By W. James Antle, III on 1.16.09 @ 6:09AM
While the Democrats flex their muscles, Republicans try to learn
how to just say no.
Just days before "change" comes to Washington, Capitol Hill
Democrats are already sounding a discordant note. Senate
Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein was briefly
off-message when President-elect Barack Obama chose Leon
Panetta as his new head of the CIA. Key Democrats have balked at
the tax cuts in Obama's stimulus plan and the House has already
voted to pare them down. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
pointedly told Roll Call, "I don't work for Barack Obama
-- I work with him."
How well Democratic congressional leaders, eager to flex their
muscles after eight years of George W. Bush, actually work with
the new president remains to be seen. If recent history is any
guide, it is perfectly understandable why Obama might prefer to
have dinner at George Will's house. "Don't you expect for
Democrats to act like Republicans," House Majority Whip James
Clyburn told Bloomberg News. "Democrats will be Democrats."
And Republicans will be Republicans, it seems. Already leading
GOP legislators seem ill at ease in the role of loyal opposition.
Take for example the confirmation hearings of Hillary Clinton.
The conservative case against Hillary is nothing new --
Whitewater, Travelgate, her conduct on the Watergate Committee
staff, and countless other Clinton scandals well known to
faithful readers -- and her credentials for being secretary of
state are, one might say, thin.
Yet when the Senate Foreign Relations Committee held hearings on
her nomination, Republicans could muster little more than a few
questions about donors to Bill Clinton's well-endowed foundation.
Every Republican on the committee except for one -- Sen. David
Vitter of Louisiana -- voted to advance her nomination. Some
conservatives outside of Congress reacted to Obama's choice of
Hillary as if it were a
positive sign about the direction of his administration.
For Republicans, this is nothing new. When Bill Clinton nominated
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a former chief litigator of the ACLU's
women's rights project (giving some hint as to where she might
stand on the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade), to the
Supreme Court, Republican leaders like Sen. Orrin Hatch praised
the choice. Only three Republicans -- conservatives Jesse Helms,
Don Nickles, and Bob Smith -- voted against her confirmation.
Ginsburg went on to become arguably the most liberal member of
the Supreme Court.
A case could be made that senators should respect a president's
right to appoint qualified judges, regardless of party
affiliation. Whatever her constitutional and political views,
Ginsburg possessed solid legal qualifications. Unfortunately,
ever since the Senate rejected Robert Bork over twenty years ago,
it has been clear that any Republican senator who takes this
approach is practicing the political equivalent of unilateral
disarmament.
Why? Because, as Congressman Clyburn would put it, Democrats will
be Democrats. President Bush's nominees John Roberts and Samuel
Alito were supremely well qualified for seats on the nation's
highest court. Half the Democrats in the Senate voted against the
mild-mannered Roberts. Alito, whose conservatism was somewhat
better documented, won just four Democratic votes. All of the
Democrats who voted for Alito came from red states, like most of
the Democrats who voted for Clarence Thomas in 1991.
Republicans often don't take matters of moral and constitutional
principle like Roe v. Wade as seriously as their
Democratic counterparts do. That's why Democratic presidential
candidates habitually promise to make Roe a litmus test
for their major judicial nominees while GOP nominees usually
decline to do so. Democrats, on the other hand, will pick fights
with presidents of their own party to preserve the power of their
committee chairmanships more readily than some conservative
Republicans will fight on issues like Roe.
There are exceptions, of course. House Minority Leader John
Boehner is showing signs that he won't simply sign off on a
stimulus package regardless of content or price tag. "Oh my God,"
he stammered in response to Appropriation Committee Chairman
David Obey's $825 billion handiwork. Unfortunately, the
Democratic leadership has taken away much of the Republican
minority's ability to reshape legislation by restricting motions
to recommit and add amendments to bills. Democratic committee
chairs have also been freed of term limits.
Despite their tough talk, congressional Democrats will probably
turn out to be fairly eager to please Obama. Dianne Feinstein
quickly backed away from her early skepticism about Panetta as
CIA director,
announcing "all systems are go." And Republicans do face a
difficult task in finding their footing as an opposition party --
rejected by the country in the last two elections and faced with
a new chief executive with positive approval ratings, it won't be
easy to find ways to constructively oppose the Obama
administration without appearing obstructionist.
There might be one good way to learn, however: watch the
Democrats being Democrats.
topics:
Harry Reid, John Boehner, Supreme Court, Congress