I’ve mentioned before that I’m willing to cut senators, from both parties, quite a bit of slack for missing votes during their presidential campaign. It’s tough to hold down a day job while running for president.
But if a sitting senator is going to miss a lot of time while out on the campaign trail, he or she should be careful to avoid two things: 1) complain about others not spending enough time on Capitol Hill; and 2) pretend he/she hasn’t missed a lot of votes.
Accordingly, I don’t much care that John McCain is blowing off his Senate duties; I do care that he’s being so dumb about it.
Last week, McCain, who hasn’t cast a vote in four months and who has a worse attendance record than Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.), who took months off to recover from a brain hemorrhage, complained that lawmakers shouldn’t take an August recess.
This week, he insisted he hasn’t missed key votes.
“I have a long record of that support of alternate energy,” McCain said, adding, “I’ve always been for all of those and I have not missed any crucial vote.”
I guess it depends on the meaning of the word “crucial.”
Satyam set the record straight.
In July alone, he missed every single energy vote brought to the floor. This session, McCain has skipped votes supporting renewable energy tax credits four times, all of which were filibustered. In June, for example, McCain missed a vote on the landmark Lieberman-Warner climate change legislation.
McCain has also been the “crucial” absent vote on key legislation. In December, legislation stripping tax break giveaways to Big Oil and investing in cleaner sources failed by one vote, 59-40 (Vote #425); McCain missed that vote to campaign. In February, McCain skipped a vote on extending tax credits to renewables, which also failed by one vote (Vote #8). Both times, McCain was the only senator absent.
Thomas Friedman devoted an entire column to the subject this week. (Indeed, McCain’s response was to a question regarding Friedman’s piece.)
It was only five days earlier, on July 30, that the Senate was voting for the eighth time in the past year on a broad, vitally important bill — S. 3335 — that would have extended the investment tax credits for installing solar energy and the production tax credits for building wind turbines and other energy-efficiency systems.
Both the wind and solar industries depend on these credits — which expire in December — to scale their businesses and become competitive with coal, oil and natural gas. Unlike offshore drilling, these credits could have an immediate impact on America’s energy profile.
Senator McCain did not show up for the crucial vote on July 30
, and the renewable energy bill was defeated for the eighth time. In fact, John McCain has a perfect record on this renewable energy legislation. He has missed all eight votes over the last year — which effectively counts as a no vote each time. Once, he was even in the Senate and wouldn’t leave his office to vote.
Again, if McCain wants to forgo his Senate duties, I’m inclined to understand. It’s much harder, though, to accept his blatant dishonesty about it.