One of the measures of successful politicians is how much legislation they author, sponsor, and pass. Since the activities can be counted, the more a legislator does, the more he can claim to be “doing something” to justify his reelection.
So it must be frustrating for all the Senators who desperately want to “do something” when colleagues in their own party insist on larding unpopular policies into bills that would otherwise sail through the process. Though the main energy bill claims enough support to pass, Senators John Kerry (D-MA) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA) are blocking it because its centrist supporters refuse to include the Environmental Left’s demands for cap-and-trade. When asked to present the cap-and-tax language as a stand-alone amendment, Kerry and Boxer balked because they don’t have the 60 votes to attach it.
Who can blame them? After the large scale corruption of the legislative process to pass ObamaCare, why wouldn’t a Democratic lawmaker think that rules only apply to Republicans?
Happily, adding text to the United States Code isn’t everyone’s definition of a good legislator. Senators like Jim DeMint (R-SC) and Tom Coburn (R-OK) pride themselves on reducing the word count of the nation’s legal regime. Less law means less room for bureaucrats to expand their reach. Let’s hope the Democrats’ insatiable demand for more government continues to be an obstacle to passing any new laws.
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