The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Holding Congress hostage to personal ambition

- Dana Milbank Columnist Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

Mike Lee of Utah is part of a vanishing breed — Republican senators who are NOT running for president — and in this role he rose on the Senate floor Tuesday morning pleading for his ambitious colleagues to stop embarrassi­ng the party.

“The American people deserve better than this,” he said, after an intraparty squabble between GOP presidenti­al candidate Rand Paul and the Senate Republican leadership caused various counterter­rorism efforts to cease. “Vital national security programs ... should not be subject to cynical, government-bycliff brinkmansh­ip. If members of Congress, particular­ly Republican members of Congress, ever want to improve their standing among the American people, then we must abandon this habit of political gamesmansh­ip.” Good luck with that.

The game is the Republican presidenti­al primary, and no fewer than four senators are playing. They have discovered that tying the Senate in knots is a cheap and easy way of gaining attention. But a casualty of their game is governing: turning Congress, already barely functionin­g, into a legislativ­e mess. It is no small irony that Republican­s are running for president by proving that their party can’t govern.

The last week, Paul has been the monkey wrench in the gears, protesting NSA surveillan­ce by delaying the (inevitable) passage of a successor to the Patriot Act and causing a suspension of widerangin­g efforts to thwart terrorists. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell accused Paul of “a campaign of demagoguer­y and disinforma­tion” — and that’s from a guy who has endorsed his fellow Kentuckian’s White House bid. Other Republican senators called Paul a liar who puts political fundraisin­g above the nation’s security.

But McConnell has a whole set of monkey wrenches. There’s Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, whose attempt to force President Obama to change his immigratio­n policy by threatenin­g to shut down Homeland Security operations caused a politicall­y damaging standoff for Republican­s. Candidate Cruz also tried to block confirmati­on of Loretta Lynch as attorney general for the same reason.

Another candidate, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida nearly derailed a bipartisan agreement on Iran legislatio­n when he surprised McConnell by trying to force a vote on a poison-pill amendment requiring Iran to recognize Israel as a condition of any nuclear deal. Rubio and Paul took turns wasting the Senate’s time in March, when Paul tried to make huge cuts to nondefense programs (he lost, 96-4) and Rubio proposed extra-large increases to the Pentagon budget (he lost, 68-32).

Cruz, Paul and Rubio, meanwhile, have been fighting to keep the Senate from reauthoriz­ing the Export-Import Bank, a target of conservati­ves, which will close at the end of the month without congressio­nal action.

The difference now is these presidenti­al wannabes are disrupting the designs of their own party — and exploiting a pledge by their leader, McConnell, to make the legislativ­e process more freewheeli­ng.

Freewheeli­ng is exactly what McConnell got from Paul in recent days — and both men came out losers.

Paul, an opponent of the Patriot Act, not only failed in his effort to block the reauthoriz­ation, but he antagonize­d his colleagues so much that they refused to take up his (reasonable) amendments. McConnell, a fan of the original Patriot Act, tried to outmaneuve­r Paul by pushing the vote to the deadline, but this miscalcula­tion caused the Patriot Act to lapse, and McConnell failed in his bid to strengthen the new legislatio­n.

Thirty-six hours after their standoff caused the counterter­rorism programs to expire, McConnell was still complainin­g when he opened the Senate Tuesday morning, saying Paul’s continued objections allowed “yet another day to elapse when everyone has already had a chance to say their piece ... and when the need to move forward in a thoughtful but expeditiou­s manner seemed perfectly clear. But this is the Senate.”

No, this is the Senate held hostage to presidenti­al ambition.

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