With Republican Senators like these, who needs Democrats? - Granite Grok

With Republican Senators like these, who needs Democrats?

Judd Gregg.GOP DOA

I got an email from Arnie Arnesen the other day pointing me towards this rather telling piece about our senior Senator Judd Gregg. While she was writing in the context of whether Senator Gregg would follow through with his ongoing support of the Magic Obama and vote to pass the so-called "stimulus," ready to pour derision upon him should he not, I took it in an opposite vein. I’m looking at the fact that he’s been a "B.O." Republican (phrase from Michelle Malkin, meaning either "Barack Obama" or "bend over"– or just plain "stinky") and is apparently more than willing to stick it to conservatives as he moves forward to Lord knows what political future he has in store (which, as I write could be working for the Magic Obama himself in Commerce— an easy way to back out from a 2010 run). From FiveThirtyEight.com:

Which Senate Republicans have voted the most often with the Obama Administration so far?

Yes, the Senate is actually voting on stuff. Not a lot of stuff, but there are perhaps seven nontrivial votes for us to chew over. These include confirmation votes for Tim Geithner and Hillary Clinton, the bailout extension, both a cloture vote and an up-and-down vote the Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, and both a cloture vote and an up-and-down vote on the Omnibus Public Land Management Act.

One Republican, Olympia Snowe of Maine, has taken the administration’s position on all seven votes, as indicated by a blue square in chart below. Two, David Vitter of Louisiana and Jim DeMint of South Carolina, have gone 7-for-7 in opposing the administration (as denoted in red). A couple more thoughts follow after the graphic.

After Snowe, two Republicans have supported the administration on 6 of 7 votes: George Voinovich of Ohio and Judd Gregg of New Hampshire. Voinovich, who always ranks as among the most moderate Republicans, isn’t really a surprise, but Gregg, who has a fairly conservative voting record, perhaps is. Such are the perils of running for re-election in a state that Obama won by 10 points.

All of the Republican women voted for Ledbetter, although they’re also a fairly moderate lot with the possible exception of Kay Bailey Hutchinson; it would have been interesting to see how Elizabeth Dole would have voted on the measure. A bunch of western senators supported the administration on the Land Management vote, which may reflect regional considerations rather than partisan ones.

Susan Collins has broken with Olympia Snowe twice, on Geithner and on TARP. I don’t know if anything in particular is driving this, although Snowe has two fewer years to go until re-election.

Arlen Specter has not been particularly helpful to the administration so far, nor really has John McCain. Lamar Alexander and the two senators from Utah, somewhat surprisingly, have been on some issues.

On the Ledbetter Act, there were quite a few more votes for cloture than there were for passage, a pattern that may tend to repeat itself on other fairly popular pieces of legislation. Might that include the stimulus? I don’t know.

But overall, there aren’t too many surprises here. If there’s news, it’s that Judd Gregg may have emerged as a top-tier potential filibuster-breaking vote.

Writes Arnie,

"Gregg…Changing stripes right in front of our eyes…yep from Bush’s most reliable lackey to the most elected coward in history. I am trying to contain my revulsion at his lack of compass…"

Yep. Me too…

 

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