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The Water Cooler Title: GOP Senators Angry About Reid Claim That They're Rooting For Economic Failure Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who is trying to bring comity back to the upper chamber, has broken protocol by accusing Republicans of rooting for the economy to fail. The accusations from the blunt Nevada Democrat have irritated Republicans, and complicated Reids effort to hold a bipartisan meeting with senators in the near future. In the Senate, where lawmakers routinely address their adversaries as my friend, Reids attack on GOP motives is a jarring break from traditional decorum. Reid said Republican opposition to President Obamas $447 billion jobs bill is based purely on politics, and has cited their votes against the measure as evidence they want to slow the national recovery. Republicans oppose those ideas now because they have a proven track record of creating jobs, and Republicans think if the economy improves it might help President Obama, Reid said last week on the Senate floor. So they root for the economy to fail, and oppose every effort to improve it. And they resist anything the president proposes, no matter how common-sense, including this plan to create 2 million jobs, he said. A Senate Democratic aide made no attempt to walk back Reids comments. Sen. Reid speaks his mind, said the aide. A growing number of Democrats, especially junior members of the caucus, are growing impatient with the chambers atmosphere of genteel deadlock. Their rising irritation has emboldened them to join Reid in pointedly questioning the GOPs intentions, something that would have been unthinkable in the recent past. Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) said Reids description is accurate of some Republicans, but added that others have expressed interest in supporting bipartisan jobs legislation. Some Republicans they look at everything through the lens of how it affects them politically, and that element is gaining more influence in the Republican Conference. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) said, Ill take Harrys word for it. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.) likewise agrees with Reid. Since the Republicans are not offering any jobs plan with any credibility to it, you have to say to them: Do you really care? he said. If they do care, they should be helping us, working together with us, supporting the president. Unfortunately, too many of them just decided to say no, vote no, and thats not going to help us create a thriving economy, Durbin added. Durbin said hes afraid some Republican senators are putting politics ahead of the economy and could end up becoming a downward force in the recovery. Senate Republicans reject Reids claim. They say it is the majority leader who is playing politics by bringing up jobs legislation paid for with tax increases on income over $1 million. Its ironic how hes making these charges but he brings up pieces of the presidents proposal that he knows will draw objections from the other side, said a senior GOP aide. If anyones strategy puts politics over jobs, its his. To back up their accusations, Senate Democrats repeatedly refer to Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnells (Ky.) statement in October 2010 that his highest priority is to make Obama a one-term president. McConnells spokesman has since clarified that defeating Obama is his bosss top political goal. This summer, McConnell denied that his party is trying to torpedo the economy: [I]n 2012 ... our biggest goal for this year is to get this country straightened out. Our goal is to have a robust, vibrant economy, he added. Reid, who has a good working relationship with McConnell, has been criticizing Republicans while trying to mend fences with them. His move to change the Senates rules earlier this month infuriated Republicans, who dubbed it the nuclear option. Reid has been pushing a bipartisan caucus meeting to give lawmakers on both sides of the aisle a chance to talk out their frustrations. McConnell has yet to respond to the overture. Over the last several weeks, Reid has argued that Republicans have supported pieces of the presidents jobs package in the past, including its centerpiece, a $240 billion extension of the payroll tax holiday. McConnell floated the possibility of a payroll tax cut as an alternative to Obamas economic stimulus proposal in early 2009. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said at the time it would be very stimulative right away. At the beginning of last year, Sen. Orrin Hatch (Utah), the ranking Republican on the Finance Committee, praised the proposal to give employers tax breaks for hiring new workers as reasonable and a conservative strategy for spurring the economy. Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) have co-sponsored Sen. John Kerrys (D-Mass.) BUILD Act, which would establish a national infrastructure bank. Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) has sponsored legislation to give tax breaks to businesses that hire unemployed military veterans. Each of these proposals was included in Obamas jobs package, which Republicans voted in unison to block last week. Durbin said Republicans were happy to support some of the proposals when former President George W. Bush introduced them in a jobs bill he sent to Congress. I dont know what their motivation is, but I do know if you go to speech after speech and you say you want Barack Obama to be a one-term president and then you use the filibuster in an unprecedented way to stop all progress, that seems to me fulfilling that goal, said Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.). Other Democrats are leery of supporting Reids bold accusation against Republicans. Democrats facing tough reelections next year, such as Sen. Debbie Stabenow (Mich.), dont want to feed the public perception that Congress has broken down because of partisan acrimony. They are clearly blocking efforts to work together, said Stabenow, who declined to voice an opinion on GOP motivations.
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#1. To: Brian S (#0)
Doesn't he mean "COMEDY"?????
"CHANGE" you can step in..... My dogs have created more shovel ready jobs than the self appointed Messiah!!!
His popularity increased during the election coincided with the collapse of the economy !
If you ... don't use exclamation points --- you should't be typeing ! Commas - semicolons are for girlie boys !
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