JONATHAN COHN JANUARY 19, 2011
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For the last two years, the Senate has been the major barricade between the country and various bits of progressive legislation. Over and over again, the House would pass a bill—climate legislation, anyone?—and liberal groups would get excited, only to watch the thing get scuttled by filibusters in the Senate. (As Josh Green detailed in The Atlantic, this was a key part of Mitch McConnell's strategy to frustrate Obama and bring the GOP back to power—after all, few voters pay much attention to arcane Senate procedure.) House Democrats, particularly Nancy Pelosi, never hid their disdain for the sluggish pace of the upper chamber.
But guess who hates the Senate now? Earlier this morning, Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor kept insisting to reporters, "The Senate ought not to be a place where legislation goes into a dead end." (He said some variation of this three times.) Cantor's frustrated because the House is all set to repeal health care reform, and Harry Reid has said he's not even going to bother bringing the bill up for consideration in the still-barely-Democratic Senate. " The American people deserve a full hearing," Cantor said, "they deserve to see this legislation go to the Senate for a full vote."
2 comments
Poor, poor Republicans. Inflaming the public's passions is easy. Legislating, even repealing legislation, is hard. They have simply not done the work. The Republicans need to address the problems of the 30 million who are expected to get health insurance under the ACA, the significant fraction of Americans who have pre-existing conditions that could prevent them from obtaining coverage and the many, many small businesses which have been seeing 20+% annual increases in their premiums. They also need to honestly face the huge budget consequences of repeal. Until the Republicans do these things their repeal vote is nothing but a stunt and they deserve neither respect nor sympathy.
- aduncanson
January 19, 2011 at 11:45am
Okay, but I'd argue the Rebublicans have always hated the Senate. Why else gum up the works for bills they USED to support, until Obama came to office? If you hate something, using its rules in a completely cynical way to destroy its effectiveness doesn't bother you at all.
- AllanL5
January 19, 2011 at 12:20pm