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Midnight Express
When You Know Your Legislation is Unpopular, You Sneak it in
While America is Sleeping
By Mary Lynn F. Jones - The
American Prospect
September 20, 2004
The wee hours of a Friday morning tend not to be a busy time for most people.
But it’s been a very productive period for House Republicans, who passed six
bills during that time in 2003.
Democratic Representative Sherrod Brown cataloged the list of legislation passed
between midnight and 6 a.m. on Fridays last year for a St. Louis Post-Dispatch
column recently. Many of these bills passed by just a handful of votes. The
measures cut veterans’ benefits as well as Head Start funding and secured $87
billion for Iraq. At 5:55 a.m. on a Saturday, the House passed a
prescription-drug bill. As Brown noted, it’s convenient to approve measures in
the first hours of a Friday morning because coverage is relegated to the
Saturday morning papers.
Brown told me that it wasn’t this way when Democrats ran the House, or even when
Newt Gingrich was speaker. But, he added, “None of this is a surprise -- it’s
taken to a level no one has ever seen.”
And it certainly didn’t end in 2004.
On September 15, House Democrats, including Brown, held a news conference
introducing a resolution of inquiry to force the administration to release
Medicare drug-cost estimates that were withheld from Congress. (Keeping with the
Friday tradition, the administration announced a huge increase in Medicare
premiums late on the Friday before Labor Day, a time when Americans are
traditionally not focused on politics.) Also on September 15, Representative Joe
Barton, who heads the House Energy and Commerce Committee, refused to allow
Democrats to make opening statements or offer amendments to a bill that seeks to
make it easier to learn the names of those on Vice President Cheney’s energy
task force.
“Every move made by the Republicans has to do with corporate contributions,”
especially those from energy and drug companies, Brown told me. “It’s all a
nicely woven circle.” The companies write the bill, Republicans include
subsidies that help the companies, and then the companies make contributions to
GOP campaigns, he explained.
It’s not as if Barton -- who hails from Texas and was the star of a “Texas Honky
Tonk for Joe Barton” party thrown by corporate contributors at the Republican
national convention -- didn’t know what he was doing. He admitted that he was
breaking with tradition by not allowing Democrats to give their statements and
said he hoped it was the “last time this happens.” The measure was reported out
of committee unfavorably along party lines. Democratic Representative Jan
Schakowsky got applause when she called, “Shame on you, Mr. Chairman” while
casting her vote. Democratic Representative Henry Waxman left the room.
On September 13, Democratic Representatives David Obey and George Miller
complained that Republicans had altered their amendment on overtime regulations
on the Clerk of the House Web site to make it less appealing, according to
CongressDaily. In a letter to House Speaker Dennis Hastert, they said the change
“was clearly an effort to manipulate sentiment against the amendment prior to
the vote, and create false legislative history.”
While the amendment passed the House -- one of Democrats’ few legislative
victories this year -- it won’t become law. House Republicans have said that
they will strip the amendment from any bill that goes to President Bush. As
Miller said in a floor speech on September 13, “Even though a majority of the
House voted to stop the president’s overtime pay cut, the president’s allies
here will try to prevent the majority will of the House from prevailing.”
Not that House Republicans are too concerned about the will of the people.
They’re spending time talking about a constitutional amendment to ban gay
marriage and CBS News’ broadcast of questionable documents concerning Bush’s
National Guard service. What they’re not spending time on is oversight,
including asking tough questions of Tom Scully, the former head of the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid who lied about the true cost of the drug plan.
“You would think that Congress would be outraged,” House Minority Leader Nancy
Pelosi said during a September 15 press conference. “It really is a corrosion of
the ethical standards of the United States, in addition to being delinquent in
fulfilling its responsibilities to the American people.”
Mary Lynn F. Jones is online editor of The Hill. Her column on
Capitol Hill politics runs each week.
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