Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Senate Republicans Betray Public

To the absolute surprise of no sentient being, Republicans again put expediency over principle, even a principle they once espoused.

My local TV "news" channel features some Howdy Doody head political commentator who said the measure did not pass the Senate, failing once again to mention Republicans filibustered the bill, denying it an up and down vote, some of the same Republicans who under the Cheney administration cried and wept and rent their clothes over the unfairness of Democrats using filibusters.

Exists there a stornger word than hypocrite?



See also  http://www.salon.com/2012/07/17/gop_filibusters_for_secret_money/ and http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/bill-moyers/44377/presto-the-disclose-act-disappears.

[Republicans in the U.S. Senate voted unanimously Monday and again on Tuesday to block adoption of the Disclose Act, Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse’s legislation to require disclosure of political donations of more than $10,000 within 24 hours of the money being spent. The votes were no less remarkable for having been predictable.

For years, congressional Republicans had vowed that disclosure of donations and spending was the one sure route to an honest campaign-finance system. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, the field general who for two decades has organized the party’s attacks on campaign-finance regulation, including the McCain-Feingold reforms, once spoke eloquently of the sanctity of the First Amendment and of the merits of disclosure.

What’s more, because McConnell in the 1990s had also come around to opposing constitutional amendments against flag burning, he had credibility as a First Amendment champion.

Democrats have often supported Rube-Goldberg-inspired campaign-finance regulations, some based on a conviction that all political money is bad, others based on the belief that only the way their opponents raise money is bad. The Disclose Act, by contrast, is a fairly straightforward effort to subject political donations to sunlight, and keep the political bagmen at bay. It’s what Republicans for years had said they wanted.] emphasis added

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