All Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) wanted for Christmas was for the Senate to approve his plan to drill the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for oil. No such luck. The question then becomes what Stevens is prepared to do about it.
First, he apparently plans to do some traveling in order to spite everyone who voted against ANWR drilling.
“I’m going to go to every one of your states, and I’m going to tell them what you’ve done,” said Stevens, the leading advocate of drilling in Alaska. “This was wrong.”
Second, Stevens has to decide whether to even stay in the Senate at all. After losing the ANWR vote last night, Stevens complained, “This has been the saddest day of my life. It’s a day I don’t want to remember. I say goodbye to the Senate tonight. Thank you very much.”
Did that “say goodbye to the Senate” line mean that Stevens will no longer grace the chamber with his presence? According to MSNBC (via Atrios), it seems like a real possibility.
Our senate producer stayed here until the wee hours last night to try to find out if senator stevens was saying he was going to resign. Ken asked are you coming back? Stevens said, quote, ‘I don’t know’.”
Keep in mind, Stevens has threatened to quit before. Just a couple of months ago, when Congress decided it was embarrassed by funding for the “road to nowhere” in Alaska, Stevens said he’d quit if lawmakers pulled the money for the bridge.
What I’m not entirely clear on is why Stevens thinks this is such a devastating threat. We’re talking about the senator who won’t swear in CEOs, who has an ethical cloud having over his head, who threatens scientists who disagree with him, and who described himself as a “mean, miserable SOB.”
Does Stevens expect his colleagues to beg him to stay?