Does anyone other than myself remember all that
wonderful sounding rhetoric that we heard from, and all of the promises made
by, so many Republicans in the run up to the last election? Was I just imagining it all, or did they
promise that they would work very hard to stop the Obama nightmare if only we
would hand to them complete control of Congress? And we bought it all, hook, line and sinker,
as we all marched off to the polls, and very dutifully so, and, for the most
part, voted for Republicans. And what,
so far, have we gotten in return? Absolutely nothing!
And if you haven’t figured things out for yourself,
I hate to be the one to have to tell ya, except for the number of players on
each team, not much else has changed when it comes to what’s coming out, and not
coming out, of the U.S. Congress.
Because, or so it would seem, Senate Democrats still remain pretty much
on control of the legislative agenda in Congress, election results from last
November notwithstanding. And how is it
that I can say that? Well, because
that’s what an analysis of all the votes taken since RINO Mitch McConnell took
over as Majority Leader shows.
Apparently, with only two very minor exceptions,
every single vote that has passed the U.S. Senate since the beginning of this
Congress in January, has passed with at least, and usually more than, 93
percent of support from Democrats. So
what’s that’s tell ya? What it tells me
is that the legislation being voted on must be pretty much to their
liking. So I have a little warning for
the Republicans, including those running for president in 2016. The fact that we were so blatantly lied to
leading up to the last election does not bode well for them in the next
election.
And what we’re now hear coming out of ‘Dingy Harry’s’
office should come as a surprise to absolutely no one. Because it was ‘Dingy’s’ spokesmoron, some
boob by the name of Adam Jentleson, who said, “While Republicans have done
nothing to create jobs and help the middle class, on other topics like passing
clean funding for Homeland Security and confirming Loretta Lynch, Senator
McConnell has done the right thing by bringing bills and nominations to the
floor that Democrats can support.” He
then added, “Democrats hope this trend will continue.”
Since January, according to the U.S. Senate vote
count website, 10 of Barry’s nominations have been confirmed. And each one of those nominations has seen
unanimous support from the Democrats who voted and with varying levels of
Republican support. So it would seem to
me that, to use Rand Paul’s terminology, we have far more than just two lap
dogs in the Senate. And lap does are not
what’s needed if we are to have any hope of saving our country. What we need are a lot more junkyard dogs
willing to take Barry and the Democrats.
Now it was seven of those ten nominations that passed
the Senate unanimously. Now what that
means is that every single senator, both Republican and Democrat, who voted on
those nominations voted in favor of confirmation. Not one Republican voice any measureable opposition,
not one. And those nominations were:
George C. Hanks, Jr., to be a U.S. district Judge
for the Southern District of Texas
Alfred H. Bennett to be a U.S. district Judge for
the Southern District of Texas
William P. Doyle to be a Federal Maritime
Commissioner
Carlos A. Monje, Jr., to be Assistant Transportation
Secretary
Christopher A. Hart to be National Transportation
Safety Board chairman
Daniel Henry Marti to be Intellectual Property
Enforcement Coordinator
Michael P. Botticelli to be Director of National
Drug Control Policy
For another one of those nominations, Russell C.
Deyo to be Under Secretary for Management for the Department of Homeland
Security, only two Republicans voted against confirmation. And on Ash Carter’s nomination to be
Secretary of Defense, just five Republicans voted no. And on the nomination of Loretta Lynch to be
Attorney General, all Democrats voted in favor joined by 10 RINOs. And those
RINOs were: McConnell and Sens. Kelly Ayotte, Thad Cochran, Susan Collins, Jeff
Flake, Lindsey Graham, Orrin Hatch, Ron Johnson, Mark Kirk, and Rob Portman.
McConnell broke a pre-election promise, and in near
record time, that no attorney general nominee would be considered in ‘his’
Senate if that nominee supported Barry “Almighty’s” executive amnesty,
something that Lynch has testified that she fully supports. In addition to those nominations that all
passed with unanimous support from ‘Dingy Harry’s’ Democrat conference in 2015,
there have been eight pieces of legislation that passed the U.S. Senate so far
this Congress, each passing with near unanimous Democrat Party support. So what has changed since November?
The first bill to pass in 2015, the Terrorism Risk
Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2015, passed the U.S. Senate 93-4.
Sens. There were the only 3 Democrats to
vote against it. The only other vote against it came from Sen. Marco Rubio.
Since two of the three senators not voting were Democrats, Sens. Barbara Boxer
(D-CA) and Reid himself, that means that 41 Democrats voted for it. This was
the worst vote for Democrats all Congress, with a whopping 93 percent of their
conference that voted on the bill voting for it and just 7 percent voting
against it.
Of the other seven pieces of legislation that passed
the U.S. Senate so far this Congress, three—a Veterans Affairs bill dealing
with mental health of veterans, an anti-child pornography bill, and the recent
anti-human trafficking bill passed unanimously with no opposition from
Republicans or Democrats. A fourth, the
so-called “doc fix” which raised the national debt by nearly $200 Billion
without offsetting cuts to pay doctors who accept Medicare more, passed with
unanimous Democrat support and only eight Republicans voting against it.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) bill that
funds Barry’s executive amnesty, despite the many pre-election promises that we
heard from nearly every Republicans running that they would do no such thing,
was passed thanks to Democrat support, no Democrats vote against it. Only Republicans, and then only 31 of them, opposed
the measure to fund Barry’s amnesty.
RINO McConnell got it passed with a coalition of 45 Democrats and 23 of
his RINO Republican friends. So I ask
you again, what is it that has changed since before the last election?
There are only two measures, both bills, which
passed the U.S. Senate in this Congress that did not have the at least 93
percent, but usually unanimous support, from Democrats. One was a bill the purpose of which was to
block Barry’s National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ambush elections rule and the
other was a bill that would have approved the Keystone XL pipeline. The NLRB
vote passed on purely partisan lines, with 53 Republicans voting for it with
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Republican from Alaska, actually joining all 45 Democrats
voting to oppose it.
Meanwhile, the Keystone pipeline bill saw all
Republicans who were voting, vote in favor, joined by 9 Democrats. But it’s worth noting that Barry vetoed both
the NLRB bill and the Keystone bill, and while Republicans tried to override
Barry’s Keystone veto, they failed. What’s
perhaps most interesting about all this data is that there are 54—a
majority—Republicans in the U.S. Senate and just 46 Democrats. The GOP majority
is because of the midterm elections last November, which saw a nine-seat swing
in favor of Republicans—one of the biggest in history.
But it’s quite clear from the empirical data that
nothing has really changed, and as we have heard, ‘Dingy Harry’s’ office is
clearly quite happy about it. Especially
since it seem as if he’s still the Senate Majority Leader. McConnell on the other hand continues to get
his ass handed to him all over the place.
Whether it’s by choice or by accident, and I’m not sure which would be
worse, McConnell has no defense for his failures as a leader. He is the one charged with getting done what
the Republicans promised they would do.
And if he’s not up to the challenge, he needs to go!
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