New York Times Congressional reporter Carl Hulse on Thursday paid tribute to Sen. Ted Kennedy, diagnosed earlier this week with an inoperable brain tumor, in "Kennedy: A Little Like Everyone, a Lot Like No One Else." But Hulse went beyond acknowledging Kennedy's influence as a legislator to push the famous Massachusetts' senator's big-government worldview: "And if some of his solutions cost the government some money, well, that is what the government is for." Doesn't he mean "that is what taxpayers are for"?
Congress is rife with types: the Serious Legislator, the Bomb Thrower, the Show Horse, the Workhorse, the Blowhard, the Orator, the Partisan, the Statesman, the Prima Donna, the Mentor, the Old-fashioned Pol and the Visionary.
Senator Edward M. Kennedy is the rare man who shows flashes of them all, making him a singular senator, one of the last towering figures on a stage where the players and the performances seem to be shrinking even as the problems expand.
....
Mr. Kennedy has also dared to legislate at a time when passing laws has seemed less important than scoring political points. While others nibble around the policy edges, he has in recent years taken on immigration and a major education overhaul and played a primary role in the biggest expansion of Medicare since its inception. His efforts on immigration and the Medicare prescription drug benefit in particular made some of his own Democratic colleagues nervous as they feared he was so determined to legislate that he might deprive them of a political talking point.
Mr. Kennedy, 76, may be the last of his kind for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that few people will log nearly a half-century in the Senate. Mr. Kennedy sought an exit in 1980, running unsuccessfully for president. That failure unintentionally freed him to make his mark as a legislator, having a more significant impact over a longer period than a president could.
But the culture is changing. Though this year has been an exception, ambitious politicians have not viewed the Senate as the best springboard to the White House, looking instead to governorships as they hope to avoid the Washington insider stigma.
Even those who choose Washington tend to specialize. Pursuing legislation can be tedious, time-consuming and highly frustrating. And few are willing to take the risks that Mr. Kennedy has in attacking the big topics of the day, hammering away at the injustices he sees, leaving him red-faced and shouting on the floor, his voice carrying into the surrounding hallways without benefit of C-Span. And if some of his solutions cost the government some money, well, that is what the government is for.
At least Hulse doesn't insist in calling Kennedy a "Democrat from Massachusetts" (not a liberal), as the Times usually does:
Mr. Kennedy is one of the Senate's few celebrities, yet he does not rely on that status to push his agenda. His signature skill is forging consensus on social initiatives. He is uniquely qualified to do it, a fierce liberal who has the credibility in his party to cut a deal with the opposition, and the confidence from the opposition that he will keep his word
—Clay Waters is the director of Times Watch, an MRC project tracking the New York Times.
















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Go to Michael Savage's
May 22, 2008 - 15:47 ET by marpelGo to Michael Savage's website to get the list of the Kennedy assaults on this country. As Savage said, just because this man has a horrible disease doesn't mean that we should not forget how detrimental he's been to this country.
Hulse should not mistake form for substance.
May 22, 2008 - 15:52 ET by ThalpyHulse should not mistake form for substance. Ted Kennedy's blathering didn't necessarily mean that there was something there.
And if some of his
May 22, 2008 - 16:00 ET by bigtimerAnd if some of his solutions cost the government some money, well, that is what the government is for.
Earth to Hulse...that would be us tax-payers that fund the govt. that do care you simple cradle to grave leftist.
"Never murder your opponent when he is committing suicide." ~ W. Churchill
Kennedy
May 22, 2008 - 16:40 ET by okiehawk44Can someone list the non-government jobs Edward Kennedy has held that qualify him in any way to pretend to know what "ordinary Americans" think or feel about anything? He and his siblings and his cousins and his kids and his grandkids and nieces and nephews have done nothing but live off the fortune made by old Joe Kennedy. NOTHING! Without old Joe's money none of them would have amounted to a thing. They barely can with all his money. Liars, drunks, druggies, womanizers, adulterers, child abusers, rapists, cheats, adulterers, cowards, killers etc etc etc.
ok44... He and his
May 22, 2008 - 16:47 ET by bigtimerok44...
He and his siblings and his cousins and his kids and his grandkids and nieces and nephews have done nothing but live off the fortune made by old Joe Kennedy.
Off of Old Joe Kennedy and the tax-payers out here in the good ol' USA.
As an aside what really is a kick in the butt is the majority of ol' Joe's $$$ was made illegally.
"Never murder your opponent when he is committing suicide." ~ W. Churchill
Sure Okie
May 22, 2008 - 16:52 ET by Cool ArrowDriving instructor and Lifeguard at Chappaquiddick
LYDSEXICS UNTIE!
Cool...LMAO!"Never
May 22, 2008 - 16:54 ET by bigtimerCool...
LMAO!
Btw...might want to add in Liquor inspector.
"Never murder your opponent when he is committing suicide." ~ W. Churchill
I wonder why no one in our
May 22, 2008 - 17:12 ET by Dave659I wonder why no one in our incurious media has ever asked Ted Kennedy how he reconciles his extreme left-wing positions with the essentially mainstream, pro-American, anti-communist positions of his brother, JFK.
Spending is government's
May 22, 2008 - 17:25 ET by mattmSpending is government's job in Kennedy's socialist world as long as it's for things the Constitution does not allow, and as long as it's not for the primary obligation of the government: to provide for the common defence.
I've had an unusual extra
May 22, 2008 - 18:07 ET by pepsiman127I've had an unusual extra spring in my step that started 2 or 3 days ago...does that make me bad? Mabey im looking forward to a time when mass. only has one senator guilty of murder instead of two..
Yeah, I've been having
May 23, 2008 - 10:32 ET by pbanks7Yeah, I've been having shadenfreud moments all week. I keep telling myself that's not right. I'll just console myself with memory of articulate Ted saying, "...and we're going to run on the hpwrtijhbvpzadfgjasdgajxasdgjaxsg!" that clip Rush runs on occasion.
Every time he opens his mouth about oil or taxes I remember that he derives much of his income from the oil company the Kennedys own, incorporated in Fiji to avoid paying US taxes.
On Katie's "War on Cancer," she called him "the Liberal Lion." More like a liberal lyin' weasel.
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