Following up on an item from yesterday, Senate Republicans have decided to effectively hold Congress hostage, refusing to allow up-or-down votes on practically everything. Bills may enjoy the support of the majority of the House, majority of the Senate, and majority of the country, but the GOP has decided to embrace obstructionism in a way no previous Senate minority has ever even considered.
To be sure, this is causing intense frustration among congressional Democrats. The House is passing bills, only to see them die from neglect in the Senate. Dems in the upper chamber are desperate to score some legislative victories, but can’t get overcome the minority party’s shameless desire to shut down the legislative process.
Worse, according to a front-page piece in today’s WaPo, Dems are apparently turning their aggravation inwards.
When Democrats took control of Congress in January, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) pledged to jointly push an ambitious agenda to counter 12 years of Republican control.
Now, as Congress struggles to adjourn for Christmas, relations between House Democrats and their colleagues in the Senate have devolved into finger-pointing.
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles B. Rangel (D-N.Y.) accuses Senate Democratic leaders of developing “Stockholm syndrome,” showing sympathy to their Republican captors…. Reid, in turn, has taken to the Senate floor to criticize what he called the speaker’s “iron hand” style of governance.
Democrats in each chamber are now blaming their colleagues in the other for the mess in which they find themselves. The predicament caused the majority party yesterday surrender to President Bush on domestic spending levels, drop a cherished renewable-energy mandate and move toward leaving a raft of high-profile legislation, from addressing the mortgage crisis to providing middle-class tax relief, undone or incomplete.
I can appreciate that there’s always going to be some tensions between the chambers, but this is a foolish mistake. The current mess is entirely a Republican creation, and the GOP would like nothing more than to see Dems attack each other instead of the minority.
It’s getting close to ugly.
Asked about his decision on government funding, House Appropriations Committee Chairman David R. Obey (D-Wis.) groused to the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call: “I’ll tell you how soon I will make a decision when I know how soon the Senate sells us out.” Senate Democrats have fired back, accusing Pelosi and her liberal allies of sending over legislation that they know cannot pass in the Senate, and of making demands that will not gain any GOP votes. Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) noted that, this summer, Reid employed just the kind of theatrics Rangel and other House Democrats are demanding, holding the Senate open all night, pulling out cots and forcing a dusk-till-dawn debate on an Iraq war withdrawal measure before a vote on war funding. Democrats gained not a single vote after the all-night antics.
“I understand the frustration; we’re frustrated, too,” Bayh said. “But holding a bunch of Kabuki theater doesn’t get anything done.”
If Dems want to reinforce the perception that they legislate like herded cats, they’re doing a good job.
And just as the Republicans should be punished for blocking every popular policy proposal that reaches the Senate, they’re instead feeling good about themselves.
Republicans, who spent 12 years in similar battles, are just enjoying the spectacle.
“Just let ’em stew for a while,” said soon-to-retire Senate Minority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.), a veteran of the GOP’s own squabbles.
This isn’t a strategy for success.