Thursday, November 08, 2007

 

Kucinich Gambit Shows Who's Who

The re-introduction of articles of impeachment against Vice President Cheney on Tuesday didn't accomplish anything new... yet. Although the use of the "question of privilege" rules to introduce the resolution (H Res 799) made sure that it would receive at least an hour's worth of attention on the House floor, the end result was that the resolution was referred to the Judiciary Committee, where its twin brother, H Res 333, has been languishing for over six months.

The net effect on overall progress towards impeachment remains to be seen -- at least one member of the House Judiciary Committee who previously had little to say about the matter (Robert Wexler, whose chief claim to fame is saying "cocaine is fun" on the
Colbert Report as a joke) has now openly called for hearings to begin.

There are, however, two things that the legislative upheaval most certainly accomplished:

  1. The test has shown the limits of Pelosi's "off the table" policy regarding impeachment. Any member of Congress can interrupt normal House business as often as desired to ensure that any evidence they want to present at least makes it out on C-SPAN (with postings on YouTube sure to follow).

  2. It has definitively revealed the fault line between real Democrats (i.e. the ones that adhere to the same values that people think of when they think of an "unnamed Democrat" in a theoretical matchup in poll questions) and the pseudo-Democrats (i.e. the ones that seem to hold power in the party and that never do as well as the unnamed Democrat in those polls since they don't adhere to those values).
Following is a chart that shows the position of "people of interest" on the impeachment question right now. (I apologize for it being tiny. Blogger keeps shrinking it.)




Each member of Congress is labelled as follows:


Now, each representative's individual action may not mean anything, but I think the pattern as a whole is telling. There are four distinct groups.

Both Robert Brady (PA) and David Payne (NJ) have signed on as co-sponsors of H Res 333, but they didn't vote in either of the motions on Tuesday. I am not sure what this means -- either they were absent when the votes were taken or they abstained. I hope it's the former.

[Note: I threw in Ron Paul just because I found his vote to table surprising. I very much respect Mr. Paul's integrity and would be interested to see his reasoning on the matter.]

[UPDATE: It seems that Ron Paul clarified his intent on his vote to table. His reasoning is legitimate, and his support for hearings is clear. Hopefully, this means we'll see him bring more attention to this issue.]

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