Senate Republicans stop ethics reform
Given the damaging role corruption played
against the GOP in the 2006 elections, one might think that Republicans would be
anxious to get on the right side of ethics reform. One would be wrong.
Yesterday, the Senate GOP voted en masse against ending debate on the Senate
ethics bill. The GOP's first
filibuster stops ethics reform.
Senate Republicans scuttled broad
legislation last night to curtail lobbyists' influence and tighten congressional
ethics rules, refusing to let the bill pass without a vote on an unrelated
measure that would give President Bush virtual line-item-veto
power.The bill could be brought
back up later this year. Indeed, Democrats will try one last time today to break
the impasse. But its unexpected collapse last night infuriated Democrats and the
government watchdog groups that had been pushing it since the lobbying scandals
that rocked the last Congress. Proponents charged that Republicans had used the
spending-control measure as a ruse to thwart ethics rules they dared not defeat
in a straight vote."It's as
obvious as the sun coming up somewhere in this world that they tried to kill
this bill," a furious Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) said last
night in an interview. "And all 21 Republican senators up for reelection are
going to have to explain how they brought down the most significant reform ever
to come before this
Congress."http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/17/AR2007011702443_pf.html
Posted: Thu - January 18, 2007 at 03:54 PM