Republicans in leadership who often excelled in finding compromise and common ground.”

It seems almost silly to think the departure of a right-wing Republican from Mississippi could make the Senate GOP even more conservative and ideologically rigid, and yet, here we are.

TRENT LOTT RESIGNS

Rent Boy on Sex With Outgoing Republican Senator Trent Lott: No Comment

by PageOneQ

“Once upon a time,” writes Big Head DC, “there was a twentysomething boy-next-door type with reddish blond hair and a brillantly white smile.”

This boy-next-door is male escort Benjamin Nicholas, whose blog 15 Minutes helped him make some connections in business and politics.

One of these connections is rumored to be Senator Trent Lott, Republican Minority Whip and former Senate Majority Leader, rumored to have planned a resignation by the end of this year to avoid being scandalized by Hustler publisher Larry Flynt. Flynt had, back in June, offered cash rewards for substantiated accounts of sexual liaisons with elected officials.

Source: PageOneQ

HUSTLER RESPONDS:

HUSTLER Magazine has received numerous inquiries regarding the involvement of Larry Flynt
and HUSTLER in the resignation of Trent Lott. Senator Lott has been the target of an ongoing HUSTLER investigation for some time now, due to confidential information that we have received.

  • All the other Republicans who have been hit with sex scandals seem like “the type” for it; Vitter, Craig, whatshisname the former Congressman in Florida – all “holier than thou” on sex and “family values.” Lott never did any of that, and really doesn’t seem to be “the type.” But time will tell…

    These modern day “fire eaters” need “a damn good whacking,” like we gave their great-great-granddaddies 150 years ago.

  • Ever since Bush Senior departed and Gingrich came in there are no longer any significant Republicans capable of compromise. Those which appear to be are liars or wimps.

    What is even more annoying, however, is the way in which the Democrats’ insipid “leaders” sit idly by with the fingers up their butts, apparently oblivious to the opportunities opening right and left. If one were suspicious, one might suppose that all members of congress, Republican and Democrat, were on the same corporate payroll, that ideology is simply a chimera designed to give the rest of us the illusion that there is still such thing as real politics.

  • One of the earliest commenters here yesterday on Lott’s resignation said only: “Dead girl or live boy?” Hmmm. We’ll see.

    As much as I dislike Lott, he always seemed less ideological and more pragmatic than a lot of Republicans are. He was more like an old Dixiecrat than a New Republican Neocon.

    No matter why he’s leaving, good riddance. Lott was a smart pol. The changes in Republican leadership will only make them less effective.

  • This seems like an opportunity for Democrats. Kyl may be more confrontational, but doesn’t have anywhere near the gravitas that Lott has. Most Americans who read the news a little bit have heard of Lott, but Kyl who? Perhaps Reid will not be afraid to go on the offensive and smack Kyl around and take a stand on more issues.

  • Why should the Republicans compromise, when the Dems will repeatedly cave into their demands? Until the Dems show that they can play hardball too, there won’t be any reason to compromise.

  • Okie, that was me who asked “Dead girl or live boy”. I’m still curious, particularly after seeing reports of the on-going Larry Flynt “investigations”.

  • Here’s my question: Why would Lott resign in such an abrupt manner? Why would he blindside the Republicans by not giving them any notice? There’s something going on and it smells like yet another gay Republican scandal.

    I’m thinking some fatcat Rethug like Scaife paid Larry Flint a few million bucks to keep this story out of the news. You gotta know that if Lott joined Larry Craig and Mark Foley in the Gay Republican Scandal Club, they would hemmorage wingnut votes. I’ll bet they’d pay a pretty penny to keep that kind of news from emerging, especially this election cycle. If that’s what’s happening, I hope Flynt takes their millions, videotapes them trying to shut him up, and then kicks it wide open anyway.

  • I’m assuming that the reason so many other Republicans have decided to retire this year rather than remain in Congress is because they are tired of the nasty game and don’t see it getting any better. If Kyl becomes whip I’d imagine another shoe or two to drop and say “screw it” to an even more acrimonious situation in the Senate. Republican Senators still have to go home and face constituents and reporters who are only getting more pissed and disillusioned with the party. Kyl or another hard line winger in leadership would just seem to make a bad situation worse.

  • Racerx at 8: Here’s my question: Why would Lott resign in such an abrupt manner? Why would he blindside the Republicans by not giving them any notice?

    I’m going with a combination of (a) Occams Razor and (b) follow the money on this one. He has a big money lobbying opportunity, and the door closes on Dec 31. So he decides he’s going to take it. Now the question is strategy – how does he actually go about the timing and nature of the announcement. He could work carefully with Republican leadership to minimize the downside. . . but hey, these assholes were all pretty quick to throw him under the bus for a quack doctor who diagnoses people by videotape and looks like a moron doing it. Lott holds a grudge and enjoys a good laugh, so he figures screw ’em, I’ll do it the easier way, purely on my own and see how they miss me now, see how they wish we were more of a team now, and I can get right in their faces and say “shoulda thought of that when you bailed on me, you little SOB.”

    That’s my bet. I don’t think there is some sordid sex scandal. Lott is more the vindicitive mob boss type than the Ted Haggard type.

  • Somehow Lott seems less likely to be involved in a homosexual affair than others of his ilk, but who knows. If more and harder gridlock is in the offing with Lott gone then Congress will increasingly marginalize itself and enhance the imperial presidency. The Dems have to play hardball, well they have to learn how to crawl before they can walk, run and play for real, but until both sides of the aisle understand they are enabling a dictatorship, regardless of which party has the White House, they will continue to behave like rival gangs in the schoolyard. And we can all watch.

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