"Joe Lieberman may have been a Democrat, he may now be an independent, and some progressive Democrats may think he is a closet Republican. But what is indisputable is that he is a survivor: he has come out of a meeting with Senate Democrats upset over his role in supporting losing GOP Presidential candidate Sen. John McCain with little more than a slap on the wrist.
He did so with a little help from a (perhaps former) friend: President Elect Barack Obama, who went to the mat for Lieberman, making it clear behind the scenes that he didn’t want to start off his White House term with Democrats stripping Lieberman of his committee chairmanship or making Lieberman so upset that he’d bolt to caucus with the Republicans.
Progressive Democrats will be and are livid. But Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid argues that Lieberman is there when it counted on Democratic issues, and Lieberman vows its “the beginning of a new chapter.”Here's my comment:
I thought that it was a wise political decision, and have been hoping for this. Good work.
Here was an earlier post:
"Wednesday, November 12, 2008
"Several top Democratic senators have launched a behind-the-scenes effort to save Sen. Joe Lieberman’s chairmanship"
I don't talk about these kind of issues much because so many other people do. But here goes:"Several top Democratic senators have launched a behind-the-scenes effort to save Sen. Joe Lieberman’s chairmanship, despite calls from a Democratic base seeking retribution for Lieberman’s vocal support of John McCain’s presidential campaign.
Sens. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), Ken Salazar (D-Colo.), Tom Carper (D-Del.) and Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) are all involved in the effort, according to top Senate Democratic aides. These four senators — along with other Lieberman allies — are reaching out to the rest of the Democratic Senate caucus to try to ensure Lieberman survives a secret ballot vote on whether to strip him of his chairmanship of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
This effort, along with kind words from Majority Whip Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) last night about Lieberman, is giving the Connecticut senator some serious momentum heading into next week’s secret vote. Dodd’s involvement in saving his home-state senator is an extraordinary turn because Dodd backed Democratic candidate Ned Lamont in 2006 against Lieberman, who won the Connecticut Senate race as an independent. Dodd, however, had backed Lieberman in the Democratic primary and only switched support to Lamont when he became the Democratic nominee.
Also driving the effort to save Lieberman — an outcast with the progressive left — is the spirit behind Barack Obama’s victory.
“He’s got momentum, and we need to keep him in the caucus, and this fits into Barack Obama’s message of change and moving forward,” said one Senate Democratic aide familiar with discussions. “The message here is that we don’t want to start off a new era with retribution.”
I agree. Keep him where he is. It reminds me of Burke's treatment by the Whigs, which, well, really pissed me off. Lieberman is a Democrat. He was for the war. How many times have we heard the phrase "No litmus test", only to find out there's a folder of them that we have to pass before being a member of a party.
People like Lieberman, Friedman, and Hitchens, strike me as Democrats or leftists. Putting a hex on them because they supported the Iraq war seems wrong. It was a frightful mistake, but we might well make one ourselves someday out of the best of intentions.
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