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  • Small Change From Congress

    SMALL CHANGE FROM CONGRESS

    Charleston Post Courier, SC
    Jan 9 2008

    Presidential candidates from both parties promise to be agents of
    change. But it doesn't take a long memory to recall what happened
    last time voters were promised a fresh start for government. A year
    of Democratic control of Congress has produced a 10-year low in the
    public approval rating for the national legislature, but not much else.

    The new Democratic leadership's key note was struck by House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi of California, who promised change in the form of
    bipartisanship and civility, a willingness to work with President Bush
    to "end the war in Iraq," and the most ethical Congress in history.

    Something clearly happened to the first two promises along the way.

    Democrats have been harsh critics of the president. House Republicans
    complain of being shut out of the legislative process. But the biggest
    departure from bipartisanship came in the repeated failed efforts of
    congressional Democrats to tell President Bush how to run the war.

    The administration asked Ms. Pelosi not to visit Syria in April. She
    went anyway, and The Washington Post chided her for trying to act
    like an alternative president. Ms. Pelosi later promoted a resolution
    blaming Turkey for the genocide of Armenians in the early years of the
    last century. She withdrew it after bipartisan appeals not to offend
    an ally helping stabilize the Middle East. She also withdrew a bill
    restricting wiretapping of terrorist suspects because she misjudged
    support for the administration's opposition to it.

    Ms. Pelosi promised to break the link between lobbyists and legislation
    and make the earmarking process more transparent. She made it harder
    for lobbyists to entertain members of Congress, but the Post reported
    significant loopholes in the new law. Earmarking transparency was
    undermined in the omnibus appropriation passed last month by the
    insertion of spending provisions not reviewed by House or Senate.

    Ms. Pelosi had some victories. A year-end summary by The Associated
    Press listed laws to raise the minimum wage, set new fuel efficiency
    standards for motor vehicles, increase subsidies for farmers and
    authorize new water projects. She was unable to enact bills to
    raise taxes to offset changes in the alternative minimum income tax,
    roll back energy tax breaks, nearly double the size of a children's
    health insurance program and open federal funding for embryonic stem
    cell research.

    Ms. Pelosi promised change, but her achievements were small relative
    to her promises, and her way of doing business was intensely
    partisan. Maybe there's a lesson here for this year's presidential
    candidates.
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