The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Tom DeLay's House of Shame
By Jonathan Alter
Newsweek
© October 10, 2005
Page 35
Congress has always had its share of extremists. But the
DeLay era is the first time the fringe has ever been in
charge.
A decade ago, I paid a call on Tom DeLay in his ornate
office in the Capitol. I had heard a rumor about him
that I figured could not possibly be true. The rumor was
that after the GOP took control of the House that year,
DeLay had begun keeping a little black book with the
names of Washington lobbyists who wanted to come see him.
If the lobbyists were not Republicans and contributors to
his power base, they didn't get into "the people's House."
DeLay not only confirmed the story, he showed me the book.
His time was limited, DeLay explained with a genial smile.
Why should he open his door to people who were not on the
team?
Thus began what historians will regard as the single most
corrupt decade in the long and colorful history of the
House of Representatives. Come on, you say. How about
all those years when congressmen accepted cash in the
House chamber and then staggered onto the floor drunk?
Yes, special interests have bought off members of Congress
at least since Daniel Webster took his seat while on the
payroll of a bank. And yes, Congress over the years has
seen dozens of sex scandals and dozens of members brought
low by financial improprieties. But never before has the
leadership of the House been hijacked by a small band of
extremists bent on building a ruthless shakedown machine,
lining the pockets of their richest constituents and
rolling back popular protections for ordinary people.
These folks borrow like banana republics and spend like
Tip O'Neill on speed.
I have no idea if DeLay has technically broken the law.
What interests me is how this moderate, evenly divided
nation came to be ruled on at least one side of Capitol
Hill by a zealot. This is a man who calls the Environmental
Protection Agency "the Gestapo of government" and favors
repealing the Clean Air Act because "it's never been
proven that air toxins are hazardous to people"; who
insists repeatedly that judges on the other side of
issues "need to be intimidated" and rejects the idea
of a separation of church and state; who claims there
are no parents trying to raise families on the minimum
wage—that "fortunately, such families do not exist"
(at least Newt Gingrich was intrigued by the challenges
of poverty); who once said: "A woman can't take care of
the family. It takes a man to provide structure." I
could go on all day. Congress has always had its share
of extremists. But the DeLay era is the first time the
fringe has ever been in charge.
The only comparison to DeLay Co. might be the Radical
Republicans of the 1860s. But the 19th-century Radical
Republican agenda was to integrate and remake the South.
The 21st-century Radical Republican agenda is to enact
the wish list of the tobacco and gun lobbies, repeal
health and safety regulations and spend billions on
shameless pork-barrel projects to keep the GOP at the
trough. Another analogy is to Republican Speaker Joe
Cannon, who ran the House with an iron fist a century
ago. But Cannon had to contend with Progressive Republicans
who eventually stripped him of his power. DeLay's ruling
radical conservative claque remains united, at least for
now.
Comparisons with fellow Texan Sam Rayburn fall short, too.
Rayburn was respected on both sides of the aisle for his
rock-solid integrity. He and most other House speakers
carefully balanced their support for corporate interests
like the oil depletion allowance with at least some sense
of the public good. And they had to share much of their
power with committee chairmen. Today, seniority is much
less important. Chairmen are term-limited (six years) or
tossed if they displease DeLay. And this crowd views "the
public interest" as strictly for liberal pantywaists.
How have they succeeded? A new book, "Off Center: The
Republican Revolution and the Erosion of American Democracy,"
by Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson, explains how the GOP
is simply better than the Democratic Party at the basic
blocking and tackling of politics, including the exploitation
of cultural and religious issues. The authors argue that
even if DeLay goes down, the zealotry and corporate shilling
will continue as long as the GOP controls the House. Consider
DeLay's temporary replacement, Missouri Rep. Roy Blunt.
The Washington Post reported last week that Blunt is
respected by Republican members in part because he has
"strong ties to the Washington lobbying community." That's
a qualification for office?
The only reason the House hasn't done even more damage
is that the Senate often sands down the most noxious
ideas, making the bills merely bad, not disastrous. What
next for the House of Shame? If DeLay's acquitted, he'll
be back in power. If he's convicted, his proteges will
continue his work. Reform efforts by fiscal conservatives
determined to curb their borrow-and-spend colleagues are
probably doomed. The only way to get rid of the termites
eating away the people's House is to stamp them out at the
next election.
© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.
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