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Politics : View from the Center and Left -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dale Baker who wrote (2508)7/29/2005 4:15:28 PM
From: Suma  Respond to of 542088
 
Under the Cover of Darkness

There is a reason some votes are not called until the dead of night. Everyone
knew the House vote on the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) was
going to be a close one. "As the showdown neared, the sales effort became more
intense. It included a personal appeal by [President] Bush and Vice President
Dick Cheney, who were whisked to the Capitol by motorcade Wednesday morning to
ask House Republicans to support the president's legislative priorities." The
vote began a couple minutes after 11:00pm. "When the usual 15-minute voting
period expired at 11:17 p.m.," the nays had won by a mere 5 votes. But
proponents of the bill, who had made it clear that they were willing to do
"whatever they need to do to get" passage of the legislation, were not ready to
admit defeat. Employing a tactic that Vice President Dick Cheney once called
"the greatest abuse of democracy," House Republican leaders held the vote open
for an additional 47 minutes. During this time, they worked furiously to round
up votes, browbeating representatives in a manner reminiscent of the 2003
Medicare vote. One representative -- Rep. Charles Boustany (R-LA) -- was brought
into the Republican cloakroom where no less than the president himself gave him
the hard sell via cellular telephone. In the waning hours of the morning, the
House passed CAFTA by a vote of 217 to 215.

STICKS AND CARROTS: "Administration officials and Republican leaders made it
known that they were willing to negotiate side agreements and consider special
requests to win votes." After "the president's unusual appearance on Capitol
Hill, followed up with private telephone calls to wavering members...highway
projects were dangled before undecided lawmakers, as well as assignments on
top-shelf committees." Like the set of "Let's Make a Deal," Republican leaders
"told their rank and file that if they wanted anything, now was the time to
ask...and members took advantage of the opportunity by requesting such things as
fundraising appearances by Cheney and the restoration of money the White House
has tried to cut from agriculture programs. Lawmakers also said many of the
favors bestowed in exchange for votes will be tucked into the huge energy and
highway bills that Congress is scheduled to pass this week before leaving for
the August recess." House Majority Whip Roy Blunt (R-MS) admitted "'it didn't
hurt' that Congress was putting the finishing touches on a federal highway bill
at the same time that the House was voting on CAFTA. 'It's certainly not beyond
the realm of possibility' that lawmakers would tie their votes on CAFTA to
getting certain projects in the highway bill, Blunt said." One observer noted,
"If they voted their conscience, CAFTA would fail by 50 votes in the House.

TAYLOR-ING THE VOTE: Perhaps "one of the strangest votes" came from Rep. Charles
H. Taylor (R-NC) who had "vowed to vote against the pact." Yet, "as the minutes
ticked by, Mr. Taylor was one of only two members recorded as not voting." On
Thursday, Taylor claimed, "Due to an error, my 'no' vote did not record on the
voting machine. The clerk's computer logs verified that I had attempted to vote,
but it did not show my 'nay.'" One of Taylor's constituents was left wondering,
"I would maintain with 63 minutes to vote and so much attention paid to who had
voted, there's no way it went unnoticed who hadn't voted. If it was a very, very
important vote to him, which it should have been, then you look up at the board
and make sure your vote registered correctly." Taylor claims that he would seek
to have the error corrected in the House logs.

THE EPITOME OF A FLIP-FLOP: The case of how Rep. Robin Hayes (R-NC) voted is
much more clear cut. Similar to Taylor, in the weeks preceding the CAFTA vote,
Rep. Robin Hayes (R-NC) "was colorfully adamant in his opposition" declaring,
"I know there is no way I could vote for CAFTA." When "the clock ran out on
CAFTA late Wednesday night, with the measure apparently headed to a 214-210
defeat," Hayes had delivered on his promise. He had voted no. But, according to
Hayes, House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) then approached him with a simple
offer for a vote switch: "Negotiations are open. Put on the table the things
that your district and people need, and we'll get them." It apparently was an
offer he couldn't refuse. Just as he did with his 2001 Trade Promotion Authority
vote -- when "leaders had been forced to ask a teary-eyed Hayes to switch his
vote" -- Hayes acquiesced, changing from a nay to an aye.

THE POLICY OF FEAR: Unable to sell the pact on its own merits, "Bush
administration officials dispatched to sell the idea to reluctant lawmakers said
the stakes went beyond a newly opened market in a region...They used a national
security argument, saying that rejecting the deal would impoverish the region
and undermine new and fragile democracies. Instability and poverty would drive
people north and increase the flow of illegal immigrants into the United
States." Lacking both a national security policy and an immigration policy,
President Bush is now trying to present trade policy as a three for one deal.

DANCING WITH DELAY IN THE PALE MOONLIGHT: Several representatives remarked on
how the CAFTA vote reminded them of the wheelings and dealings of the 2003
Medicare bill. That was the legislation with which Majority Leader Tom DeLay
broke House rules by trying to buy a fellow congressman's vote. In a 62-page
report, the House Ethics Committee found DeLay in fact offered to endorse the
congressional bid of Rep. Nick Smith's son in exchange for the lawmaker's vote
on the Medicare prescription drug bill -- a direct violation of House rules
which state, "it is improper for a member to offer or link support for the
personal interests of another member as part of quid pro quo to achieve a
legislative goal." There are indications that similar tactics were employed in
trying to get CAFTA passed and some representatives are debating filing ethics
charges



To: Dale Baker who wrote (2508)8/3/2005 1:07:30 AM
From: TimF  Respond to of 542088
 
A lot of conservatives don't like it.

Its more pork than it is a principled conservative bill.