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The Whole Story from Mr Blog.
We now know that Obama’s Deputy Chief of Staff, called Colorado
House Speaker Andrew Romanoff in September, 2009, to offer him one of
three enumerated jobs if only he would drop out of the Democratic
Senate primary in which he was challenging appointed Senator Michael
Bennet. But the question is why?
In the case of the Spector/Sestak bribe, the answer is obvious: The
Obama Administration wanted the Pennsylvania Senator to switch parties
so that they would have a filibuster proof majority in the Senate. To
persuade him to switch, the White House had to do its utmost to clear
the field and assure him a safe path to the Senate nomination in his
new political party. So, Rahm Emanual asked former President Bill
Clinton to dangle positions in front of Sestak to get him to drop out
of the race.
But Michael Bennet was no great friend of the White House. Having
never been elected to a statewide position, he lacked a political base
and was never a particularly strong candidate. He only got the Senate
seat as an appointment to fill the seat vacated by Senator Ken Salazar
who gave up the seat to become Secretary of the Interior in the Obama
Administration. So why was the Obama Administration trying to clear the
field for Bennet and assure him of the nomination?
The answer likely lies in the politics of health care. Bennet had
been a question mark from the beginning of the health care debate. The
Huffington Post reported, on November 22, 2009, that he was willing to
lose his Senate seat if he had to in order to back health care reform.
The Post reported that his dramatic announcement ended months of
silence on the subject and relieved White House concerns that he was
not going to back the bill.
Funny how Bennet’s announcement came less than two months after Romanoff was offered a job to drop out of the race!
If a connection can be documented between the offer and the vote (no
other motivation seems credible) the transaction becomes particularly
sickening. Trading a job for a vote is the crassest and most obvious
form of bribery. But what else can account for Bennet’s sudden morph
from being on the fence over health care to an ardent supporter who
would lose all rather than see it die?
In any case, we need to help Jane Norton, Colorado’s former Lt
Governor, beat either Bennet or Romanoff in the general election in the
fall. She holds a lead and we need to throw this kind of horse trading
bribery politics out of office.
By Dick Morris And Eileen McGann
I am Independent. Feels real good. Mr Blog
Become an Independent voter it feels real good..... Being independent voter you get the best of all politics. If there was a Democrat that had a good policy for the people I can vote for that democrat, If a republican has good policy "a lot do" for the people than I can vote for that republican. If a independent has a good policy I can vote for that independent. It´s the only way to be a true American. Vote for the right person that has the best interest for the majority of the people.
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