IMPEACH BUSH
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George W. Bush"
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GOP Senate Did One Thing in 2006: Kill
Democratic Initiatives
Bob Geiger Blog December 19, 2006 Of all the nauseating tactics used by the Republican party in the 2006, midterm election campaign, one of the more galling was their continued insistence that Democrats had "no plan" for national security. To provide cover for that bogus claim, the Senate's GOP leadership made damn sure that, on September 13, 2006, they killed 528 pages of a national-security blueprint, proposed by Democrats, called the Real Security Act of 2006 -- and then went around for the next six weeks saying the Democrats had no plan. That legislation, dumped on an almost-straight party line vote, was one of many Democratic-sponsored measures to die in the Republican-controlled Senate in 2006 and part of a whopping three-quarters of Democratic initiatives squashed over the two years of the 109th Congress. An analysis of all Senate roll call votes in 2006, shows that, true to the form they established the previous year, the GOP killed most legislation proposed by Senate Democrats. In all, Democrats were able to scrape together a handful of Republican votes to pass just 28 pieces of legislation in all of 2006. There were 279 roll call votes in the second half of the 109th Congress -- January through December of this year -- and 104 votes involved measures sponsored by Democrats. Of those, 73, or 70 percent, had a negative outcome, meaning that they were rejected in an up-or-down vote or tabled/killed by the GOP majority. (And this is with a generous interpretation that gives Republicans "credit" for allowing benign, crowd-pleasers to pass, such as a Barbara Boxer amendment to punish parents who have committed incest and a measure by Barack Obama for Katrina relief, which both passed by unanimous votes.) Add the 70 percent kill-rate of the Democratic measures defeated in 2006 with the greater number beaten back by Republicans in 2005 and the GOP ends the 109th Congress having shot down 207 of 283 pieces of Democratic-sponsored legislation -- or 73 percent. There are two things that jump out when one considers the votes of the last Senate… One is that it was indeed as partisan as it appeared to those of us observing it each and every day and the deck was at all times stacked against Democrats and any legislation they tried to move forward. This was brought into specific relief when I averaged the roll call votes on all 73 times in 2006 that Democratic legislation was killed and the average numeric vote in those instances was 46-53 -- amazingly close to the exact split of 44 Democrats and 55 Republicans in the 2004-2006 Senate. How's that for a look at what results a Democratic Senator should have reasonably expected, no matter what legislation they brought to the floor? The other startling thing that becomes obvious when analyzing the votes, is the sheer number of bills related to national security or helping America's Veterans that were voted down by the Republicans -- with no substitute measures of their own -- simply because the ideas came from the other side of the aisle. Here's some examples of Democratic legislation that was killed by the Senate GOP majority in 2006:
And it goes on and on from there… We know how hard the Republicans have fought against an increase in the minimum wage, but they also came out hard against another effort by Ted Kennedy (D-MA) to increase college Pell grants and job training programs. In addition, the GOP saw to it that a measure by Jeff Bingaman (D-NM), to foster greater American fuel efficiency via "… foreign oil replacement with biofuels and alternative fuels and advanced/hybrid vehicle use" was rejected 46-54. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) lost on S. Amdt 4689 for grants to provide education on preventing teen pregnancies and Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) followed up on the Hurricane Katrina debacle by proposing S.Amdt. 4563, to re-establish the Federal Emergency Management Agency as an independent body. Apparently thinking Brownie had done a "heck of a job," the Republicans killed that as well. But Senate Republicans sure found a lot of time to get involved in the Terri Schiavo case, whip people into a frenzy over flag burning, hate on gay marriage, give more tax breaks to the wealthy and -- in what outgoing Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) cited as one of his major accomplishments -- save the Mount Soledad Cross. Let's hope this is instructive more than anything and that, by looking back at what the Republican party has not cared about for the last two years, we'll get a better sense of what we can expect now that Democrats are going to be in charge of the legislative agenda. Commentary: |
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