Meet the new boss, slightly worse than the old boss

When a criminal indictment forced Tom DeLay to step aside as House Majority Leader, Rep. [tag]John Boehner[/tag] (R-Ohio) was, oddly enough, the “reformer” in the race to replace him. Boehner, despite a dubious record on congressional ethics, vowed to “lead the effort to bring about the kind of reforms the American people are expecting from Congress.”

Is Boehner following through on those commitments? Not so much.

[F]ar from trying to put the brakes on [tag]lobbyists[/tag] and the [tag]money[/tag] they channel into [tag]Republican[/tag] coffers, Mr. Boehner, who has portrayed his ties to Washington lobbyists as something to be proud of, has stepped on the gas.

He has been holding fund-raisers at lobbyists’ offices, flying to political events on corporate planes and staying at a golf resort with a business group that has a direct stake in issues before Congress.

Tapping a rich vein of longstanding relationships with lobbyists and their corporate clients, Mr. Boehner, an Ohio Republican, has raised campaign contributions at a rate of about $10,000 a day since February, surpassing the pace set by former Representative [tag]Tom DeLay[/tag] after he became majority leader in 2002, a review of federal filings shows.

According to the NYT, Boehner’s biggest donors include the political action committees of “lobbying firms, drug and cigarette makers, banks, health insurers, oil companies and military contractors.” Better yet, while most lawmakers have grown weary of ethically-questionable private travel, Boehner keeps racking up the frequent-flier miles, traveling to Boca golf resort in March for a “convention of commodities traders, who have contributed more than $100,000 to his campaigns and are lobbying against a proposed federal tax on futures transactions.” Boehner reportedly assured his hosts that Congress would reject the tax, just as they requested.

The more things change, the more they get slightly worse when it comes to congressional Republicans.

Boehner really did pull a Boner. Just when you think they couldn’t get any lower, they go out and prove everyone wrong.

  • Republicans wouldn’t change course even if they could. They know how to campaign, and they’re well equpped to fund that.

    The fact that their policies support a mere one percent of family highest incomes is beside the point. The Democrats will never harp on that since the point’s been made … once, long ago, hasn’t it?

    When Democrats use the same fund-raising tactics (usually milder ones), the GOP/press trashes them. Then the Dems explain and apologize and return the funds. Remember the Buddhist Temple fund-raiser?

    When Democrats finally come up with an ad which, after running un-noticed for two weeks, suddenly offends Republicans for two days, what do Rahm and DCCC do? Shut down the finally-successful ad. When the Roman Catholic Church trashes a movie (DaVince Code, e.g.), attendance skyrockets. There’s a message there somewhere (like: let the GOP act as our publicity agents), but we don’t get it.

    I’m beginning to wonder: is politics beneath us? Don’t we want to get our hands dirty? Do we really enjoy playing beanbag while the GOP plays NFL? Have our elected representatives been too long on the federal gravy train? Have we voters forgotten that we (or our parents or grandparents) created the 1950s Middle Class, of which we — the 99% — still the beneficiaries? Why isn’t the DCCC putting out ads which will make The Boner twist slowly in the wind? Here’s a hint: begin with “Meet the new boss”.

  • Ed, WaPo makes your point for you very well today with a front page “expose” of the Democracy Alliance, a group of large donors doing – finally – what the right has been doing for decades. Except somehow when the left tries to match the right, we’re engaged in excessive secrecy and questionable ethics. (Which may be true, but only an appropriate charge for the paper to make if the paper is also going to call for the dismantling of the right wing machinery.)

  • ***…but only an appropriate charge for the paper to make if the paper is also going to call for the dismantling of the right wing machinery.***
    Zeitgeist

    I doubt that one will ever have the ability to walk up to the right-wing machine, and ask the doo-hickey to reign in the thing-a-ma-bob. That’s like the chicken asking the fox to babysit the chicks.

    Frist and Bones; the doctor and the gravedigger. They’ll only be happy when they’re standing over the lifeless carcass of the Constitutiion; one declaring it dead, and the other shoveling on the dirt….

  • When the new boss is the same as the old boss, it would suggest that it is not so much the individual who is the problem, but the pool of potential new bosses, the process by which they’re selected, and their philosophies that are the problem.

  • “…while most lawmakers have grown weary of ethically-questionable private travel…”

    I think you mean wary, not weary. I really doubt that they have actually grown tired of flying around on private jets instead of first class on commercial…

  • “The more things change, the more they get slightly worse when it comes to congressional Republicans.”

    Nope.

    The more things change with Republicans, the more they get A WHOLE LOT WORSE!!

    These people never cease to amaze me with their ability – just when I’ve told myself “they can’t get worse” – to prove my imagination atrophied and dessicated when it comes to imagining just how much worse they can get, how much lower they can go, and how big a smile they can give while they whip up another shit sandwich for the morons who vote for them.

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