| A Second Chance For Republicans to Act Rather Than Talk |
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| Written by Ed Morrissey |
| Thursday, 22 May 2008 06:54 |
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Congress sent an incomplete version of the farm bill to the White House yesterday, rendering the veto override vote taken in the House meaningless. Democrats in both chambers will now need to shepherd the bill back through votes in order to get an official veto that they can override — which means they have to start at square one. While that reflects poorly on the Democrats, the Republicans hardly have any reason to crow:
The foul-up gives Republicans in the House and Senate a second chance. Their first efforts on the farm bill flew in the face of all the high-minded rhetoric regarding fiscal discipline and reform emanating from luminaries such as Tom Cole and John Boehner since the last special-election loss in Mississippi. The GOP wants to carry the mantle of clean government and small government, but majorities of Republicans in both chambers voted for a farm bill laden with pork projects, corporate welfare, and farm subsidies that make no sense in a market where food prices have risen significantly. Memo to the GOP: we don’t believe your rhetoric any longer. Oh, conservatives still want an end to corruption, a reduction in the size and scope of the federal government, and spending discipline to go with lower taxes. We just don’t believe that many elected Republicans want those goals, nor do we think that current Republican leadership has any real commitment to them, either. Want to dazzle us? Want to start rebuilding your credibility? Then stop talking and start taking action. When this farm bill comes back through Congress, oppose its fiscal foolishness. You have an opportunity to demonstrate through action instead of empty rhetoric that you understand the lesson of 2006, and that you will start acting on conservative principles rather than on political expediency. If you act on the latter, you will surely see an even starker lesson in 2008. Cross-posted at Hot Air. |








