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Inside the Worst Congress Ever
By Matt Taibbi
Rolling Stone
Tuesday 17 October
2006
The worst
Congress ever: How our national legislature has become a stable of
thieves and perverts - in five easy steps.
There is very
little that sums up the record of the US Congress in the Bush years better
than a half-mad boy-addict put in charge of a federal commission on child
exploitation. After all, if a hairy-necked, raincoat-clad freak like Rep.
Mark Foley can get himself named co-chairman of the House Caucus on Missing
and Exploited Children, one can only wonder: What the hell else is going on
in the corridors of Capitol Hill these days?
These past six
years were more than just the most shameful, corrupt and incompetent period
in the history of the American legislative branch. These were the years when
the US parliament became a historical punch line, a political obscenity on
par with the court of Nero or Caligula - a stable of thieves and perverts
who committed crimes rolling out of bed in the morning and did their very
best to turn the mighty American empire into a debt-laden, despotic
backwater, a Burkina Faso with cable.
To be sure,
Congress has always been a kind of muddy ideological cemetery, a place where
good ideas go to die in a maelstrom of bureaucratic hedging and rank
favor-trading. Its whole history is one long love letter to sleaze, idiocy
and pigheaded, glacial conservatism. That Congress exists mainly to misspend
our money and snore its way through even the direst political crises is
something we Americans understand instinctively. "There is no native
criminal class except Congress," Mark Twain said - a joke that still
provokes a laugh of recognition a hundred years later.
But the 109th
Congress is no mild departure from the norm, no slight deviation in an
already-underwhelming history. No, this is nothing less than a historic
shift in how our democracy is run. The Republicans who control this Congress
are revolutionaries, and they have brought their revolutionary vision for
the House and Senate quite unpleasantly to fruition. In the past six years
they have castrated the political minority, abdicated their oversight
responsibilities mandated by the Constitution, enacted a conscious policy of
massive borrowing and unrestrained spending, and installed a host of
semipermanent mechanisms for transferring legislative power to commercial
interests. They aimed far lower than any other Congress has ever aimed, and
they nailed their target.
"The 109th
Congress is so bad that it makes you wonder if democracy is a failed
experiment," says Jonathan Turley, a noted constitutional scholar and the
Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington Law School. "I
think that if the Framers went to Capitol Hill today, it would shake their
confidence in the system they created. Congress has become an exercise of
raw power with no principles - and in that environment corruption has
flourished. The Republicans in Congress decided from the outset that their
future would be inextricably tied to George Bush and his policies. It has
become this sad session of members sitting down and drinking Kool-Aid
delivered by Karl Rove. Congress became a mere extension of the White
House."
The end result is
a Congress that has hijacked the national treasury, frantically ceded power
to the executive, and sold off the federal government in a private auction.
It all happened before our very eyes. In case you missed it, here's how they
did it - in five easy steps:
Step One: Rule
by Cabal
If you want to get
a sense of how Congress has changed under GOP control, just cruise the
basement hallways of storied congressional office buildings like Rayburn,
Longworth and Cannon. Here, in the minority offices for the various
congressional committees, you will inevitably find exactly the same
character - a Democratic staffer in rumpled khakis staring blankly off into
space, nothing but a single lonely "Landscapes of Monticello" calendar on
his wall, his eyes wide and full of astonished, impotent rage, like a rape
victim. His skin is as white as the belly of a fish; he hasn't seen the sun
in seven years.
It is no big scoop
that the majority party in Congress has always found ways of giving the
shaft to the minority. But there is a marked difference in the size and the
length of the shaft the Republicans have given the Democrats in the past six
years. There has been a systematic effort not only to deny the Democrats any
kind of power-sharing role in creating or refining legislation but to
humiliate them publicly, show them up, pee in their faces. Washington was
once a chummy fraternity in which members of both parties golfed together,
played in the same pickup basketball games, probably even shared the same
mistresses. Now it is a one-party town - and congressional business is
conducted accordingly, as though the half of the country that the Democrats
represent simply does not exist.
American
government was not designed for one-party rule but for rule by consensus -
so this current batch of Republicans has found a way to work around that
product design. They have scuttled both the spirit and the letter of
congressional procedure, turning the lawmaking process into a backroom deal,
with power concentrated in the hands of a few chiefs behind the scenes. This
reduces the legislature to a Belarus-style rubber stamp, where the
opposition is just there for show, human pieces of stagecraft - a fact the
Republicans don't even bother to conceal.
"I remember one
incident very clearly - I think it was 2001," says Winslow Wheeler, who
served for twenty-two years as a Republican staffer in the Senate. "I was
working for [New Mexico Republican] Pete Domenici at the time. We were in a
Budget Committee hearing and the Democrats were debating what the final
result would be. And my boss gets up and he says, 'Why are you saying this?
You're not even going to be in the room when the decisions are made.' Just
said it right out in the open."
Wheeler's very
career is a symbol of a bipartisan age long passed into the history books;
he is the last staffer to have served in the offices of a Republican and a
Democrat at the same time, having once worked for both Kansas Republican
Nancy Kassebaum and Arkansas Democrat David Pryor simultaneously. Today,
those Democratic staffers trapped in the basement laugh at the idea that
such a thing could ever happen again. These days, they consider themselves
lucky if they manage to hold a single hearing on a bill before Rove's
well-oiled legislative machine delivers it up for Bush's signature.
The GOP's "take
that, bitch" approach to governing has been taken to the greatest heights by
the House Judiciary Committee. The committee is chaired by the legendary
Republican monster James Sensenbrenner Jr., an ever-sweating, fat-fingered
beast who wields his gavel in a way that makes you think he might have used
one before in some other arena, perhaps to beat prostitutes to death. Last
year, Sensenbrenner became apoplectic when Democrats who wanted to hold a
hearing on the Patriot Act invoked a little-known rule that required him to
let them have one.
"Naturally, he
scheduled it for something like 9 a.m. on a Friday when Congress wasn't in
session, hoping that no one would show," recalls a Democratic staffer who
attended the hearing. "But we got a pretty good turnout anyway."
Sensenbrenner kept
trying to gavel the hearing to a close, but Democrats again pointed to the
rules, which said they had a certain amount of time to examine their
witnesses. When they refused to stop the proceedings, the chairman did
something unprecedented: He simply picked up his gavel and walked out.
"He was like a kid
at the playground," the staffer says. And just in case anyone missed the
point, Sensenbrenner shut off the lights and cut the microphones on his way
out of the room.
For similarly
petulant moves by a committee chair, one need look no further than the Ways
and Means Committee, where Rep. Bill Thomas - a pugnacious Californian with
an enviable ego who was caught having an affair with a pharmaceutical
lobbyist - enjoys a reputation rivaling that of the rotund Sensenbrenner.
The lowlight of his reign took place just before midnight on July 17th,
2003, when Thomas dumped a "substitute" pension bill on Democrats - one that
they had never read - and informed them they would be voting on it the next
morning. Infuriated, Democrats stalled by demanding that the bill be read
out line by line while they recessed to a side room to confer. But Thomas
wanted to move forward - so he called the Capitol police to evict the
Democrats.
Thomas is also
notorious for excluding Democrats from the conference hearings needed to
iron out the differences between House and Senate versions of a bill.
According to the rules, conferences have to include at least one public,
open meeting. But in the Bush years, Republicans have managed the conference
issue with some of the most mind-blowingly juvenile behavior seen in any
parliament west of the Russian Duma after happy hour. GOP chairmen routinely
call a meeting, bring the press in for a photo op and then promptly shut the
proceedings down. "Take a picture, wait five minutes, gavel it out - all for
show" is how one Democratic staffer described the process. Then, amazingly,
the Republicans sneak off to hold the real conference, forcing the Democrats
to turn amateur detective and go searching the Capitol grounds for the
meeting. "More often than not, we're trying to figure out where the
conference is," says one House aide.
In one legendary
incident, Rep. Charles Rangel went searching for a secret conference being
held by Thomas. When he found the room where Republicans closeted
themselves, he knocked and knocked on the door, but no one answered. A House
aide compares the scene to the famous "Land Shark" skit from Saturday Night
Live, with everyone hiding behind the door afraid to make a sound. "Rangel
was the land shark, I guess," the aide jokes. But the real punch line came
when Thomas finally opened the door. "This meeting," he informed Rangel, "is
only open to the coalition of the willing."
Republican
rudeness and bluster make for funny stories, but the phenomenon has serious
consequences. The collegial atmosphere that once prevailed helped Congress
form a sense of collective identity that it needed to fulfill its
constitutional role as a check on the power of the other two branches of
government. It also enabled Congress to pass legislation with a wide
mandate, legislation that had been negotiated between the leaders of both
parties. For this reason Republican and Democratic leaders traditionally
maintained cordial relationships with each other - the model being the
collegiality between House Speaker Nicholas Longworth and Minority Leader
John Nance Garner in the 1920s. The two used to hold daily meetings over
drinks and even rode to work together.
Although
cooperation between the two parties has ebbed and flowed over the years,
historians note that Congress has taken strong bipartisan action in
virtually every administration. It was Sen. Harry Truman who instigated
investigations of wartime profiteering under FDR, and Republicans Howard
Baker and Lowell Weicker Jr. played pivotal roles on the Senate Watergate
Committee that nearly led to Nixon's impeachment.
But those days are
gone. "We haven't seen any congressional investigations like this during the
last six years," says David Mayhew, a professor of political science at Yale
who has studied Congress for four decades. "These days, Congress doesn't
seem to be capable of doing this sort of thing. Too much nasty
partisanship."
One of the most
depressing examples of one-party rule is the Patriot Act. The measure was
originally crafted in classic bipartisan fashion in the Judiciary Committee,
where it passed by a vote of thirty-six to zero, with famed liberals like
Barney Frank and Jerrold Nadler saying aye. But when the bill was sent to
the Rules Committee, the Republicans simply chucked the approved bill and
replaced it with a new, far more repressive version, apparently written at
the direction of then-Attorney General John Ashcroft.
"They just rewrote
the whole bill," says Rep. James McGovern, a minority member of the Rules
Committee. "All that committee work was just for show."
To ensure that
Democrats can't alter any of the last-minute changes, Republicans have
overseen a monstrous increase in the number of "closed" rules - bills that
go to the floor for a vote without any possibility of amendment. This tactic
undercuts the very essence of democracy: In a bicameral system, allowing
bills to be debated openly is the only way that the minority can have a real
impact, by offering amendments to legislation drafted by the majority.
In 1977, when
Democrats held a majority in the House, eighty-five percent of all bills
were open to amendment. But by 1994, the last year Democrats ran the House,
that number had dropped to thirty percent - and Republicans were seriously
pissed. "You know what the closed rule means," Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart of
Florida thundered on the House floor. "It means no discussion, no
amendments. That is profoundly undemocratic." When Republicans took control
of the House, they vowed to throw off the gag rules imposed by Democrats. On
opening day of the 104th Congress, then-Rules Committee chairman Gerald
Solomon announced his intention to institute free debate on the floor.
"Instead of having seventy percent closed rules," he declared, "we are going
to have seventy percent open and unrestricted rules."
How has Solomon
fared? Of the 111 rules introduced in the first session of this Congress,
only twelve were open. Of those, eleven were appropriations bills, which are
traditionally open. That left just one open vote - H. Res. 255, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005.
In the second
session of this Congress? Not a single open rule, outside of appropriation
votes. Under the Republicans, amendable bills have been a genuine Washington
rarity, the upside-down eight-leafed clover of legislative politics.
When bills do make
it to the floor for a vote, the debate generally resembles what one House
aide calls "preordained Kabuki." Republican leaders in the Bush era have
mastered a new congressional innovation: the one-vote victory. Rather than
seeking broad consensus, the leadership cooks up some hideously expensive,
favor-laden boondoggle and then scales it back bit by bit. Once they're in
striking range, they send the fucker to the floor and beat in the brains of
the fence-sitters with threats and favors until enough members cave in and
pass the damn thing. It is, in essence, a legislative microcosm of the
electoral strategy that Karl Rove has employed to such devastating effect.
A classic example
was the vote for the Central American Free Trade Agreement, the
union-smashing, free-trade monstrosity passed in 2005. As has often been the
case in the past six years, the vote was held late at night, away from the
prying eyes of the public, who might be horrified by what they see. Thanks
to such tactics, the 109th is known as the "Dracula" Congress: Twenty bills
have been brought to a vote between midnight and 7 a.m.
CAFTA actually
went to vote early - at 11:02 p.m. When the usual fifteen-minute voting
period expired, the nays were up, 180 to 175. Republicans then held the vote
open for another forty-seven minutes while GOP leaders cruised the aisles
like the family elders from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, frantically
chopping at the legs and arms of Republicans who opposed the measure. They
even roused the president out of bed to help kick ass for the vote, passing
a cell phone with Bush on the line around the House cloakroom like a bong.
Rep. Robin Hayes of North Carolina was approached by House Speaker Dennis
Hastert, who told him, "Negotiations are open. Put on the table the things
that your district and people need and we'll get them." After receiving
assurances that the administration would help textile manufacturers in his
home state by restricting the flow of cheap Chinese imports, Hayes switched
his vote to yea. CAFTA ultimately passed by two votes at 12:03 a.m.
Closed rules,
shipwrecked bills, secret negotiations, one-vote victories. The result of
all this is a Congress where there is little or no open debate and virtually
no votes are left to chance; all the important decisions are made in
backroom deals, and what you see on C-Span is just empty theater, the
world's most expensive trained-dolphin act. The constant here is a political
strategy of conducting congressional business with as little outside input
as possible, rejecting the essentially conservative tradition of
rule-by-consensus in favor of a more revolutionary strategy of rule by
cabal.
"This Congress has
thrown caution to the wind," says Turley, the constitutional scholar. "They
have developed rules that are an abuse of majority power. Keeping votes open
by freezing the clock, barring minority senators from negotiations on
important conference issues - it is a record that the Republicans should now
dread. One of the concerns that Republicans have about losing Congress is
that they will have to live under the practices and rules they have created.
The abuses that served them in the majority could come back to haunt them in
the minority."
Step Two: Work
as Little as Possible - And Screw Up Whatever You Do
It's Thursday
evening, September 28th, and the Senate is putting the finishing touches on
the Military Commissions Act of 2006, colloquially known as the "torture
bill." It's a law even Stalin would admire, one that throws habeas corpus in
the trash, legalizes a vast array of savage interrogation techniques and
generally turns the president of the United States into a kind of
turbocharged Yoruba witch doctor, with nearly unlimited snatching powers.
The bill is a fall-from-Eden moment in American history, a potentially
disastrous step toward authoritarianism - but what is most disturbing about
it, beyond the fact that it's happening, is that the senators are hurrying
to get it done.
In addition to
ending generations of bipartisanship and instituting one-party rule, our
national legislators in the Bush years are guilty of something even more
fundamental: They suck at their jobs.
They don't work
many days, don't pass many laws, and the few laws they're forced to pass,
they pass late. In fact, in every year that Bush has been president,
Congress has failed to pass more than three of the eleven annual
appropriations bills on time.
That figures into
tonight's problems. At this very moment, as the torture bill goes to a vote,
there are only a few days left until the beginning of the fiscal year - and
not one appropriations bill has been passed so far. That's why these
assholes are hurrying to bag this torture bill: They want to finish in time
to squeeze in a measly two hours of debate tonight on the
half-trillion-dollar defense-appropriations bill they've blown off until
now. The plan is to then wrap things up tomorrow before splitting Washington
for a month of real work, i.e., campaigning.
Sen. Pat Leahy of
Vermont comments on this rush to torture during the final, frenzied debate.
"Over 200 years of jurisprudence in this country," Leahy pleads, "and
following an hour of debate, we get rid of it?"
Yawns, chatter, a
few sets of rolling eyes - yeah, whatever, Pat. An hour later, the torture
bill is law. Two hours after that, the diminutive chair of the Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee, Sen. Ted Stevens, reads off the summary of the
military-spending bill to a mostly empty hall; since the members all need
their sleep and most have left early, the "debate" on the biggest spending
bill of the year is conducted before a largely phantom audience.
"Mr. President,"
Stevens begins, eyeing the few members present. "There are only four days
left in the fiscal year. The 2007 defense appropriations conference report
must be signed into law by the president before Saturday at midnight...."
Watching Ted
Stevens spend half a trillion dollars is like watching a junkie pull a belt
around his biceps with his teeth. You get the sense he could do it just as
fast in the dark. When he finishes his summary - $436 billion in defense
spending, including $70 billion for the Iraq "emergency" - he fucks off and
leaves the hall. A few minutes later, Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma - one of
the so-called honest Republicans who has clashed with his own party's
leadership on spending issues - appears in the hall and whines to the empty
room about all the lavish pork projects and sheer unadulterated waste jammed
into the bill. But aside from a bored-looking John Cornyn of Texas, who is
acting as president pro tempore, and a couple of giggling, suit-clad pages,
there is no one in the hall to listen to him.
In the Sixties and
Seventies, Congress met an average of 162 days a year. In the Eighties and
Nineties, the average went down to 139 days. This year, the second session
of the 109th Congress will set the all-time record for fewest days worked by
a US Congress: ninety-three. That means that House members will collect
their $165,000 paychecks for only three months of actual work.
What this means is
that the current Congress will not only beat but shatter the record for
laziness set by the notorious "Do-Nothing" Congress of 1948, which met for a
combined 252 days between the House and the Senate. This Congress - the
Do-Even-Less Congress - met for 218 days, just over half a year, between the
House and the Senate combined.
And even those
numbers don't come close to telling the full story. Those who actually work
on the Hill will tell you that a great many of those "workdays" were
shameless mail-ins, half-days at best. Congress has arranged things now so
that the typical workweek on the Hill begins late on Tuesday and ends just
after noon on Thursday, to give members time to go home for the four-day
weekend. This is borne out in the numbers: On nine of its "workdays" this
year, the House held not a single vote - meeting for less than eleven
minutes. The Senate managed to top the House's feat, pulling off three
workdays this year that lasted less than one minute. All told, a full
fifteen percent of the Senate's workdays lasted less than four hours.
Figuring for half-days, in fact, the 109th Congress probably worked almost
two months less than that "Do-Nothing" Congress.
Congressional
laziness comes at a high price. By leaving so many appropriations bills
unpassed by the beginning of the new fiscal year, Congress forces big chunks
of the government to rely on "continuing resolutions" for their funding. Why
is this a problem? Because under congressional rules, CRs are funded at the
lowest of three levels: the level approved by the House, the level approved
by the Senate or the level approved from the previous year. Thanks to wide
discrepancies between House and Senate appropriations for social
programming, CRs effectively operate as a backdoor way to slash social
programs. It's also a nice way for congressmen to get around having to pay
for expensive-ass programs they voted for, like No Child Left Behind and
some of the other terminally underfunded boondoggles of the Bush years.
"The whole point
of passing appropriations bills is that Congress is supposed to make small
increases in programs to account for things like the increase in
population," says Adam Hughes, director of federal fiscal policy for OMB
Watch, a nonpartisan watchdog group. "It's their main job." Instead, he
says, the reliance on CRs "leaves programs underfunded."
Instead of dealing
with its chief constitutional duty - approving all government spending -
Congress devotes its time to dumb bullshit. "This Congress spent a week and
a half debating Terri Schiavo - it never made appropriations a priority,"
says Hughes. In fact, Congress leaves itself so little time to pass the real
appropriations bills that it winds up rolling them all into one giant
monstrosity known as an Omnibus bill and passing it with little or no
debate. Rolling eight-elevenths of all federal spending into a single bill
that hits the floor a day or two before the fiscal year ends does not leave
much room to check the fine print. "It allows a lot more leeway for fiscal
irresponsibility," says Hughes.
A few years ago,
when Democratic staffers in the Senate were frantically poring over a
massive Omnibus bill they had been handed the night before the scheduled
vote, they discovered a tiny provision that had not been in any of the
previous versions. The item would have given senators on the Appropriations
Committee access to the private records of any taxpayer - essentially
endowing a few selected hacks in the Senate with the license to snoop into
the private financial information of all Americans.
"We were like,
'What the hell is this?'" says one Democratic aide familiar with the
incident. "It was the most egregious thing imaginable. It was just lucky we
caught them."
Step Three: Let
the President Do Whatever He Wants
The constitution
is very clear on the responsibility of Congress to serve as a check on the
excesses of the executive branch. The House and Senate, after all, are
supposed to pass all laws - the president is simply supposed to execute
them. Over the years, despite some ups and downs, Congress has been fairly
consistent in upholding this fundamental responsibility, regardless of which
party controlled the legislative branch. Elected representatives saw
themselves as beholden not to their own party or the president but to the
institution of Congress itself. The model of congressional independence was
Sen. William Fulbright, who took on McCarthy, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon
with equal vigor during the course of his long career.
"Fulbright behaved
the same way with Nixon as he did with Johnson," says Wheeler, the former
Senate aide who worked on both sides of the aisle. "You wouldn't see that
today."
In fact, the
Republican-controlled Congress has created a new standard for the use of
oversight powers. That standard seems to be that when a Democratic president
is in power, there are no matters too stupid or meaningless to be
investigated fully - but when George Bush is president, no evidence of
corruption or incompetence is shocking enough to warrant congressional
attention. One gets the sense that Bush would have to drink the blood of
Christian babies to inspire hearings in Congress - and only then if he did
it during a nationally televised State of the Union address and the babies
were from Pennsylvania, where Senate Judiciary chairman Arlen Specter was
running ten points behind in an election year.
The numbers bear
this out. From the McCarthy era in the 1950s through the Republican takeover
of Congress in 1995, no Democratic committee chairman issued a subpoena
without either minority consent or a committee vote. In the Clinton years,
Republicans chucked that long-standing arrangement and issued more than
1,000 subpoenas to investigate alleged administration and Democratic
misconduct, reviewing more than 2 million pages of government documents.
Guess how many
subpoenas have been issued to the White House since George Bush took office?
Zero - that's right, zero, the same as the number of open rules debated this
year; two fewer than the number of appropriations bills passed on time.
And the cost?
Republicans in the Clinton years spent more than $35 million investigating
the administration. The total amount of taxpayer funds spent, when
independent counsels are taken into account, was more than $150 million.
Included in that number was $2.2 million to investigate former HUD secretary
Henry Cisneros for lying about improper payments he made to a mistress. In
contrast, today's Congress spent barely half a million dollars investigating
the outright fraud and government bungling that followed Hurricane Katrina,
the largest natural disaster in American history.
"Oversight is one
of the most important functions of Congress - perhaps more important than
legislating," says Rep. Henry Waxman. "And the Republicans have completely
failed at it. I think they decided that they were going to be good
Republicans first and good legislators second."
As the ranking
minority member of the Government Reform Committee, Waxman has earned a
reputation as the chief Democratic muckraker, obsessively cranking out
reports on official misconduct and incompetence. Among them is a lengthy
document detailing all of the wrongdoing by the Bush administration that
should have been investigated - and would have been, in any other era. The
litany of fishy behavior left uninvestigated in the Bush years includes the
manipulation of intelligence on Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass
destruction, the mistreatment of Iraqi detainees, the leak of Valerie
Plame's CIA status, the award of Halliburton contracts, the White House
response to Katrina, secret NSA wiretaps, Dick Cheney's energy task force,
the withholding of Medicare cost estimates, the administration's
politicization of science, contract abuses at Homeland Security and lobbyist
influence at the EPA.
Waxman notes that
the failure to investigate these issues has actually hurt the president,
leaving potentially fatal flaws in his policies unexamined even by those in
his own party. Without proper congressional oversight, small disasters like
the misuse of Iraq intelligence have turned into huge, festering, unsolvable
fiascoes like the Iraq occupation. Republicans in Congress who stonewalled
investigations of the administration "thought they were doing Bush a favor,"
says Waxman. "But they did him the biggest disservice of all."
Congress has
repeatedly refused to look at any aspect of the war. In 2003, Republicans
refused to allow a vote on a bill introduced by Waxman that would have
established an independent commission to review the false claims Bush made
in asking Congress to declare war on Iraq. That same year, the chair of the
House Intelligence Committee, Porter Goss, refused to hold hearings on
whether the administration had forged evidence of the nuclear threat
allegedly posed by Iraq. A year later the chair of the Government Reform
Committee, Tom Davis, refused to hold hearings on new evidence casting doubt
on the "nuclear tubes" cited by the Bush administration before the war. Sen.
Pat Roberts, who pledged to issue a Senate Intelligence Committee report
after the 2004 election on whether the Bush administration had misled the
public before the invasion, changed his mind after the president won
re-election. "I think it would be a monumental waste of time to re-plow this
ground any further," Roberts said.
Sensenbrenner has
done his bit to squelch any debate over Iraq. He refused a request by John
Conyers and more than fifty other Democrats for hearings on the famed
"Downing Street Memo," the internal British document that stated that Bush
had "fixed" the intelligence about the war, and he was one of three
committee chairs who rejected requests for hearings on the abuse of Iraqi
detainees. Despite an international uproar over Abu Ghraib, Congress spent
only twelve hours on hearings on the issue. During the Clinton
administration, by contrast, the Republican Congress spent 140 hours
investigating the president's alleged misuse of his Christmas-card greeting
list.
"You talk to many
Republicans in Congress privately, and they will tell you how appalled they
are by the administration's diminishment of civil liberties and the constant
effort to keep fear alive," says Turley, who testified as a constitutional
scholar in favor of the Clinton impeachment. "Yet those same members
slavishly vote with the White House. What's most alarming about the 109th
has been the massive erosion of authority in Congress. There has always been
partisanship, but this is different. Members have become robotic in the way
they vote."
Perhaps the most
classic example of failed oversight in the Bush era came in a
little-publicized hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee held on
February 13th, 2003 - just weeks before the invasion of Iraq. The hearing
offered senators a rare opportunity to grill Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and top Pentagon officials on a wide variety of matters, including
the fairly important question of whether they even had a fucking plan for
the open-ended occupation of a gigantic hostile foreign population halfway
around the planet. This was the biggest bite that Congress would have at the
Iraq apple before the war, and given the gravity of the issue, it should
have been a beast of a hearing.
But it wasn't to
be. In a meeting that lasted two hours and fifty-three minutes, only one
question was asked about the military's readiness on the eve of the
invasion. Sen. John Warner, the committee's venerable and powerful chairman,
asked Gen. Richard Myers if the US was ready to fight simultaneously in both
Iraq and North Korea, if necessary.
Myers answered,
"Absolutely."
And that was it.
The entire exchange lasted fifteen seconds. The rest of the session followed
a pattern familiar to anyone who has watched a hearing on C-Span: The
members, when they weren't reading or chatting with one another, used their
time with witnesses almost exclusively to address parochial concerns
revolving around pork projects in their own districts. Warner set the tone
in his opening remarks; after announcing that US troops preparing to invade
Iraq could count on his committee's "strongest support," the senator from
Virginia quickly turned to the question of how the war would affect the
budget for Navy shipbuilding, which, he said, was not increasing "as much as
we wish." Not that there's a huge Navy shipyard in Newport News, Virginia,
or anything.
Other senators
followed suit. Daniel Akaka was relatively uninterested in Iraq but asked
about reports that Korea might have a missile that could reach his home
state of Hawaii. David Pryor of Arkansas used his time to tout the wonders
of military bases in Little Rock and Pine Bluff. When the senators weren't
eating up their allotted time in this fashion, they were usually currying
favor with the generals. Warner himself nicely encapsulated the obsequious
tone of the session when he complimented Rumsfeld for having his shit so
together on the war.
"I think your
response reflects that we have given a good deal of consideration," Warner
said. "That we have clear plans in place and are ready to proceed." We all
know how that turned out.
Step Four:
Spend, Spend, Spend
There is a simple
reason that members of Congress don't waste their time providing any
oversight of the executive branch: There's nothing in it for them. "What
they've all figured out is that there's no political payoff in oversight,"
says Wheeler, the former congressional staffer. "But there's a big payoff in
pork."
When one considers
that Congress has forsaken hearings and debate, conspired to work only three
months a year, completely ditched its constitutional mandate to provide
oversight and passed very little in the way of meaningful legislation, the
question arises: What do they do?
The answer is
easy: They spend. When Bill Clinton left office, the nation had a budget
surplus of $236 billion. Today, thanks to Congress, the budget is $296
billion in the hole. This year, more than sixty-five percent of all the
money borrowed in the entire world will be borrowed by America, a statistic
fueled by the speed-junkie spending habits of our supposedly "fiscally
conservative" Congress. It took forty-two presidents before George W. Bush
to borrow $1 trillion; under Bush, Congress has more than doubled that
number in six years. And more often than not, we are borrowing from
countries the sane among us would prefer not to be indebted to: The US
shells out $77 billion a year in interest to foreign creditors, including
payment on the $300 billion we currently owe China.
What do they spend
that money on? In the age of Jack Abramoff, that is an ugly question to even
contemplate. But let's take just one bill, the so-called energy bill, a big,
hairy, favor-laden bitch of a law that started out as the wet dream of Dick
Cheney's energy task force and spent four long years leaving grease-tracks
on every set of palms in the Capitol before finally becoming law in 2005.
Like a lot of laws
in the Bush era, it was crafted with virtually no input from the Democrats,
who were excluded from the conference process. And during the course of the
bill's gestation period we were made aware that many of its provisions were
more or less openly for sale, as in the case of a small electric utility
from Kansas called Westar Energy.
Westar wanted a
provision favorable to its business inserted in the bill - and in an
internal company memo, it acknowledged that members of Congress had
requested Westar donate money to their campaigns in exchange for the
provision. The members included former Louisiana congressman Billy Tauzin
and current Energy and Commerce chairman Joe Barton of Texas. "They have
made this request in lieu of contributions made to their own campaigns," the
memo noted. The total amount of Westar's contributions was $58,200.
Keep in mind, that
number - fifty-eight grand - was for a single favor. The energy bill was
loaded with them. Between 2001 and the passage of the bill, energy companies
donated $115 million to federal politicians, with seventy-five percent of
the money going to Republicans. When the bill finally passed, it contained
$6 billion in subsidies for the oil industry, much of which was funneled
through a company with ties to Majority Leader Tom DeLay. It included an
exemption from the Safe Drinking Water Act for companies that use a
methane-drilling technique called "hydraulic fracturing" - one of the widest
practitioners of which is Halliburton. And it included billions in subsidies
for the construction of new coal plants and billions more in loan guarantees
to enable the coal and nuclear industries to borrow money at
bargain-basement interest rates.
Favors for
campaign contributors, exemptions for polluters, shifting the costs of
private projects on to the public - these are the specialties of this
Congress. They seldom miss an opportunity to impoverish the states we live
in and up the bottom line of their campaign contributors. All this time -
while Congress did nothing about Iraq, Katrina, wiretapping, Mark Foley's
boy-madness or anything else of import - it has been all about pork, all
about political favors, all about budget "earmarks" set aside for expensive
and often useless projects in their own districts. In 2000, Congress passed
6,073 earmarks; by 2005, that number had risen to 15,877. They got better at
it every year. It's the one thing they're good at.
Even worse, this
may well be the first Congress ever to lose control of the government's
finances. For the past six years, it has essentially been writing checks
without keeping an eye on its balance. When you do that, unpleasant notices
eventually start appearing in the mail. In 2003, the inspector general of
the Defense Department reported to Congress that the military's
financial-management systems did not comply with "generally accepted
accounting principles" and that the department "cannot currently provide
adequate evidence supporting various material amounts on the financial
statements."
Translation: The
Defense Department can no longer account for its money. "It essentially
can't be audited," says Wheeler, the former congressional staffer. "And
nobody did anything about it. That's the job of Congress, but they don't
care anymore."
So not only does
Congress not care what intelligence was used to get into the war, what the
plan was supposed to be once we got there, what goes on in military prisons
in Iraq and elsewhere, how military contracts are being given away and to
whom - it doesn't even give a shit what happens to the half-trillion bucks
it throws at the military every year.
Not to say, of
course, that this Congress hasn't made an effort to reform itself. In the
wake of the Jack Abramoff scandal, and following a public uproar over the
widespread abuse of earmarks, both the House and the Senate passed their own
versions of an earmark reform bill this year. But when the two chambers
couldn't agree on a final version, the House was left to pass its own
watered-down measure in the waning days of the most recent session. This
pathetically, almost historically half-assed attempt at reforming corruption
should tell you all you need to know about the current Congress.
The House rule
will force legislators to attach their names to all earmarks. Well, not all
earmarks. Actually, the new rule applies only to nonfederal funding - money
for local governments, nonprofits and universities. And the rule will remain
in effect only for the remainder of this congressional year - in other
words, for the few remaining days of business after lawmakers return to
Washington following the election season. After that, it's back to business
as usual next year.
That is what
passes for "corruption reform" in this Congress - forcing lawmakers to put
their names on a tiny fraction of all earmarks. For a couple of days.
Step Five: Line
Your Own Pockets
Anyone who wants
to get a feel for the kinds of beasts that have been roaming the grounds of
the congressional zoo in the past six years need only look at the deranged,
handwritten letter that convicted bribe-taker and GOP ex-congressman Randy
"Duke" Cunningham recently sent from prison to Marcus Stern, the reporter
who helped bust him. In it, Cunningham - who was convicted last year of
taking $2.4 million in cash, rugs, furniture and jewelry from a defense
contractor called MZM - bitches out Stern in the broken, half-literate
penmanship of a six-year-old put in time-out.
"Each time you
print it hurts my family And now I have lost them Along with Everything I
have worked for during my 64 years of life," Cunningham wrote. "I am human
not an Animal to keep whiping [sic]. I made some decissions [sic] Ill be
sorry for the rest of my life."
The amazing thing
about Cunningham's letter is not his utter lack of remorse, or his
insistence on blaming defense contractor Mitchell Wade for ratting him out
("90% of what has happed [sic] is Wade," he writes), but his frantic, almost
epic battle with the English language. It is clear that the same Congress
that put a drooling child-chaser like Mark Foley in charge of a House caucus
on child exploitation also named Cunningham, a man who can barely write his
own name in the ground with a stick, to a similarly appropriate position.
Ladies and gentlemen, we give you the former chairman of the House
Subcommittee on Human Intelligence Analysis and Counterintelligence:
"As truth will
come out and you will find out how liablest [sic] you have & will be. Not
once did you list the positives. Education Man of the Year ... hospital
funding, jobs, Hiway [sic] funding, border security, Megans law my bill,
Tuna Dolfin [sic] my bill ... and every time you wanted an expert on the
wars who did you call. No Marcus you write About how I died."
How liablest you
have & will be? What the fuck does that even mean? This guy sat on the
Appropriations Committee for years - no wonder Congress couldn't pass any
spending bills!
This is Congress
in the Bush years, in a nutshell - a guy who takes $2 million in bribes from
a contractor, whooping it up in turtlenecks and pajama bottoms with young
women on a contractor-provided yacht named after himself (the "Duke-Stir"),
and not only is he shocked when he's caught, he's too dumb to even
understand that he's been guilty of anything.
This kind of
appalling moral blindness, a sort of high-functioning, sociopathic
stupidity, has been a consistent characteristic of the numerous Republicans
indicted during the Bush era. Like all revolutionaries, they seem to feel
entitled to break rules in the name of whatever the hell it is they think
they're doing. And when caught breaking said rules with wads of cash
spilling out of their pockets, they appear genuinely indignant at
accusations of wrongdoing. Former House Majority Leader and brazen fuckhead
Tom DeLay, after finally being indicted for money laundering, seemed amazed
that anyone would bring him into court.
"I have done
nothing wrong," he declared. "I have violated no law, no regulation, no rule
of the House." Unless, of course, you count the charges against him for
conspiring to inject illegal contributions into state elections in Texas
"with the intent that a felony be committed."
It was the same
when Ohio's officious jackass of a (soon-to-be-ex) Congressman Bob Ney
finally went down for accepting $170,000 in trips from Abramoff in exchange
for various favors. Even as the evidence piled high, Ney denied any
wrongdoing. When he finally did plead guilty, he blamed the sauce. "A
dependence on alcohol has been a problem for me," he said.
Abramoff,
incidentally, was another Republican with a curious inability to admit
wrongdoing even after conviction; even now he confesses only to trying too
hard to "save the world." But everything we know about Abramoff suggests
that Congress has embarked on a never-ending party, a wild daisy-chain of
golf junkets, skybox tickets and casino trips. Money is everywhere and guys
like Abramoff found ways to get it to guys like Ney, who made the important
discovery that even a small entry in the Congressional Record can get you a
tee time at St. Andrews.
Although Ney is so
far the only congressman to win an all-expenses trip to prison as a result
of his relationship with Abramoff, nearly a dozen other House Republicans
are known to have done favors for him. Rep. Jim McCrery of Louisiana, who
accepted some $36,000 from Abramoff-connected donors, helped prevent the
Jena Band of Choctaw Indians from opening a casino that would have competed
with Abramoff's clients. Rep. Deborah Pryce, who sent a letter to Interior
Secretary Gale Norton opposing the Jena casino, received $8,000 from the
Abramoff money machine. Rep. John Doolittle, whose wife was hired to work
for Abramoff's sham charity, also intervened on behalf of the lobbyist's
clients.
Then there was
DeLay and his fellow Texan, Rep. Pete Sessions, who did Abramoff's bidding
after accepting gifts and junkets. So much energy devoted to smarmy little
casino disputes at a time when the country was careening toward disaster in
Iraq: no time for oversight but plenty of time for golf.
For those who
didn't want to go the black-bag route, there was always the legal jackpot.
Billy Tauzin scarcely waited a week after leaving office to start a $2
million-a-year job running PhRMA, the group that helped him push through a
bill prohibiting the government from negotiating lower prices for
prescription drugs. Tauzin also became the all-time poster boy for pork
absurdity when a "greenbonds initiative" crafted in his Energy and Commerce
Committee turned out to be a subsidy to build a Hooters in his home state of
Louisiana.
The greed and
laziness of the 109th Congress has reached such epic proportions that it has
finally started to piss off the public. In an April poll by CBS News, fully
two-thirds of those surveyed said that Congress has achieved "less than it
usually does during a typical two-year period." A recent Pew poll found that
the chief concerns that occupy Congress - gay marriage and the inheritance
tax - are near the bottom of the public's list of worries. Those at the top
- education, health care, Iraq and Social Security - were mostly blown off
by Congress. Even a Fox News poll found that fifty-three percent of voters
say Congress isn't "working on issues important to most Americans."
One could go on
and on about the scandals and failures of the past six years; to document
them all would take ... well, it would take more than ninety-three fucking
days, that's for sure. But you can boil the whole sordid mess down to a few
basic concepts. Sloth. Greed. Abuse of power. Hatred of democracy.
Government as a cheap backroom deal, finished in time for thirty-six holes
of the world's best golf. And brains too stupid to be ashamed of any of it.
If we have learned nothing else in the Bush years, it's that this Congress
cannot be reformed. The only way to change it is to get rid of it.
Fortunately, we
still get that chance once in a while.

See our picks for
the
10 Worst Congressmen and read what people are saying in our
politics blog.
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