Breaking: 9/11 first responders bill passed by Senate, heads to House

AZ BlueMeanie

Posted by AzBlueMeanie: You did it! You shamed Republicans into voting for the 9/11 first responders bill. Deal reached on aid package for 9/11 responders: Advertisement After a last-minute compromise, the Senate passed legislation Wednesday to provide up to $4.2 billion in new aid to survivors of the September 2001 terrorism attack on the World Trade Center … Read more

Action Alert: 9/11 first responders bill cloture vote today

AZ BlueMeanie

Posted by AzBlueMeanie: When the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010 came up for a vote a couple of weeks ago, all forty-two Senate Republicans voted to block the bill designed to provide health care for the men and women who rushed to "ground zero" more than nine years ago, and who … Read more

DADT repeal the law of the land

David Safier

by David Safier Obama just signed the DADT repeal into law. The civil rights baton was passed to him, and he ran with it. Let's hope he carries it further during his term before passing it on to the next runner.

Sen. Arlen Specter’s “Closing Argument”

AZ BlueMeanie

Posted by AzBlueMeanie:

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rage at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
– Dylan Thomas

You really didn't think that "Snarlin' Arlen" Specter would go gently into that good night, did you? On Tuesday, Specter delivered his farewell address to the U.S. Senate which he termed his "closing argument" (he is a former prosecutor). Specter laid out a damning indictment of movement conservatism and the damage it has inflicted upon this country, and at the same time sounded a clarion call to moderate Republicans to to take back the Republican Party from these right-wing radical extremists. Are you listening?

The best video I could find is this segment from the Ed Show with an interview of Sen. Specter.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

The transcript of Sen. Specter's prepared remarks are here. Text of Sen. Specter’s ‘Closing Argument’ | Philadelphia Inquirer (highlights):

This is not a farewell address, but rather a closing argument to a jury of my colleagues and the American people outlining my views on how the Senate – and with it, the Federal Government — arrived at its current condition of partisan gridlock, and my suggestions of where we go from here on that pressing problem and key issues of national and international importance.

* * *

The days of lively debate with many members on the floor are long gone. Abuse of Senate rules has pretty much stripped senators of the right to offer amendments. The modern filibuster requires only a threat and no talking. So the Senate's dominant activity for more than a decade has been the virtually continuous drone of the quorum call.

But that is not the way it was when I was privileged to enter the world's greatest deliberative body 30 years ago. Senators on both sides of the aisle engaged in collegial debate and found ways to find common ground on the nation's pressing problems. When I attended my first Republican moderates luncheon, I met Mark Hatfield, John Chaffee, Ted Stevens, Mac Mathias, Bob Stafford, Bob Packwood, Chuck Percy, Bill Cohen, Warren Rudman, Alan Simpson, Jack Danforth, John Warner, Nancy Kassenbaum, Slade Gorton, and others-a far cry from later years when the moderates could fit into a telephone booth. On the other side of the aisle, I found many Democratic senators willing to move to the center to craft legislation: Scoop Jackson, Joe Biden, Dan Inouye, Lloyd Bentsen, Fritz Hollings, Pat Leahy, Dale Bumpers, David Boren, Russell Long, Pat Moynihan, George Mitchell, Sam Nunn, Gary Hart, Bill Bradley, and others.

They were carrying on the Senate's glorious tradition.

* * *

Next, Congress should act to try to stop the Supreme Court from further eroding the Constitutional mandate of separation of power. The Court has been eating Congress's lunch by invalidating legislation with judicial activism after nominees commit under oath in confirmation proceedings to respect Congressional fact finding and precedents. The recent decision in Citizens United is illustrative. Ignoring a massive Congressional record and reversing recent decisions, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito repudiated their confirmation testimony and provided the key votes to permit corporations and unions to secretly pay for political advertising – effectively undermining the basic democratic principle of the power of one person/one vote. Roberts promised to just call balls and strikes and then moved the bases.

* * *

Congress's response is necessarily limited in recognition of the importance of judicial independence as the foundation of the rule of law. Congress could at least require televising the court proceedings to provide some transparency to inform the public about how the Court is the final word on the cutting issues of the day in our society. Brandeis was right that sunlight is the best disinfectant.

* * *

Congress has the authority to legislate on this subject just as Congress decides other administrative matters like what cases the Court must hear, time limits for decisions, the number of justices, the day the Court convenes and the number for a quorum. While television cannot provide a definitive answer, it could be significant and may be the most that can be done consistent with life tenure and judicial independence.

* * *

And now let me shift gears – in my view, a principle reason for the historic stature of the United States Senate has been the ability of any Senator to offer virtually any amendment at virtually any time. The Senate Chamber provides the forum for unlimited debate with the potential to acquaint the people of America and the world about innovative proposals on public policy and have a vote on the issue.

Regrettably, that has changed in recent years because of abuse of the Senate rules by both parties. The Senate rules allow the Majority Leader, through his right of first recognition, to offer up a series of amendments to prevent any other senator from offering an amendment. That had been done infrequently up until about a decade ago and lately has become a common practice by both parties.

By precluding other Senators from offering amendments, the Majority Leader protects his party colleagues from taking tough votes. Never mind that we were sent here and paid to make tough votes. The inevitable and understandable consequence of that practice has been the filibuster. If a Senator cannot offer an amendment, why vote to cut off debate and go to final passage? Senators were willing to accept the will of the majority in rejecting their amendments, but unwilling to accept being railroaded to concluding a bill without an opportunity to modify it. That practice led to an indignant, determined minority to filibuster and deny the 60 votes necessary to cut off debate. Two years ago on the Senate floor, I called the practice "tyrannical". 

No Virginia, 23% of high school students did NOT fail Army entrance test

David Safier

by David Safier Nominations are still open for the worst Star headline of the year. The Creative Headline Writing Team is  burning the midnight oil, working right up to the December 31 deadline to create new, awful headlines. This one is a humdinger: 23% of high school grads fail Army entrance test Wow. You mean … Read more

Um, Mr. Fischer, I think there are some Democrats left in Arizona

David Safier

by David Safier Anyone else see a pattern here? As I posted earlier, when Howie Fischer wrote an article about Pearce and Adams raising the specter of people on the Redistricting nominating committee being anti-Christian, he didn't bother to ask any Democrats to comment. And Democratic legislators had plenty to say. Today, Fischer has an … Read more

Today’s Tea Party may be more like the revolutionary version than I thought

David Safier

by David Safier Was the original Tea Party, the one that threw 90,000 pounds of British tea in the Boston Harbor in 1773, actually a ploy by merchants who were smuggling Dutch tea into the colonies to preserve their profits? If so, today's Tea Partiers, who are so often doing the bidding of the business-friendly … Read more

Voted Arizona’s Best Political Blog
by the Washington Post and Google’s FeedSpot

latest Event from thedgt.ORG

Upcoming community Events

Bluesky