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Liberal ‘hell no’ caucus rises
« on: November 19, 2014, 12:56:13 am »
http://www.politico.com/story/2014/11/keystone-xl-senate-liberals-113009.html?hp=t1_r


Liberal ‘hell no’ caucus rises

By Burgess Everett

11/18/14 7:45 PM EST

The defeat of the Keystone XL Pipeline in the Senate marked a major show of muscle for next year’s new hell-no caucus: liberals.

Liberal Senate Democrats united to block the controversial project, even though their imperiled Democratic colleague Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, begged them not to at a Democratic caucus lunch on Tuesday afternoon.

It was a remarkable move for a group that has stood behind Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) over the years, as he sought to protect vulnerable moderates, like Landrieu and some of her now-ousted colleagues, from taking tough votes on divisive environmental, health care and social issues.

But red-state Democrats like Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Mark Begich of Alaska are on their way out, and liberals like Jeff Merkley, Bernie Sanders and Sheldon Whitehouse – with Elizabeth Warren leading the way on messaging – may cause as many headaches for Senate Republicans as tea partiers caused Democrats in the past four years.



“I will use whatever tools I have as a senator to protect the environment,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, a liberal from Oregon.

Asked if he could ever envision himself performing a Rand Paul-style talking filibuster in the Republican Senate, Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island replied: “Oh, of course. We will have more tools in the minority than we had in the majority.”

Progressives are girding for battle with Republicans over campaign finance law, consumer protections and women’s health care. But the early battle lines appear increasingly drawn around environmental policy, where Democratic centrists may defect from leadership in next year’s Senate and help Republicans pass legislation strongly opposed by liberal senators.

“They actually want to tear down environmental protection and regulation in every public comment that I’ve heard a Republican make. Clearly, there’s a challenge coming. And we have to be prepared to meet that challenge,” Whitehouse said. “With respect to climate, you can’t just go back and fix it and make it right with whoever was hurt by some stupid policy.”



Still, liberals’ Keystone victory is likely to be short-lived. Next year, Republicans could boast as many as 54 votes in the Senate if they oust Landrieu, and combined with centrist Democratic supporters from red and purple states Keystone’s eventual passage seems assured. But the Keystone vote is only the beginning of a slew of votes next year on Republican proposals likely aimed at increasing U.S. energy production and rolling back regulations the GOP finds burdensome — votes sure to provoke a fight with Senate liberals.

With Republicans able to steamroll Democrats in the House with a new historic majority, next year’s Senate Democratic minority becomes the last line of congressional defense for liberals and progressives. And as the GOP plans its agenda, members of the party’s left wing is vowing that there’s still fight left in them despite their diminished influence: If provoked, they say they are ready to use Senate procedure to fight the majority’s agenda tooth and nail.?

Indeed, Whitehouse and other progressive senators said that while other economic and social issues worry them, they don’t believe the damage that Republicans could do by unwinding environmental regulations can be undone. Given that sense of urgency, climate change may be the issue that draws the strongest challenge from an increasingly influential bloc of Senate liberals as Republicans prepare to take both chambers of Congress for the first time in eight years.

The concerns among Democrats as they brace for Republicans to set the Senate agenda range much more broadly than solely green and environmental issues as they brace for Republicans to set the agenda in the Senate. Merkley mentioned campaign finance and the weakening the of regulations instituted by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.



“Social Security and Medicare, the environment, education. There are going to be lots of opportunities for them to show their true colors,” said Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.).

And even some of the avowed centrists who are seeking to move bipartisan legislation on infrastructure and energy policy say there are going to be issues where they are prepared to loudly confront the GOP majority.

“I’m not going to be part of sitting down if the Republicans are trying to roll through that I fundamentally disagree with,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), who voted against Harry Reid as Democratic leader. “I’m not going to let them defund Planned Parenthood, for example. … they might try to do this as an appeasement to their base.”

But McCaskill is with Republicans on Keystone, as are a number of Democrats that will return next year in the minority. As the first major, divisive post-election vote, the movement on Keystone is bringing out strong rhetoric from environmentalists that fear this is only a preview of the stiff headwinds they will face next year.



“The idea that people are supporting a project that will significantly increase carbon emissions is totally insane. It’s an absurd proposal,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), perhaps the most liberal member of the Senate. “Obviously I will disagree with Republicans on virtually every issue, but on this issue of climate change the Republican position is an embarrassment to the American people.”

How this all plays out depends entirely on what direction the GOP takes in January. The Republicans have long staked out Keystone as one of their first priorities next year, but McConnell has also vowed to challenge the Obama administration’s proposals for regulating and limiting emissions from coal-fired power plants.

And Republicans consistently have preferred to “streamline” environmental regulation for infrastructure projects — an issue that will come up when Congress has to pass a new transportation bill by the end of May. But Republicans could also seek a less confrontational agenda out of the gate, focusing on small bore policies previously passed by the House like repealing Obamacare’s medical device tax and broader ideas like tax reform that are less ideologically divisive.

While they expect plenty of fights with Democrats next year, GOP leaders are downplaying the potential for a new emboldened Democratic minority to derail their priorities and turn the Senate into two more years of failed procedural votes and long hours of boring, empty quorum calls.

“It’s actually going to be much better than some people think. Because there is an enormous appetite on the Democratic side to actually be relevant,” said Senate Minority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas). “I don’t expect anybody to give up their ideological convictions overnight, but I’ve had several conversations with some pretty liberal Democrats … they said: ‘We can choose to govern in the center and we can try to find some common ground.’ I think that’s going to happen.”

The goal of passing sweeping climate change or environmental protection legislation no longer possible, liberal Democrats are instead eyeing a long game: Knock down GOP proposals that they disagree with when they can hold the line against 60 votes. If they can’t, rely on President Obama to squash them with his veto pen. And hold the line until 2016, when Democrats hope to retake the Senate majority and litigate climate change in the presidential race.

“On climate it’s unlikely that we’re going to be able to find a middle ground given the rhetoric we’ve heard during the campaign. So it’s very likely to be a fight,” said Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), who won a contested Senate primary by running to the left. “But it’s very likely that we legislatively play everything to a tie … then in the next election cycle the voters can decide whether they want to move backwards or forward.”

Even as they vow to fight Republicans at every turn on issues that fundamentally divided liberals and conservatives, left-leaning Democrats insist that they will not do so seeking retaliation against a Republican minority that stymied their economic, environmental and social priorities for so long with filibusters and delay. Those days, they insist, are gone — leaving liberals to somehow find a balance between fighting for their convictions and not drawing the same charges of obstruction that have dominated Democratic messaging for years.

“The best news about a Republican majority in the Senate is that the Republican minority is now gone,” Whitehouse said. “They were just a God awful minority.”


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Oceander

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Re: Liberal ‘hell no’ caucus rises
« Reply #1 on: November 19, 2014, 01:02:59 am »
Good.  Now we get to see just exactly who the obstructionists are who will sacrifice the interests of the American people for their own ideological pathologies.

Offline Scottftlc

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Re: Liberal ‘hell no’ caucus rises
« Reply #2 on: November 19, 2014, 01:05:17 am »
A pyrhic victory for the ultra liberals and the radical enviros...one of their last.  They are marginalizing the entire the Democratic Party with their efforts.  They are stuck on an island with only an echo chamber for support.  The broad swath of America will be completely turned off by these radicals.  The Democrats are self-inflicting nasty wounds.
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