acroyear: (news)
[personal profile] acroyear
  1. lieberman is right and the voters want a moderate who's willing to put partisan politics aside
  2. lieberman's wrong and the liberal voters in the state want more direct representation than they had in him, someone willing to take on the president
  3. lieberman's wrong and partisan politics will explode - he'll split the democrat vote between the "always vote democrat" and his own supporters and the republican will take the seat.
The cynic in me is betting on #3, particularly if the (ultra-)conservatives get a rallying open vote on the table the way gay marriage worked in several other states.

it seems, people love to be discriminatory if they can do so anonymously, which is exactly how these amendment votes manage to work...

question: if he wins as an independent, is he still an independent when it comes to senate majority/minority rules, committee memberships, etc?

Date: 2006-08-09 09:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rsteachout.livejournal.com
In all likelihood, he'll be counted as a Dem and treated as such since he didn't betray the Party and has been a party supporter for most things. Politicians who switch parties after the election may be treated like poison by their former collegues and but can rely on their new party to come through with the pay-off for their switch. On the other hands, Jeffords -- who ditched his party but did not formally embrace the opposition party even though he caucussed with them -- only got the minimum he was promised before the switch. In fact, when one of the committees was reorganized after the Republicans had regained the Senate that Jeffords had taken from them, the Dems asked the Repubs if they were going to give one of their positions to the "independent" (i.e. Jeffords) The rebuff quickly came: "If you want him on the committee give him one of *your* positions. He's getting nothing from us." Jeffords lost a lot more than he gained. Not only did he lose committees and positions, the Dems refused to back the Milk Compact -- his signature legislation for re-election -- something the Republicans had always supported in order to keep him on their side.

Profile

acroyear: (Default)
Joe's Ancient Jottings

January 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
56789 1011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 29th, 2026 06:12 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios