Las Vegas Review-Journal

Reid: U.S. turning into Russia

Ex-senate Dems speak of wealth’s effects on politics

- By Scott Sonner The Associated Press

RENO — Two retired Democrats who served in the U.S. Senate together for nearly three decades said Tuesday that money has been the driving force behind a dramatic rise in partisansh­ip and resulting gridlock in Congress over the past decade.

“Money is everything in politics today,” former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said.

“While money doesn’t always get what it wants, it almost always gets gridlock instead,” added ex-secretary of State John Kerry. “And that’s what we have today.”

The two appeared together at the launch of a biennial lecture series at the University of Nevada, Reno named after Reid, who retired in 2016 as Nevada’s longest-serving

U.S. senator. The inaugural lecture was titled “Bipartisan­ship and Public Service.”

Both blamed Republican­s for blocking efforts to enact enforceabl­e limits on campaign contributi­ons from corporatio­ns, political parties and other campaign committees. They said the gridlock often is by design, orchestrat­ed by corporate and business interests that want to thwart federal regulation or equitable tax policies.

Reid said America “is becoming just like Russia … run by a very few wealthy families.”

“They’ve created this unbelievab­le race for money,” Kerry added.

The Republican National Committee did not immediatel­y respond to a phone call and email seeking comment Tuesday night.

Kerry, who first elected to the Senate from Massachuse­tts during President Ronald Reagan’s landslide victory in 1984, and Reid, who first won his seat in 1986, recalled their earlier days in office, when they said moderates in both parties worked cooperativ­ely for the good of the country.

“Back then, comprise was not capitulati­on. And no extremist held you accountabl­e,” said Kerry, whom President Obama named secretary of state in 2013.

“Compromise was not a dirty word,” Reid added. “Legislatio­n is the art of compromise. I never, ever got what I wanted. I always had to work with somebody else. That is something we’ve lost. Now it’s ‘We do it my way or no way.’”

Kerry, who lost the 2004 presidenti­al election to Republican George W. Bush, said a long tradition of bipartisan cooperatio­n began to disappear with the Republican “revolution” led by Georgia Rep. Newt Gingrich in 1994, followed by the evolution of the conservati­ve Tea Party and more recently the GOP’S “Freedom Caucus.”

“Then came the hostile takeover of the Republican Party, which is where we are today,” he said.

Kerry said the rules of the Senate remain virtually unchanged over the past century.

“It’s not the rules of the Senate that get in the way. It’s the people that get in the way, individual­s who decide their extreme ideologica­l view is more worth fighting for” than compromisi­ng and doing what’s best for the United States, he said.

Reid said in an interview before the lecture that many mistakenly blame President Donald Trump for the erosion of bipartisan­ship.

“People think Trump created the Republican Congress,” he said. “They’re wrong. The Republican Congress created Trump.”

He said the partisansh­ip escalated with the election of Barack Obama in 2008.

“Prior to Obama, there was partisansh­ip, of course, but Obama drove Republican­s crazy,” Reid said.

“They always thought he was an illegitima­te president, and they set out to do two things,” he said. “They would do anything they could to defeat Obama during his re-election, which they failed to do. And No. 2, they would oppose everything Obama wanted. They succeeded there.”

“They have done all they can to affect the ability of the Senate to get anything done, and they’ve refused to do anything about campaign spending,” he said. “Filibuster­s were rarely used in the past, but Republican­s use them now even on things they agree about just to stall for time.”

 ?? Scott Sonner ?? The Associated Press Former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, and former Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, right, participat­e in a lecture series Tuesday at the University of Nevada, Reno, moderated by history professor Hugh Shapiro, center....
Scott Sonner The Associated Press Former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, and former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, right, participat­e in a lecture series Tuesday at the University of Nevada, Reno, moderated by history professor Hugh Shapiro, center....
 ??  ?? Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid speaks Tuesday during a lecture series at the University of Nevada, Reno.
Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid speaks Tuesday during a lecture series at the University of Nevada, Reno.

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