Today, New York Times congressional reporter Carl Hulse hands over nearly all his news hole for the newly empowered Democrats to whine about the GOP's supposedly corrupt years of control of Congress.
"Republican rule on Capitol Hill drew to an exhausted end just before dawn on Dec. 9 after lawmakers dispatched a pile of bills that few had read and even fewer had helped write. Democrats say the era of such chaotic and secretive legislating came to a close as well."
Hulse lets us know that a kinder, gentler group is taking over.
"Mrs. Pelosi has consulted with the new Republican leader, Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, in developing initiatives for the year, including a task force to explore independent enforcement of ethics rules. That was in sharp contrast to two years ago, when Republicans -- who only grudgingly consulted Democrats -- pushed through a set of diluted ethics rules that they were later forced to rescind. Democrats also supported a severance package for senior Republican aides, but the spending was blocked in the last hours of Congress by conservative Republicans.”
[…]
"Mr. Frank and Representative Edward J. Markey, a fellow Massachusetts Democrat, pointed to another difference between incoming Democrats and the Republicans who took control in 1995 and saw their mission as one of purging Democrats and hobbling government.
"'Democrats want government to work,' said Mr. Markey, who under the Republican majority was often frozen out despite his senior position on the Energy and Commerce Committee. 'I have not had a conversation where Democrats sit around talking about who they want to get back at.'"
[…]
"Republicans see the ability to force tough votes -- which they avoided in the majority by stifling Democratic alternatives -- as having two potential benefits: It can put vulnerable Democrats on record with positions that might not be popular at home, or it can fracture the untested Democratic majority."
Hulse goes to a Congress watcher (who once worked for a Democratic senator) to lambaste the outgoing Republicans.
"But to Congress watchers who grew increasingly outraged over Republican conduct of the House during the rule of Mr. Hastert and the majority leader Tom DeLay, the Democrats are definitely heading in the right direction.
"'The House has been so egregiously run for a number of years that it was seen as contributing both directly and indirectly to the election results,' said Thomas Mann, a Congressional scholar at the Brookings Institution. 'There really is a strong political incentive to try to do business differently.'"
If you believe Hulse, it's going to be a new era of sweetness and light now that the right people are in charge.
"In the House and Senate, the leadership is vowing to conduct full and open conference committees that reconcile differing legislation passed by the two chambers and produce a final bill. In recent years, those sessions have all but disappeared, with senior Republicans hashing out final versions behind closed doors, occasionally adding provisions passed by neither the House nor the Senate. Some of the major legislation approved in the final hours of the past Congress was written in private by just a few lawmakers and aides and rushed to the floor.
"Democrats said the Republican majority typically refused to tell them even where the supposedly bicameral, bipartisan conference sessions were being held.
"'We are going to have conferences with the House,' said Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the incoming majority leader, 'real conferences, public conferences, where public issues will be debated and voted upon."
Hulse finally deals with the opposing view, briefly:
"Republicans said that Democrats exaggerated the degree to which they were excluded from legislative operations and that the Republican majority was less oppressive than House Democrats had been in the latter part of their 40-year majority before losing power in 1994. And they said that Democrats did not want to work with them but were more interested in scoring political points.
"Democrats disputed those accusations. But even if there is some truth in them, they said, their years in the minority have made them newly sensitive to the need for a more democratic democracy."
For more New York Times bias, visit TimesWatch.
—Clay Waters is the director of Times Watch, an MRC project tracking the New York Times.



















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"'Democrats want government t
December 27, 2006 - 16:35 ET by TexasOptimist"'Democrats want government to work,' said Mr. Markey, who under the Republican majority was often frozen out despite his senior position on the Energy and Commerce Committee. 'I have not had a conversation where Democrats sit around talking about who they want to get back at.'"
Earth to Markey. Earth to Markey. Come in Markey.
LOL!
Merry Christmas.
"...Purging Democrats
December 27, 2006 - 16:40 ET by MightyMouth"...Purging Democrats and Hobbling Government."
So, what's the problem?
"There are two types of people in this country; those who provide freedom and those who enjoy it." MM says...
Sounds like a helluva good id
December 27, 2006 - 23:57 ET by MikeBSounds like a helluva good idea to me.
"A communist is someone who reads Marx. An anti-communist is someone who understands Marx." Ronald Reagan
Democrats (and their sychopha
December 27, 2006 - 16:44 ET by mattmDemocrats (and their sychophantic media cheerleaders) can "dispute those accusations" all they want, but that doesn't change the fact that the accusations are correct.
The Dems ran the show for so long they corrupted themselves and this government. They introduced socialism in the form of the New Deal and the Great Society. They set the precedent for judicial activism and packing the courts, and of "Borking" or filibustering judicial candidates they oppose. They prolonged the effects of racism by instituting affirmative action (reverse discrimination) and quotas. They created the money-driven, palm-greasing culture of D.C. politicking and pork-barrel spending. They invented scandal-mongering while being the most scandal-ridden group of crooks ever assembled. Etc. Etc. Etc. Everything they accuse the Republicans of, the Dems invented.
Those GOPers who followed the example of their corrupt Democrat colleagues deserved to be bounced from office (even though the degree to which they were ethically challenged pales in comparison to the Kennedy/Clinton Party), but the Dems who got elected will have to prove they're not even worse, or they'll be gone in two years too; especially with the Ultral Left in control of their party.
Newly sensitive? Horsepuckey
December 27, 2006 - 16:55 ET by rimskyNewly sensitive? Horsepuckey! Nancy Pelosi has one agenda. She will do what ever she can to stifle truly fair discourse about anything if it's not made of liberal/leftist/socialist fabric.
Hey Ed, your pants are on fir
December 27, 2006 - 16:58 ET by RackieHey Ed, your pants are on fire.
What a bunch of B.S. Hulse is
December 27, 2006 - 17:04 ET by bigtimerWhat a bunch of B.S. Hulse is full of...that simple....and whoever is giving him the info. is a liar....plus it goes without saying what a piece of trash the NYT's is that this is published in.
I have watched the House and Senate from the Dem's being in charge until now, this is outrageous outright lies...I watch the debates, the votes the conference committees and reports that come out with their votes and such when televised...the right is nothing, I mean nothing, like the left when it comes to being shabbily treated, overbearing just plain rude and talk about not allowing any amendments or votes, the dem's have still to this day filibustered everything they could get their hands on...the Republicans do not....I say do not fight back, I used to say they do not know how to fight back, they do, it is the majority of the weak-kneed RINO's that lead the way with the media like Warner or Graham or McCain or Spectoid that the media grabs...and they love it, makes them feel powerful and just...even though they do not speak for the majority of us out here on the right, but they have no opposition in their own party to fight back in unison with persistence.... so I about give up.
"If we ever forget that we are a Nation Under God....then we will be a Nation Gone Under." Ronald Reagan
BT, come on man.. don't give
December 27, 2006 - 17:14 ET by rimskyBT, come on man.. don't give it up. I keep reminding myself, when doors are slammed in your face you gotta look for others that you didn't suspect were ever there, to open.
rimsky....just a figure of sp
December 27, 2006 - 17:34 ET by bigtimerrimsky....just a figure of speech I guess....I really never give up...seriously.
Frustration and anger get to me when you see things so clearly and a bunch of chicken shites keeping mum and doing absolutely nothing about perfect situations they could of because of fear of the media and political correctness...and let the RINO's lead the way because of the leftist media influence.
Virgil Goode is a perfect example of late.
By the way I hope all had a great and peaceful Christmas with those they loved.
"If we ever forget that we are a Nation Under God....then we will be a Nation Gone Under." Ronald Reagan
Kudda Been a Contender
December 27, 2006 - 17:33 ET by acumenWhat a shame - if Hulse had only filed his fiction a little sooner he could have been in the running for a MRC Notable Quotables award. Ya blew it kid, kudda been a contender.......
Carl Hulse is unbiased? Why d
December 27, 2006 - 18:26 ET by Clear thinkerCarl Hulse is unbiased?
Why don't these guys just come right out and say up front that they support any stupid thing Democrats say. I would have a lot more respect for them if they did (maybe).
The pretense of objectivity i
December 27, 2006 - 19:35 ET by mattmThe pretense of objectivity is the cover for their deception.
What is wrong with democrat
December 27, 2006 - 19:37 ET by james789What is wrong with democrats? I mean, wasn't it not too long ago that they were the party that supported bondage and enslavement, well today they want to enslave your mind as well as your body, whats so bad about drinking the cool aid and giving them all your money in taxes? Think about it, if someone would just take away everyones money, then no one could buy drugs, legal or illegal, or all the other evil nasty things that harm our society and we'd all live longer lives.
The man who loves other countries as much as his own stands on a level
with the man who loves other women as much as he loves his own wife. ~
Theodore Roosevelt
Everybody was kung fu fighting
December 27, 2006 - 19:57 ET by nkviking75Up until Gingrich came along the GOP had gotten used to being the minority. The Democrats walked all over them. Even when they were the majority, the Republicans rarely seemed to grasp that they were in charge. The Democrats stifled a lot of the GOP agenda. I hope whichever Republicans remain are willing to engage in all out, bare knuckle street fighting, because that's what the Democrats will dish out to them. We're still cleaning up the mess of the Clinton years. Bubba was eminantly defeatable in '92, but GHW Bush couldn't seem to land a blow against him. Now that we're stuck with a Democrat Congress, our job is to hold them back as much as possible and launch a new conservative assault in '08.
The Horn of Africa is on fire
December 27, 2006 - 20:29 ET by Ten7sThe Horn of Africa is on fire. The Palestinians are so agitiated that they can't decide whether to fight each other or Israel, which is as nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs. We've got an Illegal Immigration crisis that no one in government wants to deal with. Likewise, no one is paying much attention to NorthKorea with its nukes or Iran that's trying to get some. The Islamist terrorists are still targeting U.S. and Europe. As for U.S., Hannibal could smuggle a herd of elephants loaded with C4 across our borders and no one would be the wiser. Then, the UK and France have cities full of unassimilated Muslims citizens.
And what do we get from the Fourth Estate, tripe, nonsense, highschool whining about what the big meanies did to their Liberal buddies during the last congress. Hey journalists, how about finally squeezing the Democrats' Iraq policy out of them? If that's too hard, ask them about any of the above. Heck, ask them about their proposed tax policies. Anything, just quit acting like children.
"But to congress watcher
December 28, 2006 - 12:20 ET by Chris Norman"But to congress watchers who grew increasingly outraged..."
Ah ha! A new - er - anonymous - group to add to our list of people that we're supposed to take the MSM's word that they exist and are "unbiased". "Critics", "People close to the investigation", "Observers", "Knowledgable Sources" and now, - drum roll, please - "Congress Watchers"(!) - and I'm telling you, they are outraged, positively outraged, folks!
The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on.
- Arabian Proverb