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Senate's Dr. Pain
Townhall.com ^ | April 28, 2005 | Robert Novak

Posted on 04/28/2005 4:36:05 AM PDT by Tom D.

Senate's Dr. Pain

April 28, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Dr. Tom Coburn, a U.S. senator from Oklahoma for less than four months, last week was up to old tricks he started playing in the House a decade ago. He was making colleagues' lives miserable by exposing wasteful, unnecessary spending that is supposed to stay hidden. The Senate establishment, like its House counterpart, has retaliated by bringing ethics charges against the obstetrician-senator for going home to Muskogee, Okla., to deliver babies.

In a legislative body whose members spend much of their time off the Senate floor begging for money, it is worthy of Kafka that the only pending ethical proceeding involves Coburn's concept of the citizen-legislator. It is serious. Unless the rules are changed, Coburn must either break his campaign pledge of continuing baby deliveries or leave the Senate.

His early departure from the Senate would occasion rejoicing there, as he showed April 20. Not observing a freshman senator's customary silent period, he proposed reducing the $592 million for a new U.S. embassy in Baghdad provided by the emergency supplemental appropriations bill. Coburn argued that since only $106 million could be spent over the next two years, "we are going to have $486 million hanging out there that will be rescinded and spent on something else." Instead of settling for the usual voice vote, Coburn insisted on a roll call (which he lost by only 54 to 45).

The Oklahoma Republican establishment thought it was finished with Coburn when he fulfilled his term-limit pledge and left Congress after three-terms, ending in 2000. His subsequent memoir showed his contempt for Capitol Hill mores. When a Senate seat opened for the 2004 election, Coburn withstood vicious attacks in both the Republican primary and general election campaign.

On Dec. 2, 2004, a Senate staffer handed Sen.-elect Coburn's chief-of-staff a letter signed by Sen. George Voinovich, the Senate Ethics Committee's Republican chairman, and Sen. Harry Reid, then the committee's ranking Democrat. The letter ordered Coburn to stop practicing medicine.

The staffer was no stranger to the new senator: Robert L. Walker, staff director of the Senate Ethics Committee. He had held the same post for the House Ethics Committee the year after it made the same demand in 1998. House rules were not as firm, and the Ethics Committee backed down in 1998 when Coburn made clear he would quit Congress before he quit medicine. But Senate rules prohibit "substantial" outside income.

During six years in the House, Coburn's campaign against pork-barrel spending made him anathema to Republican leaders. He planned a lower profile in the Senate, but the ethics complaint made that impossible. He also had an agenda ensuring him more attention than ordinary freshmen: bringing free market principles to health care, oversight of federal programs (as chairman of the Federal Financial Management Subcommittee) and assaulting congressional pork. For the first time since Phil Gramm left the Senate, Sen. John McCain had an anti-pork partner.

In the April 20 debate on the supplemental appropriations bill, Coburn was the only senator to support McCain against Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, who was mandating that a $40 million project go to a "Philadelphia-based company." "I believe this is the wrong way we should be doing things," Coburn told the Senate. "We need to stop. Our future depends on the integrity of a budgeting and appropriations process that is not based on politics but is based on having the future best will for our country."

It is hard to exaggerate how much Coburn's rhetoric riles pork-loving colleagues, explaining the absurd ethics proceeding against him. In answering charges that he is a part-time senator, Coburn wrote constituents last week that he will continue to "devote at least 60-70 hours per week to my Senate duties." Other senators spend as much time as Coburn back home but mainly for fund-raising. They are not stopped from padding their bankrolls with book royalties, farm income and investments.

With little chance Voinovich will bury the complaint in the Ethics Committee, Coburn can hope that the Senate Rules Committee under Chairman Trent Lott will save the Senate from embarrassment by amending the rule. What is sure is that Tom Coburn will neither yield nor shut up.

©2005 Creators Syndicate, Inc.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Oklahoma
KEYWORDS: 109th; govwatch; novak; tomcoburn; ussenate
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Everyone of us who is represented by a Republican Senator ought to write that senator today to protest this buncombe.
1 posted on 04/28/2005 4:36:05 AM PDT by Tom D.
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To: Torie

Coburn in the senate is akin to dousing vampires with Holy Water.


2 posted on 04/28/2005 4:42:16 AM PDT by jwalsh07
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To: Tom D.

Typical.

Silence the truth-teller, in order to maintain "business as usual". I am totally SICK of our "elected" ruling class.


3 posted on 04/28/2005 4:43:34 AM PDT by clee1 (We use 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 2 to pull a trigger. I'm lazy and I'm tired of smiling.)
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To: Tom D.
I like Senator Coburn, we need more like him!

Every Republican and citizen who loves his country should support Senator Cuburn and those like him!

4 posted on 04/28/2005 4:43:36 AM PDT by RAY (They that do right are all heroes!)
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To: PhiKapMom; OKSooner
Perhaps of interest.
5 posted on 04/28/2005 4:57:00 AM PDT by Joe Brower (The Constitution defines Conservatism. *NRA*)
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To: Tom D.; Howlin

Coburn should up the ante by continuing his practice, however directing that all his fees be allocated to a war chest to campaign against Reid and the rest of the pork-barrelers.

...And aren't there laws on the books protecting WHISTLEBLOWERS?!?


6 posted on 04/28/2005 4:58:23 AM PDT by The Spirit Of Allegiance (ATTN. MARXIST RED MSM: I RESENT your "RED STATE" switcheroo using our ELECTORAL MAP as PROPAGANDA!)
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To: Tom D.
If, and it is a big if, the Senate rule is "no significant outside income" than he can just do the deliveries for cost or pro bono. Or he can give the money to a Charity.

Either way he then generates no "significant" outside income. Pro bono or giving to Charity is good enough for the PGA, why not the Senate?
7 posted on 04/28/2005 5:02:27 AM PDT by fireforeffect (A kind word and a 2x4, gets you more than just a kind word.)
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To: fireforeffect

Well, I'll go along with that if every other senator donates all of his investment income, farm income and static business income to charity. Of course that is kind of anathema to the citizen legislator deal but what the heck.


8 posted on 04/28/2005 5:13:46 AM PDT by jwalsh07
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To: fireforeffect
My somewhat fuzzy recollection is that he does not net very much money out of this deal, but he has to charge his patients otherwise he could not afford his liability insurance premiums. Apparently the "Senate Rules" do not take that into account.
9 posted on 04/28/2005 5:14:51 AM PDT by Tom D. (Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. - Benj. Franklin)
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To: Blurblogger

In an interview here in Oklahoma City, Dr. Coburn stated that the only income he will receive from his practice is to cover to cost of his overhead, salaries of those who work for him, and his malpractice insurance. He will make no money from his practice.


10 posted on 04/28/2005 5:21:28 AM PDT by ops33 (Retired USAF Senior Master Sergeant)
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To: Tom D.
The Senate is full of puffed up, self-serving egotists who think the world runs on their time.

Go, Tom, GO!!

11 posted on 04/28/2005 5:33:15 AM PDT by Gritty ("If we are willing to give up our freedom for promises, nothing can save us-Thomas Sowell)
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To: jwalsh07

I agree. Has anyone told Hillary about this rule?


12 posted on 04/28/2005 5:40:56 AM PDT by Shery (S. H. in APOland)
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To: Joe Brower; PhiKapMom; Shooter 2.5
Joe, I appreciate your objectivity here. This Novak column does a lot to explain another issue we've discussed recently. It shows that a person's integrity, and positions on issues aren't as important as their "popularity".

Dr. Coburn brings the courage of Daniel to these kinds of issues, and he just ain't gonna play the same old politics with those guys. It's a good thing he's on our side...

13 posted on 04/28/2005 5:46:57 AM PDT by OKSooner
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To: OKSooner
Yes, Coburn is a man who subscribes to the old idea of what a true "representative of the people" was in this country. It tells a sad tale of the sorry state of our union at this juncture that he is under attack for espousing the primary principles upon which our nation is founded.

We need more men like him. Many, many more.

14 posted on 04/28/2005 5:53:44 AM PDT by Joe Brower (The Constitution defines Conservatism. *NRA*)
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To: Joe Brower

Ditto!


15 posted on 04/28/2005 5:57:25 AM PDT by PGalt
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To: Joe Brower

Coburn is one of the few "good guys" in either party who truly believes politics is subordinate to public service.


16 posted on 04/28/2005 8:21:20 AM PDT by Texas Federalist (No matter what my work/play ratio is, I am never a dull boy.)
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To: Tom D.
I am proud to say that Sen. Tom Coburn is MY Senator!!!!


Proud member of the Oklahoma GOP!!!
17 posted on 04/28/2005 6:46:46 PM PDT by amigatec (There are no significant bugs in our software... Maybe you're not using it properly.- Bill Gates)
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To: RAY

When you call his Senate office, they answer the phone, "Dr. Tom Coburn's office."


18 posted on 05/01/2005 1:38:45 PM PDT by The Old Hoosier (Right makes might.)
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To: The Old Hoosier

LOL I love it!


19 posted on 05/10/2005 6:25:22 AM PDT by ConservativeMan55 (DON'T FIRE UNTIL YOU SEE THE WHITES OF THE CURTAINS THEY ARE WEARING ON THEIR HEADS !)
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To: amigatec
I am proud to say that Sen. Tom Coburn is MY Senator!!!! Proud member of the Oklahoma GOP!!!

Ditto!

20 posted on 05/10/2005 6:26:39 AM PDT by yellowdoghunter (FR is so popular that people repost our thoughts on different message boards! It is an honor!)
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