Many hope that during the lame duck session of Congress, we can accomplish some of the things that America needs. It is historically a good time to take up controversial issues, because it is the furthest gap there is until the next election, but not if Republicans have their way.
Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., won his last election on Nov. 3, 1998. Not enough of his fellow Republicans came with him. Gingrich’s party lost five seats in the House of Representatives after a year exploring impeachment charges against President Bill Clinton. Gingrich, who was House speaker, acknowledged the unexpected setback by announcing his resignation. His final act of power was to call a lame-duck session of Congress to deal with the impeachment.
Democrats were horrified and helpless. As far as they were concerned, the election had been a referendum on impeachment, and the Republicans had lost it. Republicans who were retiring or being replaced by Democrats were going to provide votes for impeachment that wouldn’t be there when the new, Gingrich-free Congress took over in January. "Listen to the American people," said Democratic investigative counsel Abbe Lowell, one of many members of his party who spent weeks wringing hands, pointing at polls, and watching the impeachment train chug along.
One week before Christmas the majority party held votes on four articles of impeachment, passing two of them. Gingrich cast his final votes in the House for all four articles. Two weeks later, he departed.
This is well-remembered Washington history, and it wraps plenty of yellow "CAUTION" tape around Gingrich’s newest cause. His latest petition [Newt delinked]—a sequel and supplement to campaigns by the Tea Party groups FreedomWorks [Tebaggers delinked] and Americans for Prosperity [Teabaggers delinked]—asks conservatives to send the following pledge to their members of Congress.
I, undersigned Member of the 111th Congress, pledge to the citizens of the State of _____________ I will not participate in a Lame Duck session of Congress. I believe reconvening the Congress after the November 2nd election and prior to the seating of the new 112th Congress, smacks of the worst kind of political corruption. Attempting to pass unpopular legislation subverts the will of the American people and is an abusive power grab.
Twelve years after leaving office, Gingrich sounds like the Democrats who wondered why defeated Republicans like New Jersey’s Mike Pappas and Mississippi’s Mike Parker were allowed to impeach Bill Clinton, when their Democratic successors won by promising not to. Gingrich’s spokesman Tim Cameron told me that the situations are not really comparable… [emphasis added]
Inserted from <Slate Magazine>
Frankly we need all the time we can get, because Republicans have done nothing but obstruct for the last two years. If Republicans choose not to attend, so much the better. Republican hypocrisy knows no bounds.