(Deseret Morning News)
Deseret Morning News, Wednesday, November 08, 2006
Demo takeover will impact Utah delegation
By Suzanne
Struglinski
Deseret
Morning News
The
Democrats won the House Tuesday, putting Rep.
Jim Matheson, D-Utah, in an unfamiliar position
— the House majority — with election results
too close to call to determine whether the
Democrats would also control the
Senate.
![]() Landslide winner Jim Matheson, joined by supporters, speaks at the Utah State Democratic headquarters on election night. Keith Johnson, Deseret Morning News |
But some
Republicans fear impeachment proceedings for
President Bush could not be far
off.
If the
Republicans keep control of the Senate, Sen.
Bob Bennett, R-Utah, will help set the
Republicans' agenda in the Senate under new
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. If not,
Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., will lead the
Democrats in the Senate, with Bennett helping
McConnell adjust to life in the
minority.
"It's
depressing to see the House shift to the
Democrats' control," said Rep. Chris Cannon,
R-Utah. "It is a lot harder being in the
minority."
With the
Republicans out of the majority in the House,
Cannon will lose his chairmanship of a House
Judiciary subcommittee, but he expects to
continue serving on the House Judiciary and
House Government Reform Committee, "which are
going to be two nasty committees," he
said.
The House
Judiciary Committee would handle impeachment
proceedings, and the House Government Reform
Committee, which will "probably have a raft of
nasty investigations" under presumptive
chairman Rep. Henry Waxman,
D-Calif.
"I
suspect that I will be on both of those
committees as a go-to guy," Cannon said.
"That's going to be a harsh and ugly
environment."
Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said he does not think the
Democrats would resort to impeachment, saying
he believes they know they would look horrible
if they did.
Rep. Rob
Bishop, R-Utah, is on the House Rules
Committee, which controls amendments and
considers every piece of legislation that goes
to the House floor. The majority party
generally holds more seats on the committee, so
Bishop's seat may not be there during the next
session, but nothing is
certain.
"Nancy
Pelosi's agenda is something that is out of
step with Utah," Bishop said. "With split
government, in the worse-case scenarios, the
president still has a veto. So that means
nothing too bad can happen. The only caveat
area are tax increases."
Matheson
credits moderate Democrats, known as the Blue
Dogs, with the takeover and points out that is
it not just going to be Pelosi, a more liberal
Democrat, leading the House, but all levels of
Democrats.
He hopes
to stay on the Transportation, Science and
Financial Services committees, which he says
"are all good for Utah." With his fourth term,
he does not have enough seniority on any
committee for a chairmanship.
Bennett
said he has heard from Democratic friends that
Pelosi is going to "be very
civil."
"She
would be very smart if she were," Bennett said.
"I think one of the reasons the Republicans
lost the House was because of Delay (and other
Republican leaders) ... whose actions stemmed
from the attitude that the majority was a
God-given right. The Democrats need to
understand that their majority is not a
God-given right, either. The best thing they
can do is act like grown-ups and show a
contrast to the kinds of things we have seen in
the House."
Bennett
said the Democrats need to avoid the temptation
of impeachment proceedings, revenge or an
overall "we are going to get those Republicans"
attitude.
"If they
do that the country will suffer, and they will
lose their majority in 2008," Bennett
said.
Bennett
serves as the Senate's chief deputy whip.
McConnell served as the Senate majority whip,
but Bennett has been working with McConnell for
the past four years to take over the Senate's
top position when the time came. Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., did not
run for re-election. Bennett said McConnell
asked him not to run for the whip position,
which was something Bennett was not interested
in anyway
He said
being the whip would take too much time away
from his committee duties. Bennett serves as a
Senate Appropriations Agriculture Subcommittee
chairman as well as chairman of a subcommittee
of the Senate Banking Committee and vice
chairman of the Joint Economic
Committee.
Bennett
said by working with McConnell, he gets a seat
at the leadership table. "Frankly, we don't
know what the title will be," Bennett
said.
If the Democrats take control of the Senate, Bennett will still have a spot in the minority leadership team.
Contributing: Lee Davidson, Deborah Bulkeley
© 2006 Deseret News Publishing Company