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Senate Democrats Should Ditch Their Leader

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  • Senate Democrats Should Ditch Their Leader

    SENATE DEMOCRATS SHOULD DITCH THEIR LEADER
    By Jurek Martin

    FT
    September 28 2010 19:44

    Harry Reid should lose his job. By that, I do not mean as the
    US senator from Nevada, because his defeat by Sharron Angle, the
    Republican Tea Party darling, in November would be an insult to the
    intelligence of all with half a brain. But his time as the Democratic
    leader in the "world's greatest deliberative (but dysfunctional)
    body" needs to come to an end.

    Consider what has been happening on his watch in the last week alone.

    It makes no sense for the US not to have an ambassador in Azerbaijan,
    a sensitive corner of the world, especially when there is a highly
    qualified professional diplomat, not some used car dealer fat cat,
    named for the job. But a senator up for re-election from the state
    where expatriate Armenians, who do not like Azeris, most congregate
    has put the nomination on hold.

    But his nomination also stands in limbo because another senator,
    who does not have to run again until 2014, will not allow it to be
    considered until the government drops its temporary ban on off-shore
    oil drilling.

    Both these senators are Democrats - Barbara Boxer of California
    and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana - and both ignore Senator Reid with
    impunity. It is also suspected that Ms Boxer prevailed on him not to
    bring up for a vote, before the midterm elections, the contentious
    measures that would extend the Bush tax cuts for the middle class
    though not for the richest Americans.

    Even those with half a brain could be excused for thinking this was
    a no-brainer as an election issue for the Democrats, one that could
    rally the discontented faithful and put Republicans in the awkward
    position of filibustering a proposal that would benefit the many at
    the expense of the few.

    The House of Representatives stands ready to pass such a bill;
    President Barack Obama wants it enacted. But the Senate is the black
    hole into which even good ideas disappear without trace or, if they
    finally do emerge, like healthcare reform and financial deregulation,
    do so in highly compromised form. And Mr Reid has consigned the tax
    bill to a lame-duck session after the elections, when he is likely
    to have fewer votes than he does now. I cannot figure this out.

    The dysfunction of the Senate reflects many factors, all explored in a
    searing article in The New Yorker this summer by George Packer. They
    include outright Republican obstructionism, which, enabled by
    obscure Senate rules and procedures such as filibusters and "holds" on
    nominations, translates into the tyranny of the minority. The demise of
    moderate Republicans willing to cross the aisle has not helped either.

    But the Democrats in the chamber have just as much to answer for,
    too many of them in hock to their own special interests and too many
    seeming to think they should be president, on the Obama principle.

    Certainly, too few identify with the man in the White House, especially
    if, as this year, he cannot guarantee their re-election.

    It should be soup and nuts for a strong majority leader to navigate
    such choppy waters. But Mr Reid forever thinks small, delegating where
    he should direct, deferential to a fault to party colleagues like Max
    Baucus on healthcare and Chris Dodd on financial deregulation, whose
    own leadership has been found sorely wanting in their supposed areas
    of expertise. Whatever else may be said of her, much of it unkind,
    Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House of Representatives, at least knows
    how to crack whips.

    Last week, Mr Reid could not even get the defence spending bill
    passed, not because of opposition to funding the military but because
    he insisted on attaching to the bill two hot button issues - to end
    discrimination against gays serving in uniform and, in the "Dream
    Act", to give the children of illegal immigrants access to education
    and a path to citizenship through military service.

    Both are worthy causes but the Christmas tree method he employed almost
    guaranteed uniform Republican opposition, exemplified by John McCain
    in his grumpy old man mode, and Democratic defections. Indeed, given
    the burgeoning Hispanic population in Nevada, you could be excused
    for thinking he had his own re-election mostly in mind.

    The quality of the Senate, in both parties, has rarely been lower,
    but the Democrats, whether in majority or minority, can do better. A
    personal shortlist to succeed Mr Reid would include Dick Durbin
    of Illinois, Carl Levin of Michigan and the two Rhode Islanders,
    Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, serious men all - but not, under
    any circumstances, Charles Schumer of New York, though he doubtless
    covets it.

    If there is no shake-up at the top, then talent lower down the Senate
    Democratic ranks, like the Udall cousins from New Mexico and Colorado
    and Al Franken from Minnesota, will walk away from national politics,
    disillusioned by the experience. You could hardly blame them.




    From: A. Papazian
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