Originally posted by StarLord@Dec 16 2004, 01:07 AM
What say we spread the news that it is actually a beginning rather than some frightening end to fear? Good news spreads much better than bad news.
Much the same as fresh peanut butter vs old peanut butter.
WASHINGTON - With no fanfare, the U.S. House has passed a controversial doomsday provision that would allow a handful of lawmakers to run Congress if a terrorist attack or major disaster killed or incapacitated large numbers of congressmen.
? ``I think (the new rule) is terrible in a whole host of ways - first, I think it's unconstitutional,'' said Norm Ornstein, a counselor to the independent Continuity of Government Commission, a bipartisan panel created to study the issue. ``It's a very foolish thing to do, I believe, and the way in which it was done was more foolish.''
? But supporters say the rule provides a stopgap measure to allow the government to continue functioning at a time of national crisis.
? GOP House leaders pushed the provision as part of a larger rules package that drew attention instead for its proposed ethics changes, most of which were dropped.
? Usually, 218 lawmakers - a majority of the 435 members of Congress - are required to conduct House business, such as passing laws or declaring war.
? But under the new rule, a majority of living congressmen no longer will be needed to do business under ``catastrophic circumstances.''
? Instead, a majority of the congressmen able to show up at the House would be enough to conduct business, conceivably a dozen lawmakers or less.
House Republican leaders moved swiftly last week to tighten and centralize control of the new Congress by replacing uncooperative committee chairmen and changing the chamber's rules to deter ethics investigations of leaders.
The Republicans expanded their majority by only three seats in the Nov. 2 election, yet party leaders have been emboldened by GOP domination of all branches of government and appear determined to squelch dissent in their own ranks and to freeze Democrats out of key decisions.
Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) moved to force out the ethics committee chairman, Rep. Joel Hefley (R-Colo.), who supported three formal admonishments of Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) last year, and ousted the chairman of the Veterans Affairs Committee for failing to toe the party line on spending. The GOP leaders also rammed through a change in House rules to make it more difficult in the future to file an ethics complaint against DeLay or other members.
AND THE FOLLOWING FROM FURTHER IN THE ARTICLE
Democrats and some Republicans, troubled by the moves, cite parallels between today's Republicans and the Democrats who lost their 40-year hold on the House in 1994 after Gingrich and other conservatives campaigned against them as autocratic and corrupt, and gained 52 seats.
\"It took Democrats 40 years to get as arrogant as we have become in 10,\" one Republican leadership aide said.
Julian E. Zelizer, a Boston University history professor who edited the 2004 anthology \"The American Congress,\" said Republicans used the past week to \"accelerate the trend toward strong, centralized parties.\"
\"This is a move toward empowering the leadership even beyond what you saw in the 1970s and 1980s,\" Zelizer said. \"They have been going for broke.\"
Originally posted by CaryP@Jan 10 2005, 02:44 PM
Yeah, I'm feeling pretty good about the new Congress and their display of cooperation.
Cary