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Defection costs Republicans control of the US Senate
By Barry Grey
25 May 2001
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Senator James Jeffords of Vermont announced Thursday he was
quitting the Republican Party and aligning himself with the Democrats
in the upper chamber of the US Congress. While Jeffords declared
himself an independent, the effect of his defection from the Republicans
was to hand control of the Senate, previously split 50-50, to
the Democrats.
Jeffords' move ended at a stroke the Republican's monopoly
control over the executive branch and both houses of the legislature.
The Democrats will regain control of the Senate for the first
time since 1994. Republican Trent Lott of Mississippi will be
replaced as Senate majority leader by Democrat Tom Daschle of
South Dakota, and the Democrats will assume the chairmanship of
all Senate committees.
The turn of events took the Bush White House and the Republican
leadership in Congress by surprise. Bush's Chief of Staff Andrew
Card said he did not learn of Jeffords' likely defection until
Tuesday morning. It was not until Wednesday that the White House
made a concerted effort to dissuade Jeffords from bolting the
party, calling him in for separate meetings with Vice President
Dick Cheney and President Bush.
Speaking at a press conference in his home state the following
morning, Jeffords made a pointed attack on the right-wing agenda
of the Bush administration, declaring he was at odds with the
White House and the Republican congressional leadership on
very fundamental issuesthe issues of choice, the direction
of the judiciary, tax and spending decisions, missile defense,
energy and the environment, and a host of other issues, large
and small.
He placed particular emphasis on the issue of educationJeffords
chaired the Senate education committeedenouncing Bush for
refusing to allocate increased funding and abandoning his campaign
pledge to improve the schools. [The] Republican Party stood
for opportunity for all, he said, for opening the
doors of public school education to every American child. Now,
for some, success seems to be measured by the number of students
moved out of the public schools.
Jeffords said the first months of the Bush administration had
convinced him there was no room within the Republican Party for
a senator with his views. Invoking what he called a Vermont tradition
of moderate Republicanism and implying that his former party had
gone over to extremism and intolerance, he paid tribute to Vermont
Senator Ralph Flanders, whose dramatic statement 50 years
ago helped to bring the close on the McCarthy hearingsa
sorry chapter in our history.
Jeffords' move was the first instance of a change in party
affiliation directly causing control of the Senate to pass from
one party to the other. The actual changeover will be delayed
for several days, in accordance with Jeffords' promise to the
White House to wait until the administration's tax-cut bill is
signed into law before making his departure official. The bill,
a $1.3 trillion reduction in tax rates that overwhelmingly benefits
the wealthy, passed the Senate on Wednesday with the support of
twelve Democrats.
A third-term senator from the politically liberal northeastern
state of Vermont, Jeffords was one of a dwindling number of moderate
Republicans in Congress. He was long known as a maverick in the
increasingly right-wing Republican Party, having voted against
Reagan's tax cut in 1981 and supported a number of Democratic
initiatives during the Clinton presidency.
Generally conservative on fiscal questions, Jeffords has consistently
opposed the Republican leadership on such issues as abortion,
gun control, the environment and education. He was the only Republican
senator to co-sponsor Clinton's health care reform in 1993, a
measure which Clinton and the Democrats abandoned in the face
of a corporate lobbying campaign and opposition from congressional
Republicans. Jeffords was one of five Republicans to vote against
both articles of impeachment in the 1999 Senate trial of Clinton.
Jeffords came under attack from both the White House and the
Republican leadership in the Senate last month when he refused
to support Bush's original plan for $1.6 trillion in tax cuts.
His opposition in the evenly divided body forced Bush to trim
back his tax windfall for the wealthy. This provoked a vitriolic
reaction from within the Republican Party, including a public
campaign in the pages of the Wall Street Journal demanding
that Bush punish Jeffords by stripping him of his committee chairmanship
and making him an object lesson to other would-be dissidents.
Bush retaliated against Jeffords by excluding the Senate education
committee chairman from a White House ceremony where Bush presented
the award for teacher of the yearto a teacher from Jeffords'
home state. The White House then threatened to oppose a federal
program considered vital to dairy farmers in Vermont. When Jeffords
sought more money for special education programs, his request
was summarily rejected by Lott and the rest of the Republican
leadership.
The party tops apparently never imagined that their tactics
could boomerang. Their political blindness intensified the shock
and gloom in Republican ranks and prompted a flurry of recriminations.
One unnamed Republican strategist told the New York Times,
It's just amazing that they were so tone deaf. It's devastating.
Republican Senator Gordon Smith of Oregon made the wry observation
that a policy of reprisals was not particularly wise in a Senate
divided evenly between the two parties. Senator John McCain of
Arizona, who made an unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination
against George W. Bush in 2000, snapped, The lesson to the
K Street lobbyists and the Republican apparatchiks is, Don't
threaten people.' In a written statement issued Thursday
he declared, Tolerance of dissent is the hallmark of a mature
party, and it is well past time for the Republican Party to grow
up.
The small group of Republican moderates from New England was
particularly shaken. Senator Olympia Snowe of Maine said, Something
has gone terribly wrong, and added, The (Republican)
conference is crestfallen that it came to this point, that he
felt so beleaguered and alienated that he was driven to make this
kind of decision. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island let it
be known he too might consider leaving the Republican Party.
The White House sought to offset Jeffords' departure by convincing
Senator Zell Miller of Georgia, a right-wing Democrat who co-sponsored
Bush's $1.6 trillion tax cut bill, to defect to the Republican
camp, but Miller issued a statement Thursday declaring he would
remain a Democrat.
At his press conference, Jeffords noted that the US does not
have a parliamentary system, hinting that in the many countries
that do, including most of Europe, his action would have resulted
in the collapse of the government. While Thursday's events have
not toppled the Bush administration, they have highlighted its
underlying weakness and fragility.
A narrow social base
Notwithstanding the concerted campaign by the media to portray
the Bush administration as a model of competence, and the best
efforts of the Democrats to magnify its strength by forgoing any
struggle against it, the Republican administration rests on an
extremely narrow social base. It has no popular mandate for its
reactionary agenda.
Nor can the Bush administration escape the fact that it was
installed in office by judicial fiat. Not only are its social
policies widely opposed by the broad mass of the population, it
is considered, correctly, to be illegitimate and an affront to
the democratic principle of popular sovereignty.
Even elements within the right wing of the Republican Party
have acknowledged, in the aftermath of the Jeffords defection,
the weakness of the Bush administration, and urged it to take
the loss of the Senate as a warning. In a Washington Post column
published Thursday, William Kristol noted: Bush received
a half-million fewer votes than Gore last November. The two liberal
candidates, Gore and Nader, together won a clear majority. There's
nothing worse for a party, and a president, than to seem to be
in charge while lacking a genuine popular mandate for their agenda...
Kristol continued: Jeffords' defection could also provide
a useful splash of cold water for cocky Republicans intoxicated
by being back in power but (heretofore) blind to the precariousness
of their hold on power.
These remarks reflect the concerns within ruling circles that
underlie Jeffords' action. An astute bourgeois politician with
14 years in the House of Representatives and 12 years in the Senate,
Jeffords would not make such a radical move unless he was acting
in response to serious misgivings in high places over the trajectory
and competency of the Bush administration.
The ham-fisted manner in which Bush sought to deal with Republican
dissidents like Jeffords is indicative of the administration's
approach to the most complex and potentially explosive questions,
both at home and abroad. This is a government that proceeds, blindly
and recklessly, as though it could solve all problems through
the use of intimidation and brute force. It is all but oblivious
to the profound social and political contradictions of both American
life and international affairs, and the dangers that flow from
its own policies.
On the international front, in the space of four months Bush
has succeeded in poisoning relations with China and Russia, humiliating
South Korea and alarming North Korea, and alienating Washington's
allies in Europe and Japan. By giving barely concealed support
to Sharon's policies of military aggression and provocation, he
has brought the Middle East to the point of all-out war, undermining
the bourgeois Arab regimes and shattering the longer-term stability
of Israel itself.
Domestically, Bush's policy of tax reductions for the rich,
cuts in social programs and the elimination of regulations on
business is creating the conditions for economic shocks and social
upheavals.
The Bush administration and the forces that dominate the Republican
Party reflect the most backward and short-sighted sections of
American business. There are, however, other factions within the
ruling class that are more cognizant of the explosive contradictions
that lie just below the surface of American life. They would welcome
a move to bring the Democrats into a position of greater authority,
as a means of providing greater stability and a more considered
approach to the defense of American corporate interests.
The Democratic leadership has made clear its willingness to
play such a role. Given the tissue thin majority of the Republicans
in the House of Representatives, and the 50-50 split in the Senate,
the Democrats have had the parliamentary means to stymie Bush's
agenda from the outset. This would, however, require a determined
struggle, relying on Senate filibusters and similar tactics. As
a party, the Democrats have neither the political cohesion nor
the desire to conduct such a struggle. In fact, Jeffords' attack
on the policies of the Bush administration was far more forthright
than anything that has come from the Democrats.
Now that the Democrats will have a functioning majority in
the Senate, they will theoretically be in a much stronger position
to oppose the administration's policies. The party that controls
the Senate committees can bottle up virtually any measure proposed
by the White House, and the Senate majority leader sets the chamber's
agenda and timetable.
But those who believe Democratic control of the Senate will
significantly alter the trajectory of the government are in for
an unpleasant surprise. The Democrats will, in one way or another,
ensure that the bulk of Bush's agenda is enacted, including the
appointment of more right-wingers to the federal courts.
Daschle set the tone on Thursday, declaring he was committed
to work with Bush in a spirit of principled compromise.
To underscore the Democrats' compliance, Daschle and the ranking
Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Patrick Leahy of Vermont,
instructed their fellow Democrats to allow the Republicans to
bring to an immediate vote the contested nomination of anti-Clinton
conspirator Theodore Olson, Bush's choice for the post of solicitor
general.
Olson, a right-wing lawyer and central figure in the Republican
dirty tricks campaign that culminated in the impeachment of Clinton,
was caught giving false testimony during his confirmation hearing
last month. Had the Democrats even threatened a filibuster, Olson's
nomination would have been all but dead. Instead, as a peace offering
to Bush and the Republicans, the Democrats allowed the vote to
go forward and even supplied two of their own votes to put Olson
over the top.
See Also:
US Senate approves record tax cut for
the wealthy
[25 May 2001]
Democrats retreat on nomination of anti-Clinton
conspirator Theodore Olson
[23 May 2001]
Theodore Olson: a record of political
reaction and provocation
[23 May 2001]
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