LaxRef wrote:Jana wrote:I watched the interview, and it was wierd that Craig justified staying in the Senate because Idaho "earned" the seniority of his 30 years in office. So....longevity equals a free pass on pleading guilty to soliciting for a type of sex he publicly opposes, in a public bathroom? Come on...
If you're going to outlaw hypocrisy, you're gonna have to kick them all out!
Well, not ALL of them -- there are good, decent public servants of both parties serving Washington.
But to me there is no greater example of hypocrisy than that "Contract for America" campaign ploy which helped sweep the Republicans into the majority in the House of Representatives and the contract's author, Newt Gingrich, to the Speakership in 1994. The #1 item on that GOP list was Term Limits. Newt and his fellow party faithful all argued strongly that one of the great evils of our representative government was having men and women serve for decades and decades and becoming "drunk with power" (a phrase Newt would use repeatedly on talk radio and tv appearances). From the very beginning, I was one who argued this was a terible idea -- that we already HAD term limits in this country, and that they were called
elections. Why force out all effective public servants because of a few bad apples? I argued that by instituting term limits we also increasing the actual power of unelected staffers who would then have to lead "rookies" until they learned how D.C. actually worked. I also believed that the ardor this "Class of '94" held for term limits only existed because it was well-entrenched
Democrats they wanted to get rid of.
One member of that Frosh class of Representatives was George Nethercutt (R-Washington) from here in my adopted state. Nethercutt ran against and defeated then-Speaker Tom Foley, running basically on one issue -- term limits. Foley had served too long, Nethercutt argued, and that was bad for the people of Spokane, bad for Washington state and bad for America. I was one of those from the beginning who questioned Nethercutt's sincerity, and argued this 13 years ago. I'll bet when it is his OWN term being limited, those like me said, that he will conveniently "change his mind". When pressed on this publicly by local Spokane newspapers, Nethercutt held firm, stated his was a firm and principled belief, and he then made a solemn, public pledge to everyone he would serve no more than three terms in office.
Well of course George was re-elected three times, and then when it was time to live up to his "solemn vow" the guy OF COURSE changed his mind! EXACTLY as I and others predicted. "I changed my mind," Nethercutt argued recently. "I was wrong about term limits and now I know better. What's so wrong with that?"
Hypocrisy, sayeth I! Read more about it here:
http://econ161.berkeley.edu/Politics/Ra ... rcutt.html
Some of his very own Republican backers, who helped put Nethercutt in office, feel betrayed by this hypocrisy. The political action committee U.S. Term Limits, who funded Nethercutt's initial run against Foley, gave money to try to defeat him in 2000. The quotes from Republicans like Bill Bennett in the article above are more damning than anything a dyed-in-the-wool liberal like me could ever say.
PS Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb) is retiring at the end of '08 because he says he vowed to serve no more than two terms in the Senate and he is a man of his word. Good for you Chuck! I respect this guy tremendously, but wish he would run for re-election as he has been one of the only independent-minded members of his party in DC who doesn't march in lock-step with the President.