- April 30th, 2009, 5:59 pm
#256335
Of course he doesn't, WEF. Duh.
Here's the thing...
Specter, being a liberal Republican, was an important fellow. Would he vote his conscience, or would he toe the party line? If he voted the conscience, then the Democrats would have that filibuster-proof majority needed to get virtually anything passed. If he voted along party lines, like he did with the Card Check legislation, then he had the power to effectively stop bad (i.e., liberal) laws from getting passed.
Now? He's one of 60 senators. He has no more importance in the Senate than, say, Pennsylvania's Bob Casey. If Republicans want to siphon off votes from the Democrats, they'll go to someone like Mark Pryor, Mary Landrieu, or Ben Nelson -- people who have arguably the same liberal / conservative voting record as Specter. Plus, those three happen to be up for re-election soon, and they inhabit Red States.
Specter (who was a Democrat until the late 60s), was the most powerful man in Congress. Now? One of 60. What happened was, he would rather be one of sixty for the next seven years (this year plus re-election) than #1 for one year.
And the Democrats will not, I guarantee, will not run anyone against him (with the nat'l party's backing) in the primary election next year. It's up to the GOP to get its act together...
BUT...
They won't, because the GOP is really, really in danger of losing seats in New Hampshire, Missouri, Ohio, Florida, and North Carolina (versus a pretty safe crop for the Democrats -- Connecticut should be competitive, but it won't, same with Illinois, Colorado, Nevada, and New York). The GOP will be playing defense, they won't have cash to mount an effective offensive.
****EDIT FOR CORRECTION: Nelson and Landrieu aren't up for re-election. Oh well. My point remains the same.
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