Redstate...
The
College of Hypocritical Big
Government Cardinals
Posted by Daniel Horowitz
Wednesday, November 30th
There
is an old adage in Washington
that describes the political system as consisting of three political
parties;
Democrats, Republicans, and Appropriators.
The Appropriations Subcommittee chairmen,
often referred to as the
“College of Cardinals,” usually agree to concoct legislation that fuses
the
worst elements of the evil and stupid parties, resulting in something
worse
than a pure Democrat proposal.
This
is exactly what transpired with
the so-called minibus bill. The
Republican-controlled House passed an agriculture appropriations bill
that
breached the spending caps of their own budget, but nonetheless
remained within
the confines of the spending levels established under the Budget
Control
Act. The Senate,
after failing to pass a
budget for over 900 days, tacked on two other appropriations bills that
funded
four other departments, and sent them straight to conference committee
without
the House ever voting on two-thirds of the bill.
They added in more food stamps spending, $2.3
billion in non-offset disaster spending, and gutted all Republican
policy
riders. Then the
bipartisan College of
Cardinals went to conference committee for a compromise. This “compromise”
contained even more
spending on WIC and international food aid, and added
a provision, which was inserted into the
conference report, to expand the role of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
The
conference report passed the
House, but not after 101 Republicans opposed it, forcing leadership to
coddle
together a majority with 165 Democrats.
Now, the venerable Cardinals are really
embarrassed and are asking Boehner
to reaffirm his commitment to get the collective rumps of his caucus in
line. In an article
titled, “Cardinals
to Boehner: Crack whip,” The Hill reports on the tantrums from
anonymous
Republican appropriators.
Here
are some of the greatest hits:
“Nobody
gives their votes away here
for free around here. It just strengthens the Democrats in every
negotiation
going forward,” said a GOP lawmaker who requested anonymity, adding
that “we’ve
got some people who need to learn Politics 101. It either hasn’t been
explained
to them or they haven’t felt the need to play team ball. We don’t
discipline
much around here anymore.” [...]
“Hensarling
votes against it, Price
votes against it, two deputy whips vote against it, 101 Republicans. I
mean,
that’s not [Reps.] Jeff Flake [R-Ariz.] and Ron Paul [R-Texas] … and
the
leadership’s view is, ‘So what? We’ve got 218 with the Dems.’ Well,
that’s not
healthy,” a cardinal told The Hill. [...]
“When
I see guys at the deputy whip
table not voting for it, how about a little discipline around here?
When the
Democrats put more votes on the floor for an agreement than we do, and
we’re in
the majority?” a GOP lawmaker said.
The
exasperated members, who are a
reliable voting bloc for leadership, have told colleagues they are
“tired of
it,” according to a Republican appropriator
Let’s
get this straight. These
guys agree to negotiate with those who
never passed a budget, and gratuitously agree to a deal that House
Republicans
never got to amend and that is worse than the Senate version. Yet, it is House
conservatives who are
weakening their leverage?
It
is these supercilious Cardinals who
have taken the Dems off the ropes by granting them a free ride on
spending and
policy riders. It
is these pompous
members who will allow the Democrats to cut more from defense in order
to pay
for the higher levels of spending in the Minibus bills.
The Senate is already slated to pass a
defense appropriations bill that is $18 billion below the House bill in
order
to accommodate the extra domestic speeding.
Moreover, had Republicans rolled over on the
first minibus, it would
have paved the road for passage of more minibus bills – bills that
eliminated
provisions defunding Obamacare and Dodd-Frank, but would have denied
the House
the ability to amend them.
I
guess these conservative rebels owe
the Cardinals an apology for going along with leadership’s pledge to
oppose
bundled appropriations bills and to downside Freddie/Fannie. They didn’t realize that
you desire to use
your “leverage” to bolster the agenda of the Cardinals, instead of the
agenda
of Republicans.
Read
this and other columns at
Redstate
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