And please let's not forget that, in his big push 
on behalf of Clarence Thomas (a/k/a
"the best man for the job"), Specter took a big dump on Anita Hill.

The complete transcripts of those hearings are in print:

http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Transcripts-Clarence-Thomas-Anita-Hearings/dp/0897334086/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1241192991&sr=1-1

MCM

<http://www.truthout.org/042909A>
Truthout Original

It Just Doesn't Matter

Wednesday 29 April 2009

by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Columnist

http://www.truthout.org/042909A

     As the news of Arlen Specter's defection to 
the Democratic Party rolled across the news waves 
yesterday, I kept hearing Bill Murray from the 
movie "Meatballs" in my head: "It just doesn't 
matter! It just doesn't matter! It just doesn't 
matter!"

     Which is not entirely true, of course. The 
fallout after Specter woke up on the left side of 
the bed on Tuesday has been entirely 
entertaining, largely hilarious and just 
significant enough to warrant a little serious 
attention ... but that's just politics, which is 
also the entire reason Specter jumped. "I now 
find my political philosophy more in line with 
Democrats than Republicans," claimed Specter, but 
that's a lot of hooey; as a Republican, Specter 
consistently supported several of the most 
extreme right-wing pieces of legislation ever 
presented before the Senate.

     No, Specter flipped for one simple reason: He 
was facing an insurmountable primary challenge 
from his right flank, in the guise of 
conservative House member and former Club For 
Growth president Pat Toomey. Down by double 
digits in the polls, Specter did the simple math, 
figured his chances of re-election were far 
stronger if he campaigned under the Democratic 
banner, and ran into the waiting arms of his 
colleagues across the ideological aisle.

     For the GOP and its supporters, the defection 
brings yet another shock to an already decimated 
Republican system; this was rough news for them 
and no mistake about it. A parade of long 
Republican faces and clenched Republican jaws 
have been marching across television screen since 
the announcement to denounce Specter, the 
Democrats, President Obama, and pretty much 
anything else that came into their sight.

     "A lot of people said, well Specter, take 
McCain with you, and his daughter," growled Rush 
Limbaugh after the news came out. RNC Chairman 
Michael Steel said in a statement, "Let's be 
honest. Senator Specter didn't leave the GOP 
based on principles of any kind. He left to 
further his personal political interests because 
he knew that he was going to lose a Republican 
primary due to his left-wing voting record."

     With Specter's departure, goes the media 
refrain, the last vestiges of so-called 
"moderate" Republicanism are on the verge of 
being swept away entirely. But is Arlen Specter 
actually a moderate, and does his departure 
actually change anything? "Consider Specter's 
most significant votes over the last eight 
years," wrote Salon's Glenn Greenwald on Tuesday, 
"ones cast in favor of such definitive right-wing 
measures as: the war on Iraq, the Military 
Commissions Act, Patriot Act renewal, 
confirmation of virtually every controversial 
Bush appointee, retroactive telecom immunity, 
warrantless eavesdropping expansions, and Bush 
tax cuts (several times). Time and again during 
the Bush era, Specter stood with Republicans on 
the most controversial and consequential issues."

     "Arlen Specter," continued Greenwald, "is one 
of the worst, most soul-less, most belief-free 
individuals in politics. The moment most vividly 
illustrating what Specter is: prior to the vote 
on the Military Commissions Act of 2006, he went 
to the floor of the Senate and said what the bill 
'seeks to do is set back basic rights by some 900 
years' and is 'patently unconstitutional on its 
face.' He then proceeded to vote YES on the 
bill's passage."

     Specter's ideological inconsistency even 
extends to the act of switching parties, as 
evidenced by his reaction when James Jeffords 
(I-Vermont) dumped the GOP in 2001 and briefly 
handed majority control of the Senate to the 
Democrats. "Specter said then-Vermont Sen. Jim 
Jeffords' decision to become an independent was 
disruptive to the functioning of Congress," 
reported The Los Angeles Times on Wednesday. "He 
proposed a rule forbidding party switches that 
had the effect of vaulting the minority to 
majority status in the middle of a congressional 
session. ' If somebody wants to change parties, 
they can do that,' Specter said at the time. 'But 
that kind of instability is not good for 
governance of the country and the Senate.'"

     Pretty funny stuff right there.

     The supposedly big deal for Democrats is the 
fact that, once Al Franken finally wends his way 
past Republican roadblocks and takes his 
Minnesota Senate seat, the addition of Specter to 
the Democratic caucus lifts their majority to the 
much-ballyhooed number 60, which is the number of 
votes needed to thwart GOP filibusters and pass 
legislation unimpeded. This would seem to be an 
important victory for the Democrats - for the 
first time in 30 years, one party controls the 
White House and Congress with a supermajority in 
the Senate - but really, it's just a little more 
theater for the masses to enjoy and the media to 
misinterpret.

     "While the move would create what is likely 
to be the Senate's 60th Democratic vote, 
potentially enough to withstand Republican 
filibusters," reported The Boston Globe on 
Wednesday, "it would not necessarily change the 
chamber's legislative dynamics. Democratic 
successes at expanding their caucus have made it 
less unified ideologically, and Specter - one of 
only three Republicans in Congress to back 
Obama's $787 billion economic stimulus bill - 
said he expected to defy his new party as readily 
as he did his old one."

     Thus, the idea that Democrats have achieved 
some lofty threshold of power is almost entirely 
chimerical; Specter is no more likely to caucus 
with the Democrats just because he is one than he 
was likely to caucus with the GOP back when he 
had an "R" after his last name. Even if Specter 
took some kind of blood oath to always provide 
that 60th vote for the Democratic caucus, the 
threshold itself is largely a media/right-wing 
confabulation.

     For decades, the filibuster was considered a 
weapon of last resort; the use or threatened use 
usually only came into play when the Senate had a 
controversial Supreme Court nominee up for 
consideration. During George W. Bush's reign of 
error, the Republican-controlled Congress was 
able to pass all kinds of insanely 
anti-constitutional legislation between 2002 and 
2006 needing just a simple majority to win, 
because the Democrats never took the filibuster 
club out of their bag.

     Only when majority power in Congress changed 
hands after the '06 midterms did the filibuster 
become a daily part of governance on Capitol 
Hill, because the GOP used it against everything 
that moved. The news media, with its absolute 
lack of context and inability to remember 
anything more than a day old, has acted and 
spoken ever since with the incorrect idea that 
only a 60-vote majority can get anything done in 
the Senate. This is simply nonsense.

     No, the Democrats have had the power to pass 
just about whatever they want with 51 votes ever 
since 2006, but have only recently begun to make 
noises about doing so now that health care reform 
is on the table. President Obama, unwilling to 
deal with the 60-vote-threshold fiction, is 
pushing his allies in the Senate to do away with 
the rules that give a 41-member minority the 
power to gum up the works. Senate Democrats could 
have done this three years ago, and adding 
Specter to the equation does not change that 
arithmetic one bit.

     Besides, what does it say about a Democratic 
Party that is so willing to embrace a former 
Republican who has voted with the far right on so 
many occasions? "The idea that Specter is a 
'liberal' Republican or even a 'moderate' 
reflects how far to the Right both the GOP and 
our overall political spectrum has shifted," 
continued Glenn Greenwald on Tuesday. "Reports 
today suggest that Democratic officials promised 
Specter that the party establishment would 
support him, rather than a real Democrat, in a 
primary. If true, few events more vividly 
illustrate the complete lack of core beliefs of 
Democratic leaders, as well as the rapidly 
diminishing differences between the parties. Why 
would Democrats want a full-blooded Republican 
representing them in the blue state of 
Pennsylvania? Specter is highly likely to reprise 
the Joe Lieberman role for Democrats: a 
'Democrat' who leads the way in criticizing and 
blocking Democratic initiatives, forcing the 
party still further towards Republican policies."

     Senators Bayh, McCaskill, Nelson, Lieberman 
and now Specter represent a core problem within 
the ranks of the Democratic majority in the 
Senate. These individuals amount to a cadre of 
faux-"centrists" who have been, and likely will 
continue to be, the main line of resistance 
against Obama's legislative agenda and the 
improved welfare of the American people. They are 
the ones most empowered when everyone 
inaccurately believes the Democrats need 60 votes 
to pass anything. The annihilation of this 
fiction will go a long way toward removing these 
obstacles from the path of progress. Let them 
vote their consciences, if they have such a 
thing, without allowing them to hold the entire 
process hostage.

     But then again, maybe that fiction can be 
made into something useful in the end. Franken 
will be seated sooner or later, and that 60-vote 
supermajority will be reached. Once that happens, 
the Democratic majority will have no more excuses 
for failing to do what needs to be done. That, in 
the end, may prove to be the most important part 
of Specter's defection. But in the main, and 
despite all the noisy political theater, it 
really just doesn't matter. Yet.

ยป

William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and 
internationally bestselling author of two books: 
"War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to 
Know" and "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence." His 
newest book, "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on 
War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation," is 
now available from PoliPointPress.
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