Harry Reid's History Lesson 

Harry Reid compares the fight for health-care reform to the emancipation and 
women's suffrage movements.

By JOHN FUND 

Majority Leader Harry Reid tarred opponents of his health care bill yesterday 
as the equivalent of those who opposed equal rights for women and civil rights 
for blacks.

In a remarkable statement on the Senate floor, Mr. Reid lambasted Republicans 
for wanting to "slow down" on health care. "You think you've heard these same 
excuses before? You're right," he said. "In this country there were those who 
dug in their heels and said, 'Slow down, it's too early. Let's wait. Things 
aren't bad enough' -- about slavery. When women wanted to vote, [they said] 
'Slow down, there will be a better day to do that -- the day isn't quite right. 
. . .'"

He wrapped up his remarks as follows: "When this body was on the verge of 
guaranteeing equal civil rights to everyone regardless of the color of their 
skin, some senators resorted to the same filibuster threats that we hear today."

Senator Reid's comments were quickly condemned. "Hyperbole. It is over the top. 
It reminds me of earlier people talking about Nazis," said Juan Williams of NPR 
and Fox News, author of "Eyes on the Prize," a definitive history of the civil 
rights movement.

Historians also faulted Mr. Reid's curious reference to the Senate civil rights 
debates of the 1960s. After all, it was Southern Democrats who mounted an 
83-day filibuster of the 1964 Civil Rights Bill. The final vote to cut off 
debate saw 29 Senators in opposition, 80% of them Democrats. Among those voting 
to block the civil rights bill was West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd, who 
personally filibustered the bill for 14 hours. The next year he also opposed 
the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Mr. Byrd still sits in the Senate, and indeed 
preceded Mr. Reid as his party's majority leader until he stepped down from 
that role in 1989.

The final reason Mr. Reid's comments were so inapt and offensive is that the 
battles for women's suffrage and civil rights he referred to were about 
expanding freedom. That's not what the 2,074-page health care bill being 
debated in the Senate today does, with its 118 new regulatory boards and 
commissions. Mr. Reid may reach his needed 60 votes to pass his bill this 
month, but he is pursuing it using the most tawdry and deplorable of tactics.


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