Matt Taibbi’s piece in Rolling Stone is as depressing as it is important. It’s more than just a must-read article, it’s also a must-remember look at how the political process works (or in this case, doesn’t) in Washington.
The pitch is straightforward enough: Taibbi spent a month in Rep. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) office, watching how legislation works its way through the Hill. Sounds like basic how-a-bill-becomes-a-law stuff, right? Wrong. As Sanders told Taibbi early on, “Nobody knows how this place is run. If they did, they’d go nuts.” He wasn’t kidding.
Like David Sirota, I think the real lesson of the article is the explanation of how Republican leaders in both chambers quietly kill popular amendments to legislation, even after they’ve been approved on the floor by lawmakers.
Taibbi takes a close look at four specific amendments, all of which were sponsored by Sanders, but the third example was particularly breathtaking.
Across the Rayburn building on the second floor, a two-page memo rolls over the fax machine in Sanders’ office. Warren Gunnels, the congressman’s legislative director, has been working the phones all day long, monitoring the Capitol Hill gossip around a vote that is to take place in the Senate later that afternoon. Now a contact of his has sent him a fax copy of an item making its way around the senatorial offices that day. Gunnels looks at the paper and laughs.
The memo appears to be printed on the official stationery of the Export-Import Bank, a federally subsidized institution whose official purpose is to lend money to overseas business ventures as a means of creating a market for U.S. exports. That’s the official mission. A less full-of-shit description of Ex-Im might describe it as a federal slush fund that gives away massive low-interest loans to companies that a) don’t need the money and b) have recently made gigantic contributions to the right people.
The afternoon Senate vote is the next act in a genuinely thrilling drama that Sanders himself started in the House a few weeks before. On June 28th, Sanders scored a stunning victory when the House voted 313-114 to approve his amendment to block a $5 billion loan by the Ex-Im Bank to Westinghouse to build four nuclear power plants in China.
The Ex-Im loan was a policy so dumb and violently opposed to American interests that lawmakers who voted for it had serious trouble coming up with a plausible excuse for approving it. In essence, the U.S. was giving $5 billion to a state-subsidized British utility (Westinghouse is a subsidiary of British Nuclear Fuels) to build up the infrastructure of our biggest trade competitor, along the way sharing advanced nuclear technology with a Chinese conglomerate that had, in the past, shared nuclear know-how with Iran and Pakistan.
I know it’s hard to imagine, but it gets worse. Read the article. Keep a bottle of Maalox handy.