Posted on 04/25/2015 11:04:26 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Mitch McConnell is building the case that this Senate is much more productive than the last one.
The Kentucky Republican, who ascended to majority leader after repeatedly ripping the Democratic-led Senate as dysfunctional, has to show that the GOP can govern. If he falls short of that goal, Democrats will likely win back Senate control in 2016.
McConnell and his Republican conference got off to a rocky start to the year as they bickered with House GOP lawmakers, most notably over tying funding for the Department of Homeland Security to immigration policy.
But now, Senate Republicans are on a bit of a roll.
Republican senators say McConnell passed an important leadership test this week by reaching a compromise on a long-stalled anti-human-trafficking bill, allowing him to claim another legislative accomplishment in his first 100-plus days in charge. Last week, President Obama signed a Medicare doc fix bill after the Senate passed it 92-8. And GOP leaders have recently trumpeted bipartisan deals on trade, education and reviewing the Obama administrations nuclear deal with Iran.
Securing the votes on the trafficking bill, which first stalled on the floor in March, wasnt easy. It was initially a noncontroversial measure but quickly became embroiled in a fight over abortion.
McConnell played hardball, saying on CBSs Face the Nation last month that he wouldnt seek a floor vote on attorney general nominee Loretta Lynch until the trafficking bill cleared the upper chamber.
After weeks of posturing and finger-pointing with Senate Democrats and the White House, senators struck a deal on the abortion language Tuesday.
Yeah, Im happy with [the deal], he told reporters Tuesday when asked about his strategy of holding up Lynch.
We needed to finish the trafficking bill; its an important bill, he added.
The Senate on Wednesday will vote on amendments to the trafficking legislation before passing the underlying bill. McConnell will then call for a vote on Lynch, who has the votes to be confirmed as Eric Holders replacement.
Its likely that McConnell will cite the trafficking legislation when he makes his case next year that the Senate GOP majority deserves to stay in power. In 2016, Republicans will have to defend 24 Senate seats, while Democrats have to defend 10.
Behind the scenes, some Republican senators urged McConnell not to compromise on abortion language in the bill and use it as political ammunition in 2016.
There was some concern. People were asking, Why are we compromising on this? We should instead take this abortion issue theyre blocking right at them and talk about the federal funding of abortion, said a GOP senator who requested anonymity to discuss his colleagues objections.
Its a political strategy then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) routinely employed last year. He would bring bills to the floor that had little chance of passing, such as an increase in the federal minimum wage, for the purpose of drawing a contrast between Democratic and Republican candidates come election time.
Reid preferred forcing Republicans to vote up or down instead of opening legislation to rewriting and amendments on the floor.
Whats harder to do is to figure out how to put the pieces together to move something on the floor. It requires some compromise. It requires some consensus building, the GOP senator added.
McConnell tapped Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas), a member of the Judiciary Committee, to hammer out the latest compromise with Democrats.
The Judiciary Committee initially passed the legislation with bipartisan support, but Democrats said they voted for it only because they overlooked a provision they argued would have expanded the Hyde Amendments prohibition against using federal funds to pay for abortions.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a prominent centrist, said he didnt have a problem with the Republican language, but many liberals in his caucus saw it differently.
I was fine with it. It didnt make any sense to me, but they wanted to make sure that the majority of the caucus, a very vocal part of the caucus, was going to be heard, he said of Democratic leadership. Manchin has not been shy in publicly criticizing Reid, who is retiring at the end of this Congress.
Many Republicans thought Reid and other Democrats were using the abortion language as an excuse to block the trafficking bill and slow down the GOP agenda.
The Democrats were responding to their political base with regards to the substance of it, but I think it was also about who runs the Senate. And the Democrats are still trying to run the Senate, said Senate Republican Conference Chairman John Thune (S.D.), the third-ranking member of the GOP leadership.
Thune acknowledged that overcoming Democratic opposition burned valuable time off the Senate calendar. However, he argued it also fulfilled McConnells campaign-year promise of getting the Senate back to the business of legislating.
It took some time off the clock, but I think we as a majority have to figure out how to get things across the finish line, and ultimately Mitchs persistence paid off, he said.
McConnell said Tuesday that rank-and-file Democrats have thanked him privately.
I think the way the Senates being run is very positive, with a significant number of Democrats who have come over to me frequently and say, Thank you for changing the way the Senate is operating, he said.
Senate Republicans note they passed a budget resolution before Congresss April recess that they are now attempting to merge with the House-passed version.
They are also highlighting the passage of a dozen bipartisan bills, such as the Clay Hunt Veterans Act, which improves veterans access to mental health services, as well as votes on more than 100 amendments during the first 100 days of the Senate Republican majority.
[McConnell] stated he wants to make the place work, and this is an opportunity to prove it, said Sen. Angus King (Maine), an independent who caucuses with Democrats.
The majority leader delivered a speech to the Senate at the beginning of last year in which he promised Republicans would increase the productivity of the chamber if voters gave them control.
If America is to face up to the challenges we face in the decades ahead, shell need the Senate the Founders in their wisdom intended, not the hollow shell of the Senate we have today, he said at the time.
Getting the Senate back to voting regularly on legislation hasnt been as easy as some Republicans envisioned. It took nearly a month to pass legislation approving the Keystone XL pipeline. February was consumed by the immigration fight and the White House exerting its leverage on the new GOP Congress.
While Republicans have rallied since then, they also face major tests in the coming months on reauthorizing the Export-Import Bank, renewing Patriot Act provisions and raising the debt limit.
Only April and he already gave up on 2015.
“Mitch McConnell is building the case that this Senate is much more productive than the last one.”
productive? what a farce, no one wants to see the government productive, unless it means rolling back government.
The Hill, Politico, MSNBC, Democrat publicist; is there a difference?
Oldplayer
McConnell is getting all of Obama’s work done, he wants a pat on the back
"Mitch McConnell is building the case that this Senate is much more productive than the last one."
FR: Never Accept the Premise of Your Opponents Argument
Military issues aside, given the federal governments constitutionally limited powers, both the Senate and the House should arguably be spending as much time on the golf courses as lawless Obama does.
RINO McConnell is just another example why the ill-conceived 17th Amendment should never have been ratified, state lawmakers foolishly giving up their voices in Congress by ratifying that amendment.
He deserves it. McConnell does more for him than the Democrats.
Productive???
At what - transforming the country??
“Here Lies Mitch McConnell”—he’s not waiting for that to be his epitaph. Nor old man Roberts, Cochran or Hatch.They lie whenever they get the chance.
Enacting bad law isn’t “getting things done” IMO. Personally, for the remainder of Obama’s term, all I want my elected representatives to do is override or deny whatever Obama wants, anyone he wants to help him or complete the further destruction of this country.
A simple committed contrarian NO attitude is all that I really expected.
The greatest danger to our liberties is when Congress is in session.
Let's see how well that works out for him and his corrupt minions....
And, to the GOPe, "governing" means spending.
Traitors bought and sold
Scatalogically true!
I think we may have been better off with Reid.
Es macht nichts.
So why did we put the Pubbies back in power? The cancer in DC is metastasizing. Anyone that's been there more than 5 years is officially part of the problem.
Agreed. In that situation there was at least some token opposition to the Obama agenda. Now it’s full speed ahead with McConnell leading the charge.
My congressman, Kenny Marchant, has an 80+ percent rating in Conservative Review. But I only see his face on milk cartons. He's worthless, and is a reliable vote for whenever Boehner comes calling.
Let's face it, with a couple of exceptions the Texas House delegation has been supremely disappointing.
For the sake of my children and grandson, DC needs to be blown up...figuratively.
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