House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer offered his own spin on
Democratic rules changes to end term limits for committee
chairmen and make it more difficult for Republicans to debate or
affect legislative outcomes:
Second, the rules will no longer set term limits for Committee
chairs. I understand that our Republican colleagues once wrote
term limits into the rules in an effort against entrenched
power. But it is now clear that that effort fell victim to what
conservatives like to call the law of unintended consequences:
With chairmanships up for grabs so frequently, fundraising
ability became one of the most important job qualifications,
and legislative skill was sacrificed to political
considerations.
Third, these rules limit the abuse of motions to recommit. We
invite good-faith efforts to improve legislation—and in these
hard times, we need the Republican Party to be a constructive
partner in policy making. But we all understand which motions
are not offered in good faith: Those are the motions that
attempt to kill bills through parliamentary tricks and waste
our constituents’ time on 'gotcha' politics.
Let's not waste our constituents' time while wasting their money
too! Some motions are offered in good faith; others the Democrats
disagree with.