WASHINGTON (By Lyndsey Layton and Juliet
Eilperin, Washington Post) January 2, 2007 —
As they prepare to take control of Congress
this week and face up to campaign pledges to restore bipartisanship and
openness, Democrats are planning to largely sideline Republicans from the
first burst of lawmaking.
House Democrats intend to pass a raft of
popular measures as part of their well-publicized plan for the first 100
hours. They include tightening ethics rules for lawmakers, raising the
minimum wage, allowing more research on stem cells and cutting interest
rates on student loans.
But instead of allowing Republicans to
fully participate in deliberations, as promised after the Democratic victory
in the Nov. 7 midterm elections, Democrats now say they will use House rules
to prevent the opposition from offering alternative measures, assuring
speedy passage of the bills and allowing their party to trumpet early
victories.
Nancy Pelosi, the Californian who will
become House speaker, and Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, who will become
majority leader, finalized the strategy over the holiday recess in a flurry
of conference calls and meetings with other party leaders. A few Democrats,
worried that the party would be criticized for reneging on an important
pledge, argued unsuccessfully that they should grant the Republicans greater
latitude when the Congress convenes on Thursday.
The episode illustrates the dilemma facing
the new party in power. The Democrats must demonstrate that they can break
legislative gridlock and govern after 12 years in the minority, while
honoring their pledge to make the 110th Congress a civil era in which
Democrats and Republicans work together to solve the nation's problems. Yet
in attempting to pass laws key to their prospects for winning reelection and
expanding their majority, the Democrats may have to resort to some of the
same tough tactics Republicans used the past several years.
Democratic leaders say they are torn
between giving Republicans a say in legislation and shutting them out to
prevent them from derailing Democratic bills.
"There is a going to be a tension there,"
said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (Md.), the new chairman of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee. "My sense is there's going to be a testing
period to gauge to what extent the Republicans want to join us in a
constructive effort or whether they intend to be disruptive. It's going to
be a work in progress."
House Republicans have begun to complain
that Democrats are backing away from their promise to work cooperatively.
They are working on their own strategy for the first 100 hours, and part of
it is built on the idea that they might be able to break the Democrats'
slender majority by wooing away some conservative Democrats.
Democrats intend to introduce their first
bills within hours of taking the oath of office on Thursday. The first
legislation will focus on the behavior of lawmakers, banning travel on
corporate jets and gifts from lobbyists and requiring lawmakers to attach
their names to special spending directives and to certify that such earmarks
would not financially benefit the lawmaker or the lawmaker's spouse. That
bill is aimed at bringing legislative transparency that Democrats said was
lacking under Republican rule.
Democratic leaders said they are not going
to allow Republican input into the ethics package and other early
legislation, because several of the bills have already been debated and
dissected, including the proposal to raise the minimum wage, which passed
the House Appropriations Committee in the 109th Congress, said Brendan Daly,
a spokesman for Pelosi.
"We've talked about these things for more
than a year," he said. "The members and the public know what we're voting
on. So in the first 100 hours, we're going to pass these bills."
But because the details of the Democratic
proposals have not been released, some language could be new. Daly said
Democrats are still committed to sharing power with the minority down the
line. "The test is not the first 100 hours," he said. "The test is the first
six months or the first year. We will do what we promised to do."
For clues about how the Democrats will
operate, the spotlight is on the House, where the new 16-seat majority will
hold absolute power over the way the chamber operates. Most of the early
legislative action is expected to stem from the House.
"It's in the nature of the House of
Representatives for the majority party to be dominant and control the agenda
and limit as much as possible the influence of the minority," said Ross K.
Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers University. "It's almost counter to
the essence of the place for the majority and minority to share
responsibility for legislation."
In the Senate, by contrast, the Democrats
will have less control over business because of their razor-thin
51-to-49-seat margin and because individual senators wield substantial
power. Senate Democrats will allow Republicans to make amendments to all
their initiatives, starting with the first measure -- ethics and lobbying
reform, said Jim Manley, spokesman for the incoming majority leader, Harry
M. Reid (D-Nev.).
Those same Democrats, who campaigned on a
pledge of more openness in government, will kick off the new Congress with a
closed meeting of all senators in the Capitol. Manley said the point of the
meeting is to figure out ways both parties can work together.
In the House, Louise M. Slaughter (D-N.Y.),
who will chair the Rules Committee, said she intends to bring openness to a
committee that used to meet in the middle of the night. In the new Congress,
the panel -- which sets the terms of debate on the House floor -- will
convene at 10 a.m. before a roomful of reporters.
"It's going to be open," Slaughter said of
the process. "Everybody will have an opportunity to participate."
At the same time, she added, the majority
would grant Republicans every possible chance to alter legislation once it
reaches the floor. "We intend to allow some of their amendments, not all of
them," Slaughter said.
For several reasons, House Democrats are
assiduously trying to avoid some of the heavy-handed tactics they resented
under GOP rule. They say they want to prove to voters they are setting a new
tone on Capitol Hill. But they are also convinced that Republicans lost the
midterms in part because they were perceived as arrogant and divisive.
"We're going to make an impression one way
or the other," said one Democratic leadership aide. "If it's not positive,
we'll be out in two years."
House Republicans say their strategy will
be to offer alternative bills that would be attractive to the conservative
"Blue Dog" Democrats, with an eye toward fracturing the Democratic
coalition. They hope to force some tough votes for Democrats from
conservative districts who will soon begin campaigning for 2008 reelection
and will have to defend their records.
"We'll capitalize on every opportunity we
have," said one GOP leadership aide, adding that Republicans were preparing
alternatives to the Democrats' plans to raise the minimum wage, reduce the
interest on student loans, and reduce the profits of big oil and energy
companies.
Several Blue Dog Democrats said they do not
think Republicans can pick up much support from their group.
"If they've got ideas that will make our
legislation better, we ought to consider that," said Rep. Allen Boyd Jr. (D-Fla.),
leader of the Blue Dogs. "But if their idea is to try to split a group off
to gain power, that's what they've been doing for the past six years, and
it's all wrong."
To keep her sometimes-fractious coalition
together, Pelosi has been distributing the spoils of victory across the
ideological spectrum, trying to make sure that no group within the
Democratic Party feels alienated.
Blue Dogs picked up some plum committee
assignments, with Jim Matheson (Utah) landing a spot on Energy and Commerce
and A.B. "Ben" Chandler (Ky.) getting an Appropriations seat. At the same
time, members of Black and Hispanic caucuses obtained spots on these panels,
as Ciro Rodriguez (Tex.) was given a seat on Appropriations and Artur Davis
(Ala.) took the place of Democrat William J. Jefferson (La.) on Ways and
Means.
Democrats acknowledge that if they appear
too extreme in blocking the opposing party, their party is sure to come
under fire from the Republicans, who are already charging they are being
left out of the legislative process.
"If you're talking about 100 hours, you're
talking about no obstruction whatsoever, no amendments offered other than
those approved by the majority," said Rutgers's Baker. "I would like to
think after 100 hours are over, the Democrats will adhere to their promise
to make the system a little more equitable. But experience tells me it's
really going to be casting against type."
"The temptations to rule the roost with an
iron hand are very, very strong," he added. "It would take a majority party
of uncommon sensitivity and a firm sense of its own agenda to open up the
process in any significant degree to minority. But hope springs eternal."