Rohrabacher forms odd alliance
Paul Clinton
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher has formed an odd political pairing with a
fellow House member who just this summer helped raise money for
Rohrabacher’s opponent in the November election.
Liberal Rep. Barney Frank and Rohrabacher, a conservative
Republican who represents Costa Mesa, are working to change an arcane
procedural rule that prevents House members from criticizing their
fellow lawmakers in the Senate.
Rohrabacher and Frank (D-Mass.) hope to overturn a rule that
prevents House members from “describing and characterizing†almost
any action in the Senate. By contrast, senators are not required to
abide by a similar rule.
“Nothing I am proposing is legalizing personal attacks or
[allowing] questioning of people’s motives,†Rohrabacher said. “This
is not a license to trash somebody. I’m talking about opening up the
debate.â€
Thomas Jefferson drafted the rule in 1801 as part of his “Jefferson’s Manual,†a guide to the rules and parliamentary
procedure in both houses of Congress. At the time, Jefferson, who was
the vice president, presided over the Senate. But the rule was not
adopted by that body.
More than 200 years later, and just about six weeks after Frank
was the headliner of a fund-raiser for Democratic House candidate
Gerrie Schipske, Rohrabacher and Frank are the standard bearers for
the removal of the rule on the House side. They say the Senate has
sat on a number of bills that have passed in the lower house.
Known as the “Daschle 50,†after Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle (D-South Dakota), the bills range from pension reform and
welfare reform to the permanent repeal of the estate tax and federal
funding for President Bush’s faith-based groups.
“We’ve been working all year and the Senate has been sitting on
their hands,†Rohrabacher said. “We should be able to complain if the
Senate is not acting on a bill.â€
Rohrabacher initiated his push for the change at a hearing of the
House Rules Committee on Thursday. During a speech, Rohrabacher said
the rule causes the House to “handicap itself in debate.â€
At the hearing, Frank said the muzzle on House criticism of Senate
action is “a dumb rule†that prevents members from debating
legislation.
To change the rule, Rules Chairman Rep. David Drier (R-San Dimas)
would need to include it in his proposed rules package in January.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.