"Did the meeting take place?," CNN Chief Political Correspondent and State of the Union anchor Candy Crowley asked McConnell. "What was the conversation?"Nobody's in favor of blocking the bill, says the guy who is leading the efforts of all 41 GOP senators blocking the bill. They're not politicizing the issue, says the guy saying the bill needs to go back to the drawing board. That's pretty damned funny.
"Well, we certainly didn't talk about blocking the bill," the Kentucky Republican replied. "I don't know anybody who's in favor of blocking this bill."
McConnell added, "I thought [the president] wanted us to have a bipartisan bill. That's what I would like to have. We are in the process of gathering information from people all across the country, from Wall Street to Main Street to try to get advice about doing this right."
McConnell also said that he met recently with bankers in his home state who oppose the current version of the financial reform bill.
Pressed by Crowley about how Cornyn's involvement, at least created the appearance that Republicans were playing politics with the issue of reform, McConnell denied Obama's accusation.
"Well, look, we were talking about financial regulation, as everybody in the country is talking about it," the top Senate Republican said. "Most of the people in New York supported the president, the vast majority of them are on his side. They supported him during the election, they still support him. Is he saying we shouldn't sit down with his supporters and talk about a bill that he thinks we ought to pass and that I think we ought to pass? This is absurd, he..."
"Why was Sen. Cornyn there?," Crowley queried.
"Candy, [Obama] is the one who is trying to politicize this issue. We are the ones who are trying to get it right," he replied.
Hey Mitch, I'm a registered independent in the state of Kentucky, and I'm telling you, you're blocking the bill. It really is simple: the GOP is so cocky now that they will gain back the House and possibly the Senate that they believe they can shut down any legislation -- even overwhelmingly popular financial reform -- and get away with it. I don't think reality is quite that bad for the Democrats, especially if the Republicans keep going down this road.
But the GOP figures you'll vote for them even if they side with the banks, insult your intelligence and lie to you about doing so by telling you they're not in Wall Street's pocket and let the banks off with a slap on the wrist, thus assuring we get another bubble that will burst and wreck our economy time and time again.
It's bad enough that even Candy Crowley is calling Mitch out on it. The GOP leadership really does think you're that stupid, folks.
are the democrats likely to make an issue of this stuff in november? probably not in the organized, hammering-it-home way they need to. so yeah, the republicans will get away with it, more or less.
ReplyDeleteteadoust
This is hypocrisy at it's best. You're now going to pull the "what's popular" card? Where was that when the majority of Americans didn't want the proposed HCR bill?
ReplyDeleteLOL you're a registered independent.
Hey genius!
ReplyDeleteStill don't GET IT do you?
Obama is is trouble! Democrats are going to lose dozens of seats in November! Obama-Care is a failure!
All of a sudden the SEC goes after Goldman Sachs to change the subject! Funny how that works!
You again.
ReplyDeleteChange the subject? Isn't the entire complaint that Obama has spent too much time on health care and not enough on economic matters?
So now the administration passes health care reform and pivots to the economy and Obama's "changing the subject" because the real issue is health care.
Wow.
I love Kentucky. I love Kentuckians. Perhaps I am a tad biased on this topic. You see, my ancestry is steeped in the history of that state. Many generations of my forebears called Kentucky home. My maternal grandfather was born in 1894 on a tobacco farm in the small town of Hodgenville. He and my grandmother Loretta Doran today lie side by side in the small rural Catholic cemetery there.
ReplyDeleteThat is the same town where Abraham Lincoln was born. Down the road from my family's ancestral home (which we still own by the way) is the Lincoln Marriage Cabin where Thomas Lincoln married Nancy Hanks. If you ever visit the place, check out the bronze plaque out in front. It says:
"Donated to the state of Kentucky by Walter L. Clements"
That was my grandfather. He and his father, Walter A. Clements, also donated the Lincoln Boyhood Cabin to the state of Kentucky. The land that the Lincoln family settled on was owned by my ancestors. Like my granddad (or "Paw Paw" as we called him) the Lincolns eventually moved to Indiana.
I don't think I can state it more clearly: l am just crazy about Kentucky and the nice people who live there. That being said, however, the question is just screaming to be asked:
Why do such good and decent people keep sending a flaming asshole like Mitch McConnell to Washington?
http://www.tomdegan.blogspot.com
Tom Degan