They were for the extra spending before they were against it

Thirty five [tag]Senate[/tag] [tag]Republicans[/tag], worried about excessive government [tag]spending[/tag] and wasteful [tag]pork[/tag], wrote the [tag]president[/tag] a letter (.pdf) yesterday, telling [tag]Bush[/tag] that he should [tag]veto[/tag] the emergency spending bill for [tag]Iraq[/tag] and hurricane preparation — and if he does, they’ll back him up. The number of senators is significant because if the 35 stick together, it would mean the Senate couldn’t override the veto.

It’s exactly why I found this vote so odd.

Defying a White House veto threat, the Republican-controlled Senate on Wednesday refused to pare back an emergency spending bill sought by President Bush that lawmakers had expanded to include their own pet projects, which included items as diverse as aid for farmers and money to reroute a Mississippi railroad.

The vote was a direct rebuff of Bush by a number of [tag]GOP[/tag] senators and underscored a growing party rift at a time when the president’s popularity has sunk to new lows in public opinion polls. “I might be intimidated by my constituents, but not the president,” Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said in an interview.

The Senate vote against cutting the $106.5-billion bill was a lopsided 72-26, more than enough to override a veto.

Given a chance to scale back the spending bill to what Bush requested, only 25 Republican senators went along. The same afternoon, however, 35 senators said the spending bill cost too much and should be in line with Bush’s original blueprint.

The result was 10 Republican senators — [tag]Cornyn[/tag] (Tex.), [tag]Thune[/tag] (S.D.), [tag]Warner[/tag] (Va.), [tag]Hatch[/tag] (Utah), [tag]Craig[/tag] (Idaho), [tag]Crapo[/tag] (Idaho), [tag]Martinez[/tag] (Fla.), [tag]Bond[/tag] (Mo.), [tag]Bennett[/tag] (Utah), and [tag]Grassley[/tag] (Iowa) — who voted for the increased spending while also asking Bush to block the increased spending.

I guess they were for it before they were against it.

Ah, John Warner, how you disappoint me!

Actually, one of the things I’ve been saying Josh Bolton should do to establish Bush’s creditability is to veto a spending bill. I didn’t realize he read CBR, but it’s nice to know he takes good advice 😉

  • I guess they were for it before they were against it.

    Sounds like they were for it while they were against it.

    What’s the word that means simultaneously holding opposing viewpoints on an issue?

    Doublethink?
    Hedging?
    Hypocrisy?

    F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.”

    He must’ve never met a Republican.

  • The term is cognitive dissonance. The Republicans have managed for years to succeed in the face of it because they eschew the idea that opposes their dominant one, and then they criticize anyone else who thinks it.

    So what we have here is a group that voted one way while urging the president to do exactly the opposite. The way they got around this psychologically was to unconsciously tell themselves that they wanted the vote to fail all along. If confronted with the vote, they can simply say, “I wrote this letter to the President asking him to veto! I was opposed to it!” “But you voted for it!” “Yes, but the letter!” Ad infinitum, ad nauseum.

  • The real question is what will happen. Will W veto thinking he is operating from a position of power? If he does will the 10 floppers stay true? Seems like these 10 Senators want their name attached to a document that opposes out of control spending. That can be used at re-election time. Nobody will pay attention long enough to comprehend the whole picture.

    If I were W, I would be nervous about this. Why would these Senators stand by Bush now when he is as weak as a kitten?

    On a picky side note John Thune is from South Dakota, not North Dakota.

  • I think we can look forward to much more of this as the Reich-wing ideologues increasingly confront their own re-election prospects (outside of Wyoming, Idaho, Utah and Nebraska anyway). Quite a juggling act. I wish the Democrats were involved in pointing this out, but … members of the club and all, you know.

  • On a picky side note John Thune is from South Dakota, not North Dakota.

    Oops. Fixed.

  • Just another cynical ploy to stack the deck in a difficult election year.

    First they voted for the spending bill so they can point to that as proof that they take care of the folks back home.

    Then they sign this meaningless letter so in case they get in hot water for signing the bill they can say, “Hey, we asked the President to veto the thing but he didn’t do it, so it’s his fault not ours.”

    All designed for one purpose only, and it’s not for doing the right thing for the American people.

    As a bald-faced piece of blatant political balderdash, this really takes the cake.

  • Oh, to actually have a liberal media…..
    The reason this type of crap gives cover to pols like Thune (I am sure that some of that farm money goes to S.D.) is because the MSM does not call them on the doublethink.
    When election time rolls around, the vote to bring home the pork is trumpeted, but the letter to trim the fat gets buried.
    The advantage to having a robust right-wing media, complimented with a complicit MSM is huge.
    It is not everything, but it is big, and a constant contributor to our nations woes.

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