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Go Home Scott Brown, Still the Fulcrum of American Politics

JONATHAN CHAIT JULY 13, 2010

Scott Brown, Still the Fulcrum of American Politics

[Guest post by Noam Scheiber:]

Mike Allen turns up one more example of Sen. Scott Brown's outsize influence today:

Brown (R-Mass.) holds the key to yet another bill -- the DISCLOSE act, in response to the Citizens United ruling. Brown is increasingly seen as the make-or-break vote: The path to 60 goes through him. A Democratic aide says: “This, more than any vote he’s taken so far, will prove whether Senator Brown is the independent-minded reformer he has claimed to be.” A letter to Brown from groups supporting the bill: “You can play a pivotal role in enacting strong and effective new campaign finance disclosure laws, which have been made essential by the Citizens United decision.”

This seems like a much closer call for Brown than financial reform, for which he announced his support yesterday. On the one hand, the polling on Citizens United was pretty negative in the immediate aftermath of the decision (which is to say, people didn't want the campaign finance law weakened). On the other hand, Americans have historically not gotten so worked up about campaign finance reform, and I don't see it having the same salience as financial reform in this fall's elections. If I had to guess, knowing nothing about Brown's views on campaign finance, I'd say Brown will oppose the measure, having established his populist bona fides with the financial reform bill. That would fit his general pattern of tacking to the middle on the highest-profile issues while taking care of wealthy interests where he can get away with it. (I described this in my piece on Brown yesterday.) But obviously that's just a guess at this point.

P.S. I should have linked to this blog item by Marty Peretz in my piece. He was first to the Brown party at this publication, and has been absolutely correct, to my mind, in his warnings that Democrats underestimate Brown at their peril.

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Thank you for a fine post, Noam.

- liberal reformer

July 13, 2010 at 10:55pm

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I think we can thank Russ Feingold for making Scott Brown the fulcrum, at least on financial reform. The strong Volcker rule was in place - all we needed was for Russ to step up. If he had shown some flexibility, HE would have been the fulcrum and a much stronger financial reform bill would already be in effect. But he didn't. So Obama and Reid had to turn to Brown - who required a weaker Volcker rule and caused the delay in eventual approval because he insisted that the smaller banks pay the burden of the fees to support the costs of the bill. Thanks, Russ! Another example of progressives ending up with a further watered down 'good' in search of the never attainable perfect. Gore isn't progressive enough - let's support Nader. And we end up with W. The health care reform bill doesn't punish health insurers enough - let's insist on a public option (no matter how weak) or we won't support it. Never mind that health care reform has been the great white whale of liberalism for 50 years! Fuck it! It's not progressive enough. Thank God nearly all congressional progressives came to their senses and saved health care reform in the end.

- RobertW

July 14, 2010 at 12:17am

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