Howard County Republican Party

“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.” Ronald Reagan

Home

Calendar

Contact Us

A Veteran's Message

Republican History

Party Leadership

Chairman Backs Dan Burton

GOP National Website

Don Bates, Jr. Website

Dan Burton's Website

Jackie Walorski Website

Mike Karickhoff Website

Heath Van Natter Website

Paul Wyman Website

Herrell Breaks The Rules

Special Interest Darling

Contribute To Your Party

Volunteer

Write The Newspapers

Pulse Poll

Chairman Commentary

Scott Heard Round The Wor

Number One For A Reason

Herrell/Bauer Must Go

Dyhydrogen Monoxide

Giving Away Your Money

Let Democracy Work

Our Punch Drunk President

Who Said It

On Government and Busines

Applause is Revealing

Bailouts and Conservatism

Democrat Funnies

News Busted 4/28

What Really Happened

News Busted 4/20

News Busted 4/10

News Busted 04/03

Tea Party Theme Song

Welcome to the GOP

News Busted 3/27

Obama Team Debates Crisis

Letter To Obama

News Busted March 20

Barack O and the NFL

The First 100 Days

News Busted March 13

Newsbusters

Obama's Plan

Nationalizing Mattresses

Yes We Can't

Our Founding Fathers

Letter From The Boss

Democrats on Escalator

Obama Fans Lost

Zombies

What Are You

Links We Like

Congressman Dan Burton

Burton On Cap and Trade

Burton Backs U.S. Autos

Burton Takes On AIG

Burton Urges Getrag Aid

Howey Politics Interview

National Issues

A Letter To The President

Mommy State

Acting Stupidly

Obama Vindicates Bush

Marine Corps View

Courts Make Policy

Closing The Tent

Amateur Hour

Bailouts

Bolshevik Congress

AIG Letter

Toxic Politicians

Are You Punch Drunk?

Now Come Again!

Obama Lightness

Worse Than Useless

Obama And AIG

Tax Problems Plague Obama

Follow The Money

Tea Party Update

GOP and Minorities

Steele In Hot Water

Obama's Wrong Turn

Poop To Power

White House Misfires

Taking A Dive

Irish Obama

Obama's Gamble

Sauce For The Goose

Fearmongering

Dem Unity Breaks On $$$

Will 2010 Be 1994 Repeat?

Obama Gift Gaffe

No Excuse For Socialism

State Issues

Property Tax Rally

Gov. Goes Nationwide

Stutzman Prepares Run

Clements Responds

Clements Update

Clement Fired By County

Herrell's Illegal Votes

Bauer Kills Tax Caps

Bauer Blather

A Dangerous Game

Daniels' Approval Soars

Township Reform

Don't Bet On It

Tax Cap Showdown

Tax Cap Rally

Kernan Shepherd Killed

Morton Marcus

Kernan Shepherd Supporter

Toll Road Lease Dividends

Tax Dollars Go For Lobby

House Looks At K/S

Daniels Rips House Budget

Daniels Plans For H.S.

Governor Rips Lake County

Dire Predictions

Local Issues

Mayor Plays Politics

Fire Chief: Mayor Wrong

Myers to Challenge Wyman

Buck Working On Getrag

Dunn Re-Elected Chairman

Dems Select Chairman

Indiana Legislature

Senate District 7

Senate District 21

House District 30

House District 38

County Elected Officials

Commissioner Tyler Moore

Councilman Dick Miller

Councilman Paul Wyman

Councilman James Papacek

Councilman Jeff Stout

Councilman Stan Ortman

Councilman Joe Pencek

Treasurer Martha Lake

Auditor Ann Wells

Assessor Jamie Shepherd

Recorder Linda Koontz

Sheriff Marty Talbert

Prosecutor Jim Fleming

Surveyor Dan Minor

Coroner Jay Price

City Elected Officials

City Co. Mike Karickhoff

City Co. Ralph Baer

City Co. Kevin Summers

City Co. Cindy Sanders

Tell Us What You Think

Archives

Democrat Smoking Gun

Obama Bait and Switch

2008 Elections

Sen. Bayh Blasts Budget

Rove Hammers Budget

Barack-A-Gamble

Boehner Calls For Freeze

Obama's Left Turn

The Great Pretender

Dem Unity Crumbling Over Budget Spat
Democrats Stung by Dissenters
Unity on Agenda Eludes Party Leaders

By Shailagh Murray
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 10, 2009; A01

Democratic leaders in Congress did not expect much Republican support as they pressed President Obama's ambitious legislative agenda. But the pushback they are receiving from some of their own has come as an unwelcome surprise.

As the Senate inches closer to approving a $410 billion spending bill, the internal revolt has served as a warning to party leaders pursuing Obama's far-reaching plans for health-care, energy and education reform.

Those goals, spelled out in Obama's 2010 budget blueprint, continue to enjoy broad Democratic support. But as the ideas develop into detailed legislation, they will transform from abstract objectives into a tangle of difficult trade-offs. Crop subsidies, the student loan program and Medicare radiology rules are all currently niche concerns, but any one could become the next crisis for party leaders, with the potential to derail a major agenda item. One major proposal, to limit itemized deductions for wealthy taxpayers, has already raised doubts among prominent Democrats in both chambers.

Some issues that inflamed Democrats in previous years have yet to even register, including the proposal in Obama's budget plan to "means-test" the Medicare drug benefit as a way to pay for health-care reform. Doling out entitlement benefits based on income has long been anathema to most Democrats.

"There are a lot of items in the budget that would normally get a lot more attention, if we were in a normal year," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), who heads the House Democrats' fundraising arm. "They've been eclipsed by the tidal wave of the economy." But Van Hollen added: "They are waiting in the wings."

Democrats rejected four GOP amendments to the omnibus spending bill last night, and they will face more today. The additional amendments are the price that Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) was forced to pay Thursday night after he sought to bring an end to debate on the bill and came up one vote short. Several Republicans whose support Reid had anticipated did not deliver, but the most costly defection was that of Sen. Robert Menendez (N.J.), a member of the Democratic leadership, in protest of a little-noticed Cuba provision that would ease U.S. rules on travel and imports to the communist-led island.

The Menendez rebellion was a jolt of political reality for Reid, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Obama, signaling that the solidarity of the stimulus debate is fading as Democratic lawmakers are starting to read the fine print of the bills they will wrestle with in the coming weeks and months, and not always liking what they see.

Reid had been focused on fending off a bloc of conservative Republicans who were seeking to eliminate more than 8,500 pet projects in the bill, many of them inserted by GOP lawmakers. Democratic leaders were hearing some internal grumblings, but those concerns focused largely on the bill's hefty overall price tag.

Menendez knew that his hard-line approach to Cuba was a minority view within his party, and that it was at odds with Obama's approach. But he did not expect to discover a significant policy change embedded in the text on an appropriations bill. His policy aides came across the language when the legislation was posted on a congressional Web site.

"The process by which these changes have been forced upon this body is so deeply offensive to me, and so deeply undemocratic, that it puts the omnibus appropriations package in jeopardy, in spite of all the other tremendously important funding that this bill would provide," the enraged son of Cuban immigrants said last week on the Senate floor. Menendez even slapped a hold on a pair of Obama nominees to draw attention to the issue.

Treasury officials, working with Reid's office, continued yesterday to search for an administrative resolution with Menendez that would ensure a narrow interpretation of the legislative language in order to prevent gaping loopholes from developing. Menendez has pointed out that, had the bill sought significant changes in U.S. policy toward Iran or Venezuela, lawmakers would revolt. "What's the difference with Cuba?" said Menendez spokesman Afshin Mohamadi.

By allowing Republicans to offer a total of 11 amendments last night and today, Reid was hopeful that GOP support for the bill would grow and he would not need his New Jersey colleague's vote when the bill comes to a final vote, which is expected today.

Already, a pair of provisions in Obama's budget have attracted determined, if limited, Democratic opposition. One proposal would overhaul the federal student loan program to guarantee yearly increases in the Pell Grant program. That idea enjoys broad Democratic support. But to pay for the Pell Grant expansion, Obama would end federal support for private lending. And one of the major corporate providers of student loans is NelNet, a company based in Lincoln, Neb., the home state of Sen. Ben Nelson, a moderate Democrat who balked at the stimulus package and teamed up with three moderate Republicans to cut $100 billion from the final bill. Cutting off support for NelNet would cost Nebraska about 1,000 jobs, according to Nelson's office. Nelson said the move could hurt middle-class students who do not qualify for Pell Grants. "I don't support anything that could reduce those benefits," Nelson said.

Nelson is also one of several Democrats who have objected to changes Obama has proposed in the farm subsidy system. By stopping direct payments to farms with annual sales of more than $500,000, the White House expects to save about $10 billion over 10 years. But along with Nelson, another Democratic opponent of Obama's annual-sales model is Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (N.D.).

Similar revolts are building against tax changes Obama has proposed, including one to limit deductions that many Democrats privately consider to be a non-starter. Climate-change legislation is months away from emerging, but some Democrats already worry about the political consequences of creating a cap-and-trade system that could result in higher utility bills. Some House Democrats have floated the issue of tariffs on foreign companies -- potentially an explosive trade issue -- to equalize the cost of a carbon cap.

Obama's proposal for Medicare means testing has received surprisingly little attention so far, beyond plaudits from Republicans who have supported the idea for years. The debate over an income scale was especially heated when Congress created the Medicare drug benefit, known as Part D, during President George W. Bush's first term. As a senator, Obama voted against a Medicare means-testing proposal in March 2007.

But times have changed, said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.), who also voted no two years ago. The growing consensus among Democrats that health-care costs must be contained, and that coverage must be expanded to everyone, has redrawn the battle lines. "In the past, we've dealt with Part D on its own, and that tends to be polarizing. So the thought here is, that's much less likely if people think we're all in this together," Baucus said.


Paid For By The Howard County Republican Party, Craig L. Dunn, Chairman

Craig Dunn may be reached at 765-457-1134

Website powered by Network Solutions®