Posted on 04/27/2008 4:00:49 AM PDT by MitchellC
[Printable source]
When Democrats swept the 2006 midterm elections, several freshman House Democrats won on conservative platforms. A number of these so-called "Blue Dog" Democrats hail from districts that President Bush carried at least once. But the House belongs to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, not to Bush, and the Blue Dogs have caught on quickly.
On almost every issue, the freshman Blue Dogs have failed to advance their campaign agendas, which were carefully tailored to their moderate constituencies. From the war on terror, to taxes and the budget, to immigration and free trade, the Blue Dogs may talk tough, but they're more Yorkie than German Shepherd when confronted with Pelosi's iron grip.
One would think the Blue Dog coalition, with its 48 members, would have more sway in a House in which Democrats have only a 36-seat edge over Republicans. Instead, after initial bursts of rhetoric contrary to Pelosi's positions, most of them caved to the party leadership, even when that meant stepping out of alignment with their districts.
The fate of these freshmen this November is yet to be determined, but they aren't breathing easy. Twelve of the 13 are listed on the Cook Political Report's most recent "competitive races" chart. Note that a heavy contingent--8 of the 13--represent key swing states: Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, and Florida. Six are competing in districts Cook classifies as "likely Democratic" (Joe Donnelly, IN-2; Brad Ellsworth, IN-8; Michael Arcuri, NY-24; former NFL quarterback Heath Shuler, NC-11; Zack Space, OH-18; and Iraq war veteran Patrick Murphy, PA-8). Four are running in "lean Democratic" districts (Tim Mahoney, FL-16; Baron Hill, IN-9; Kirsten Gillibrand, NY-20; and Gabrielle Giffords, AZ-8). Two are in the "toss up" category (Chris Carney, PA-10, and Nick Lampson, TX-22). Cook deemed only one freshman Blue Dog safe (Charles Wilson, OH-6). In addition, Arcuri, Carney, Gillibrand, Giffords, Hill, Lampson, Mahoney, and Murphy were named in a leaked memo of 24 districts targeted by the National Republican Congressional Committee.
When it comes to the war on terror, the Blue Dogs folded on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) after a half-hearted attempt to stand their ground. On January 28, 21 Blue Dogs sent a letter to Pelosi asking her to move on the Senate's bill before some provisions expired. The letter outlined what should be included in the final legislation, notably immunity for telecommunications companies that cooperated with the government after the September 11 attacks by providing surveillance information. Failure to pass such a measure, the letter concluded, "could place our national security at undue risk."
But in the end, they toed the party line. The final House version of the bill, which did not include immunity for telecoms, passed on March 14, by a vote of 213 to 197. Fourteen of the signers voted for it. Carney and Shuler were the only two freshman Blue Dogs who stood by their convictions. Lampson, who didn't sign the original letter, also voted against it.
FISA has become a "point of contention," said one Republican staffer, who predicts Republicans will have a "great amount of success" with the issue in moderate districts. In fact, the Defense of Democracies Action Fund started running radio spots in early April against Rep. Jim Matheson (UT-2), who signed the letter and then voted for Pelosi's bill, as well as TV ads in other states home to some freshman Blue Dogs.
The House Democrats' fiscal 2009 budget, which passed by a slim margin (212 to 207) on March 13, was $22.4 billion in excess of President Bush's request. "It's the same budget from last year with more spending piled on," absent reforms on earmarks and entitlements, said a Republican House aide.
The Blue Dogs "feel like they're an important part" of the budget outcome, one Democratic staffer told me in mid-March. But seven freshmen--Donnelly, Ellsworth, Giffords, Hill, Lampson, Murphy, and Shuler--thought twice about their constituents' response and voted "no." The only substantive Blue Dog agenda item adopted in the 2009 House budget was pay-as-you-go rules to offset spending. The Bush tax cuts, valued at about $683 billion, are not renewed under the plan, and a new $70 billion tax to pay for a patch to the alternative minimum tax is implemented, something Blue Dogs tout as an accomplishment.
But last year, Republicans managed to get an AMT patch passed without any offsets, at the time a $50 billion violation of pay-go, because of its popularity in the Senate, where it passed 88 to 5. Ultimately, 10 of the 13 freshman Blue Dogs voted for the patch without pay-go provisions; only Shuler, Hill, and Murphy held firm. The same thing may happen this year. Just last Thursday, the House and Senate budget chairs met with Blue Dogs to discuss alternatives in order to get final budget passage.
On free trade, the Blue Dogs went along with Pelosi's desire to bury the Colombia trade pact--which had been negotiated with House Ways and Means chairman Charlie Rangel at the table--by eliminating the mandatory up-or-down vote under fast-track authority privileges. A floor vote would have forced Democrats to go on record, but a vote to prevent the vote is just as revealing. On April 10, the measure passed, 224 to 195. Just three freshman Blue Dogs--Hill, Lampson, and Mahoney--bucked Pelosi's action.
Even a Washington Post editorial took House Democrats to task: "Economically, it should be a no-brainer--especially at a time of rising U.S. joblessness. . . . Politically, too, the agreement is in the American interest, as a reward to a friendly, democratic government."
Last, the Blue Dogs are not making progress on immigration reform, the sleeper issue of the 2006 elections. The one exception: Heath Shuler proposed a comprehensive plan to beef up border security with 8,000 new border agents and new technology, expand the E-Verify program to all employers to check employees' legal status, and add more Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and training.
Pelosi will not put his bill on the agenda, so Republicans are trying to get a majority of representatives to sign a discharge petition, moving the bill directly to the floor. To date, 186 of the required 218 representatives have signed the petition.
But the freshman Blue Dogs are not coming to the aid of one of their own. Only Carney, Donnelly, Ellsworth, and Lampson have added their names. Arcuri, Gillibrand, Hill, Murphy, and Space have cosponsored the bill but have yet to support the discharge petition.
"Politically this could be very perilous for them," said Antonia Ferrier, communications director for minority whip Roy Blunt. Either they look too weak to stand up to the leadership, or they are out of sync with their districts and really aren't conservative, she added.
In just four short months, the Blue Dogs have helped kill a key national security program, as well as a free trade agreement that's been in the works for over two years; welcomed the largest tax increase in history; and left immigration reform to languish indefinitely. House Republicans will still have an uphill election battle, but if the Blue Dogs keep up this pace, the hill won't be as steep.
Whitney Blake is a business reporter for the Washington Examiner.
Freepmail or ping me on the thread to be added to the John Armor for Congress ping list.
I LOVE the way dems work, as can be seen in the FISA bill (and just about anything else that liberals have done throughout history)...
Step 1) Compel a person or corporation to do something... Often against their own interests.
Step 2) When things go bad, as they usually will when libs think them up, make the person or corporation legally and fiscally liable for the results.
Step 3) Turn the trial lawyers loose on the person or corporation. All the while, demonizing them in press. Claim that the industry is taking advantage of the weakest and least of us. Propose a tax payer “bail-out.” Maybe even try to make a case for nationalizing the industry.
Liberals believe that the only thing that matters are intentions, NOT the results. And since they meant well, they shouldn’t be responsible for the results, since the “ends” didn’t turn out the way the liberals had hoped.
Mark
It really doesn't say much for conservatives when they keep falling for pitches like these from Democrats. It should be common knowledge at this point that a vote for any Democrat at any level of government is a vote that empowers socialism and everything else we hate.
William Jefferson....please pick up the courtesy phone
Vote them out and elect conservatives WITH spines to stand up to Fancy Nancy.
Interesting. I hope you look into helping out with the GOP candidate in your district.
The “blue dog” bull shiite is another aspect of the damage done by the fools who “just couldn’t vote for my Republican congressman because there is a gay Republican in Florida” or “ I can’t vote Republican this year because Bob Ney and Randy Cunningham are crooks.”
Well we certainly did have a gay GOPer in Florida and Ney and Cunningham were crooks who are now in the can, but now we have the worst congress in our lifetime. Thanks jerks.
It's the job of the RNC and the congressional campaign committee, to advertise to the public that pretensions of moderation by any Democrat is a fraud on the public.
Problem is, the RiNO's don't want to politick to conservative voters at all, which is why Rahm Emanuel's "phony-moderate" election scheme worked in the first place.
Too bad we are stuck with yet another appeaser like McCain. He is no better than the worst of the blue dogs on any given day.
We desperately need RR II,a David Petraeus,Mitt or Fred, anyone but McCain.
Oh and don't be surprised if Metro boy Charlie Crist "magically" become VP!! That was always the deal. Crist brought us McCain.
Its not conservatives, its right wing populists, aka cultural populists.
The dems have a good strategy of re-uniting the cultural and economic populists as "moral populists".
Even Huckabee said that he could re-unite them as GOP voters.
I donated some cash to them because of that ad. If other GOP state organizations or candidates follow suit, I will donate to them as well.
If the Blue Dogs really want some clout, they should switch to GOP.
That is what ruined the party. Infiltration of Democraps into the party because they know they can't win as Democraps. Now you have a party that is no different than the Democraps, which is why they are loosing.
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