
Democrats8217; hopes of starting off their control of the US Senate with a sweeping commitment to ethics reform received a painful jolt, with their ethics and lobbying legislation sidetracked by a dispute with Republicans.
Democrats failed to clear a crucial legislative hurdle on Wednesday when the Senate voted 51-46 to proceed with the bill that would have reduced the influence of lobbyists in shaping legislation and forced lawmakers to be more open about the pet projects they slip into legislation. Sixty votes were needed to advance the legislation.
With the vote, the bill was effectively driven from the Senate floor.
Republicans voted against the motion to proceed because they were upset that Democrats were blocking an amendment, sponsored by Senator Judd Gregg, that would have given US President George W Bush authority, with the approval of Congress, to single out individual spending items in legislation for elimination.
8220;I hope this is going to be just a bump in the road,8221; said Democratic Whip Senator Dick Durbin. But there was no further action on the legislation scheduled, and revival of the bill hinged on reaching some kind of compromise on the Gregg amendment.
Both parties blamed the other for the temporary demise of what they hailed, when debate on the legislation started a week ago, as a model for bipartisan cooperation.
8220;It8217;s a terribly unfortunate day for this body,8221; said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
Democrats, who seized a narrow majority in the Senate, as well as the House, after campaigning on the 8220;culture of corruption8221; when Congress was controlled by the Republicans, had promised to start off with a major effort to break the links between lawmakers and lobbyists and reassure voters of the integrity of members of Congress.
The legislation would have barred lawmakers from accepting gifts and travel paid for by lobbyists, made it more difficult for former lawmakers to lobby their old colleagues, denied pensions to lawmakers convicted of serious crimes, required more reporting by lobbyists on their activities and required disclosure of the pet projects lawmakers insert into legislation.
Before the vote that deadlocked the bill, the Senate voted 88-9 to approve a Reid amendment that would have required senators who catch rides on corporate jets to pay charter rates. Now they reimburse jet owners with the far cheaper equivalent of a first-class ticket.
The bill was jointly sponsored by Reid and Republican leader Mitch McConnell.
McConnell noted that a similar ethics bill passed the Senate last year by a 90-8 vote and said he hoped, despite the deadlock, that 8220;we can continue to work on a path toward finishing the underlying bill.8221;