Panicked GOP Rushes Toward Secret Tax Deal Before Alabama Seats New Senator

@FAWFULFAN
Panicked GOP Rushes Toward Secret Tax Deal Before Alabama Seats New Senator

Reprinted with permission from Shareblue.com

A significant consequence of Democrat Doug Jones’s amazing victory in the Alabama election is that in January, Republicans will be down to just 51 votes in the Senate. Which is why House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell are determined to vote on their tax scam in December.

On Wednesday morning, Republicans in Congress frantically announced they have the outline of a deal to be passed by the House and Senate, and they’re hoping to rush through a vote next week. (Update: Republican leaders announced a final bill early on Thursday.)

None of the details of this secret deal are yet known. Any of the horrifying provisions of the House and Senate bills, from taxing graduate students to ending the health insurance mandate to eliminating credits the middle class relies on, could have made it in.

If Republicans hold the vote next week, before Jones is sworn in, then the temporary Senate appointee, Luther Strange, will get to vote for it, despite the fact that nobody in Alabama elected him.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is demanding the vote be postponed until Alabama’s new senator is in the chamber to give his constituents a voice. Other Senate Democrats are following his lead, including Ron WydenElizabeth WarrenKamala Harris, and Chris Van Hollen.

It should be noted that in 2010, Senate Republicans were adamant that the surprise Massachusetts election of Scott Brown meant Democrats should delay a vote on Obamacare — which they did. And that was over a bill that went though regular order and public hearings, and was not nearly as unpopular in polls.

Among the Republicans who took that view at the time were John McCain and Susan Collins, both of whom have been absolutely fine with how the tax scam has been rushed through so far. “I don’t think an election should drive the timetable,” Collins now says.

And while delaying a tax vote a few weeks is apparently so unreasonable, Senate Republicans were fine with delaying a Supreme Court nomination 293 days, until there was an entirely new president.

It is clear Republicans are still struggling to even wrap their heads around Alabama choosing a Democrat, let alone that that Democrat deserves a say in national legislation. RNC chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and National Republican Senatorial Committee chairman Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO) have said that Jones should switch parties because Alabama voted for Trump, weirdly forgetting that Alabama also just voted for Jones.

Republicans should wait until every last American is properly represented in the Senate before moving forward. They should not fear the will of Alabama, and the nation.

Header image: AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

 

Advertising

Start your day with National Memo Newsletter

Know first.

The opinions that matter. Delivered to your inbox every morning

North Carolina GOP's Extremist Nominees Excite Democratic Strategists

Michele Morrow

In 2020, Joe Biden narrowly missed capturing North Carolina’s 16 electoral votes, losing the state by a slim 1.4-percentage-point margin. But that was nearly four years ago. Before the Dobbs decision. Before Donald Trump’s 91 felony indictments. And before last week, when the state’s GOP voters nominated a guy who favorably quotes Hitler, has compared LGBTQ+ people to insects and larvae, and thinks a six-week abortion ban isn’t quite extreme enough for governor. Tar Heel State Republicans also nominated another extremist, Michele Morrow, for superintendent of the state’s schools.

Keep reading...Show less
{{ post.roar_specific_data.api_data.analytics }}