Last week, it was the "IMPEACH BUSH" crowd that filled the Statehouse. Thursday afternoon this well-organized bunch of regular Joes popped in to lobby their legislators, they told me, to "vote no on H. 520."
Which one's H. 520? That not the Global Warming Bill that just came out of the Senate, is it?
"It's the tax on fuel oil and propane," they told me. In fact, these guys, about two-dozen, were mostly guys who bring it - fuel oil and propane - to your house. Hired-gun Lobbyist Shawn Banfield of William Shouldice Associates was having them fill out slips of paper to have delivered to their individual representative, urging them to "Vote no on H. 520."
One little problem: H. 520 does not include a tax on fuel oil and propane.
That was in the original version, but removed three months ago. It never made it out of committee. What Sen. Peter Shumlin finally replaced it with as a funding source was a 5-year $35 million surcharge to be imposed on the unanticipated whopping profits the Louisiana-based Entergy Corporation, owner of Vermont Yankee Nuclear in Vernon, all 650-megawatts, has been reaping of late.
That money will be used to bankroll a new energy efficiency utility to be designed by the PSB, that will do what has to be done - cut fossil fuel use. Time is running out. It's called global warming, and even in the best-case scenario, things are going to get worse before they show any inkling of improvement.
Gov. Jim Douglas, however, has shot to Entergy's defense, portraying it as a bad message to the business community. Entergy could not have a better spokesman.
Coincidentally, while a certain segment of the Vermont business sector was shamelessly doing a brazen job of distorting the truth under Montpeculiar's golden dome, Dr. James Hansen (left), the star witness for Vermont in the big "Tale of the Tailpipe Trial" at federal court in Burlington, was on the stand. Hansen, 66, a physicist, is director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
The major auto companies are suing Vermont to prevent our little Green Mountain State from enforcing California's auto emissions standards. They say they can't do it, it'll cost too much.
In December of 2005, Hansen forecast we have 10 years to turn this global warming thing around. Ten years to halt the the out-of-control increase in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
Press: Are we going to make it?
HANSEN: Well, that depends. I hope the decision is such that it does force vehicle makers to go down a path of improved efficiency and in that case I think we still have a chance, but time is getting short.
PRESS: What will it take to impress on people just how short? That’s a tough thing to do.
HANSEN: Yeah. And this problem is different than the air pollution problem where you see the effects immediately both of the pollution and when you reduce it. But here the system has inertia and we’ve only obtained about half of the eventual response for the gases we’ve already put in the atmosphere. There’s more in the pipeline. It’s going to occur even if we stabilize atmospheric composition. So this problem is more difficult for people to understand. They don’t see much so far.
PRESS: What’s It going to take?
HANSEN: Ah, well,
PRESS: What’s it going to take? Something horrible, right?
HANSEN: Well, it’s going to take politicians who are willing to address long term problems not only the four-year problems.
Yes, indeed. Politicians with backbone.
And a lot of them.
Real soon.
Sitting all day in the same seat brought back a feeling of immobility, one I haven't experienced since I had a job for almost six months with the U.S. Census Bureau back in 1980.
Today, I spent almost seven hours sitting in the same seat up on Hospital Hill. This one was my chemotherapy seat with the IV in the fat vein on top of my left hand. Went well.
Memories?
I had only been in Burlap a few months. Census HQ was on lower Maple Street - an artsy ad agency in there now. Democrat Jimmy Carter was president. Ruth Poger, South Burlington Queen Bee, was the boss. Lots of Democrat Party-connected female managers. Friends of Patrick & Madeleine, aka. Patrick Leahy & Madeleine Kunin were they. Or rather Madeleine May Kunin as she's identified in her recent Lake Champlain op-ed in the Rutland Herald.
Plain and simple, the Census gals were short on boys and hired me on the spot. This Chicago cabbie with a Jesuit University degree appeared of interest. Over the next six months, I learned Vermont and Vermont politics in a whole lot more depth than the "normal" newcomer. And $150-a-week was a decent paycheck in 1980. The rent over on Marble Ave. was $125-a-month. And Jeannine, my Chicago sweetheart, was working behind the counter at La Patisserie on Main Street.
Nurse Pat, who took the photo of Peter Patient today, also shares a Chicago past. Grew up in "boring" Indianapolis. Went to St. Joe's in South Bend, the girls college, and spent much of those wild 1970s, like me, in Chicago! Greatest big city in the world! We agreed on that.
After chemo, I went downtown to the coffee shop. Light crowd on the Marketplace, except for the bunch sounding the IMPEACH BUSH message up in front of the Unitarian Church. I took this photo after they'd broken up. Leahy, Sanders, Welch, Douglas and Bush himself may wish we've heard the last of the IMPEACH BUSH cries, but you know what?
We haven't.
I confess, I missed the CH. 3 Six O'Clock News. By the time they posted it, I had already gone through the email. Surprised by the news judgment. Fanning the flames of the suicidal Virginia Tech psycho shooter???
Ol' WGOP must have gotten bad ratings? This led tonight's Vermont News:
***updated 7:50 P.M.***
Good turnout for Gov. Jim Douglas' rescheduled weekly presser at the Statehouse Tuesday.
Lots of topics covered, though, yours truly was the only member of the Fourth Estate interested (in response to a reader's suggestion) in where Jim Douglas stands in the wake of another Vermonter's death - Christopher DeGiovine - in the Bush-Cheney War based on lies way over in Iraq.
PRESS: In light of the recent death of another Vermonter in Iraq, do you still support the Bush-Cheney War in Iraq and if so why?
DOUGLAS: Well, Peter, my view isn’t different from what it’s been. I believe that the Congress and the President have a responsibility to find a credible exit strategy from our engagement in Iraq. I was encouraged to hear a report on the radio this morning that after a veto there may be grounds for reaching some compromise on a funding bill with some benchmarks or other ways of defining that strategy. So I certainly hope they are able to do that and I think that’s their responsibility.
PRESS: You sound like you would support the Democrat bill. Congress is trying, as you know, to get out of Iraq. The President seems like he’s not. And Congress has put timetables, time lines on getting out; goals and targets to shoot at. Do you support those?
DOUGLAS: Well, I don’t know about specific dates, but that’s the kind of give and take that has to occur for the Congress and the president to find common ground, something they can both agree to.
PRESS: Is there anything the President is doing that you take exception to? Or not doing?
DOUGLAS: Well, I’m not a military strategist.
PRESS: But you’re a politician. He’s a politician. Given the situation, your party? His popularity?
DOUGLAS: Well, I’m not sure what the question is.
PRESS: The question is, is there any advice you would have for the president to do something or not do something? To change course on something?
DOUGLAS: Well, to work with the Congress to find some common ground, a bill that both branches can agree to.
Really?
On another matter, Gov. Jim Douglas was not setting the best example today. That's because the license plate on his gubernatorial Chevrolet expired at midnight.
Bummer.
That's a picture of the CH. 5 cameraman Oli Birgisson getting a shot of the evidence. Douglas brushed it aside at his weekly pressser when we brought it up in the context of New Jersey Gov. John Corzine not wearing his seat belt.
"It's not my car," said Gov. Scissorhands.
***UPDATE***
Marsillyiss, er, Marselis Parsons reported on CH. 3's Six O'Clock News that the Guv's new plate sticker had been mailed to the wrong address.
The new one, Mr. Parsons told viewers, had been affixed by afternoon's end.
Was the Guv breaking the law...since midnight anyway?
I called BPD. Great phone system. Couldn't reach a live "officer-in-charge." So we hit the chief's number.
Chief not in. But Deputy Chief is.
Our lucky day, eh?
Wrong, Deputy Chief been away from enforcing that stuff for quite some time. He's not sure if there's a few days "grace" period.
I try South Burlington PD. No live cops, but the lady in dispatch is quite certain anyone driving a vehicle with an April expired plate could be pulled over and popped from midnight on.
Whew!
Happy May Day.
Busy day ahead.
Have to get past this frightening, armed gentleman [left] to get into the Statehouse this morning. Don't know how I do it, but I do. Thank you, Chief Dave Janawicz.
Gov. Jim Douglas has changed his schedule and moved his "regularweekly" presser up from Thursday at 1 P.M. to 10 o'clock this morning.It's our "Inside Track" day, but I've adapted. Got a certaininterview done with a certain someone yesterday so we've already filleda big whole.
Did you catch the story in this morning's Freeps about Big Business wailing and gnashing teeth over Sen. Peter Shumlin's proposed tax on Entergy Vermont Yankee's "nuclear" bankroll?
Writes Statehouse Reporter Terri Hallenbeck:
State Treasurer Jeb Spaulding, a Democrat,offered an indication that the Vermont Yankee tax might not go oversmoothly among members of Shumlin's own party. Spaulding said the taxsends a negative message to businesses. "It's very problematic," hesaid. "It tarnishes our image as a reliable business partner."
Spaulding is quoted expressing his support for the original Shummy proposal - a surcharge on heating fuels to raise money for heating-fuel efficiency. It wasridiculed by the GOP Guv and the hissing and moaning got so loud,Shummy pulled it off the table.
Spaulding said Monday that first proposalmade more sense to him because the tax matched the goal -- the tax onheating fuel would pay for a program designed to reduce the use ofheating fuel.
What's he running for?
All scanned. The first one, the PET Scan, took 35 minutes in the tube-thingy. That's after 45 minutes just laying still in a recliner in the back of the truck trailer that lugs it around New England. I dozed off a couple times. It sure does have a Star Trek feel to it all.
Then an hour break to drink a couple bottles of some banana-tasting creamy stuff that's radioactive.
Cool.
Then into the CT scan, but this time it was less than 15 minutes. Had time to go home for a bite to eat and then a run downtown for a little coffee and printed matter (i.e. newspapers).
Very quiet.
So quiet that Burlington Officers Matt White ([left) and Lee Thayer actually had a chance to stop and chat with each other in the heart of the smallest largest city known to any state in the United States!
Officer White hails from Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
Officer Thayer is from Milton, Vermont.
Honest.
Lee's a 1999 graduate of Milton High School. The boys, er, men, went through the Vermont Police Academy together and have been wearing Burlington Blue for three years.
They're the most important people on Earth when you really need 'em.
And am I "dating" myself when I say they look kinda young?
Also on the street, playing to a very sparse audience, was this gentleman. I'd know his name, but as soon as I pointed the camera in his direction he started improvising a song hitting on me for money for taking his picture.
Public street, pal.
For now I'll just think of him as "Your Excellency!"
Gov. Jim Douglas has changed his schedule, moving his "regular weekly press conference" from Thursday to Tuesday. That means I have a little Tuesday schedule reordering in store.
Wouldn't miss Gov. Scissorhands' performance for the world!
Anybody out there got a good question for our chief executive?
Not a speech - a question?
As You Like It, Act V, Sc. I
The fool doththink he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. [check *Update* below)
"Beware the leader who bangs the drums of war
in order to whip the citizenry into a patriotic fervor,
for patriotism is indeed a double-edged sword.
It both emboldens the blood, just as it narrows the mind...
And when the drums of war have reached a fever pitch and the blood
boils with hate and the mind has closed, the leader will have no
need in seizing the rights of the citizenry. Rather, the
citizenry, infused with fear and blinded with patriotism, will offer up all
of their rights unto the leader, and gladly so.
How do I know?
For this is what I have done.
And I am Caesar."
- William Shakespeare
If the shoe fits, eh?
***UPDATE***
The distinguished chap who sent me the above "alleged" Shakespeare line, now informs me it's not from the pen of Will Shakespeare. Says it's been floating around the Internet for a few years....
I don't have time to dig into it further right now....doctors appointments. (Anybody have time to find the source?)
It's still a good line, eh?
Yours truly's off to the Fanny Allen...."Double Scan Land" for today. The "miracles" of modern medicine.
[photo shot last fall at Oakledge Park. The birds came back. We made it through!]
"Four years ago this spring the Bush administrationtook leave of reality and plunged our country into a war so poorlyplanned it soon turned into a disaster."
The words of Bill Moyers in his "Buying the War" eye-opener. Like a man who gets right to the point.
"The story of how high officialsmisled the country has been told. But they couldn't have done it ontheir own; they needed a compliant press, to pass on their propagandaas news and cheer them on. Since then thousands of people have died,and many are dying to this day. Yet the story of how the media boughtwhat the White House was selling has not been told in depth ontelevision."
Better late than never, eh?
If you haven't seen it, it's available online here at PBS.
And closer to home in the Beautiful Dark & Damp Burlap area, yours truly's second Statehouse cafeteria food-fight of this season, aka "Point-Counterpoint," will air on CH. 17 - at 11:40 A.M. & 5:40 P.M. We, me and the CCTV crew, taped it under the dome on Wednesday when the place was jumping!
It's the only time I'm aware of that Burlington Rep. Kurt Wright, a Republican, has refused to appear on a television program. In this case, he would have been opposite fellow Burlington pol, Rep. David Zuckerman, a Progressive. The issue on the table was the Impeach Bush & Cheney Resolution that had passed the Senate. and was headed for the House Floor that afternoon.
Perfectly understandable, eh? Who in their right mind would want to have to go before the TV cameras and defend George "WMD" Bush?
With no Kwik Stop Kurt, just an empty seat, I had to play his part opposite The Pony Tail. After knowing Kurt for going on three decades, I think I have his mannerisms and political gyrations down pretty good.
Just kidding. I didn't play his part. Well, not too much of the time, anyway.
But according to reliable sources, GOP Rep. Wright had heard such - that I played him - and called CH. 17 demanding he be allowed to view the program before it airs!!!
Big Brother?
Those sources say they were eventually able to calm down Ol' Kurt. Poor guy's extra sensitive imagewise these days. Heck, in addition to state rep, he recently ascended to the presidency of the Burlington City Council.
Presidents have much larger....heads, eh?
Speaking of presidents, Senate President Pro Tem Peter Shumlin is also a guest, as is Associated Press writer Ross Sneyd.
No beating around the bush....
Entergy, the huge New Orleans power corporation that owns our state's only nuke plant, could not have a better spokesman in Vermont than the one who strode before the TV cameras and radio microphones at the Statehouse Thursday.
The articulate and loquacious smoothie ridiculed the Democrats’ latest proposal to pay for Vermont’s fight to slow Global Warming by taxing either Entergy’s windfall profits or the growing amount of deadly nuclear waste stored on its Vernon, Vermont site. Those buckeroos - about $35 million over the last five years of VT Yankee's operating license - would bankroll a new state-run energy efficiency utility dedicated to reducing Vermonters energy use by boosting renewables and dramatically increasing energy efficiency.
Entergy did not have to hire its new Vermont spokesman. He’s already getting a paycheck - from the State of Vermont. His name is James Douglas. He lives in MIddlebury, and he’s our governor!
Here’s an excerpt of Gov. Smoothie’s remarks on the matter from his weekly presser under the golden dome:
DOUGLAS: It’s another example of Democrats in the legislature proposing a new tax. It seems every few weeks they come up with a new tax idea, whether it’s the transfer of homes, gasoline or home-heating fuel or large vehicles, mini-vans, now it’s the Yankee Power Plant. They come up with more ideas to tax Vermonters and entities in our state that I think is quite disconcerting, because as you know, we’re the most heavily taxed state in America according to both the Census Bureau and the Tax Foundation.
This would fund some new bureaucracy to help Vermonters conserve, and I certainly want Vermonters to conserve...but I think there’s a lot more work to be done before embracing some new tax and new bureaucracy.
Press: As you know, Sen. Peter Shumlin [right] at his Monday press conference accused you, and if he were here now would probably say that in the last five minutes you’ve done an excellent job, as you always do, of "talking the talk,” but you have not "walked the walk."
Things are getting very serious on global warming. He says we only have 10 years. We have to take serious steps, serious action. Just filing lawsuits here and there isn’t enough anymore.
You still haven’t told us how you would fund the program.
You never give a suggestion on the funding side?
DOUGLAS: Well, because, Peter, We don’t have a system where each program of state government is funded by a discreet source. We have a budget, a large multibillion dollar appropriation every year from several sources that funds all the many programs of state government. So it’s not a matter of finding a new source of money for each new program, it’s a matter of establishing some priorities, making decisions and fitting it in to our resources.
PRESS: I wonder if I can characterize your position on this and you tell me if I have it right or wrong. You have lukewarm support for the bill, but you would not support ANY taxing source for it?
DOUGLAS: Well, I certainly don’t see the need for any taxing source. And let me cycle back, at the risk of sounding too defensive, and offer more of an answer to Peter’s question.
I don’t accept the notion that I’m not “walking the walk.”
I saw a bunch of folks from special-interest groups holding a press conference out in front of the Federal Building (in Burlington) a week or two ago in connection with the lawsuit there (U.S. automakers are suing Vermont for adopting tougher tailpipe emission standards).
That was my administration that adopted the tough California auto-emission standards. That wasn’t the legislature. That wasn’t some special interest group. That was my administration that adopted those tough standards that are being challenged.
The defendant in the lawsuit is George Crombie, the secretary of Natural Resources. That was my decision. My walk!
That and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative the other lawsuits that I’ve initiated, the savings we’re achieving in state government. The Climate Change Commission that has objectives for reducing emissions that are very similar to some of the ones that I’ve heard being discussed by private organizations, was my initiative and I feel very good about the steps I’ve taken.
There are a lot of companies who’ve done well and we’re pleased that they do. It just seems to me we don’t need to keep thinking about new ways to tax Vermonters and Vermont companies when we’re trying to improve the prospects for our economic future to attract more investment and capital here. These Democratic lawmakers just keep thinking of more taxes and that’s not what we need when we’re #1 in America.
Next year we'll spend about $4.7 billion in Vermont. I think we can find some resources within that very large amount of money without some new tax if this is a priority.
He's good isn't he?
Entergy's damn lucky to have him.
Nobody around here "talks the talk" any better than Jim Douglas.
That may, in part, explain why King James, a Republican serving his third term as governor, remains an almost prohibitive favorite to win a fourth term in 2008.
Vermont Democrats want to "walk the walk." Good for them!
But they'll need to improve their "talking" skills before they'll ever achieve that goal.
When I got to the Statehouse Wednesday morning, the cafeteria was already packed with 200-plus people with name tags around their necks who'd come from all over the state to personally put their bodies on the line for two things:
1. Democracy
2. The impeachment of President George "WMD" Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.
A House Democratic rep who was following the issue closely and keeping a vote count had an ashen look in his face. On Monday, the word was impeachment supporters only had about 25 votes in the 150-seat House. On Tuesday the estimate rose slightly to 30.
But at 10:30 Wednesday morning, our Democrat vote-counter told us he would have predicted impeachment would get no more that 40 votes max....that is until he saw the size of the intelligent, well-behaved grassroots crowd that had showed up. And people were still pouring into the building.
All bets were off.
Who are these people?
Folks like Bill Cobleigh, 60, of Wallingford.
"I’m here because I’m angry. I represent thousands of others who couldn’t be here today because they have other obligations," he said.
"I have two children in the United States Military (one Coast Guard one an Army nurse), Bill told us. "I support our troops because they’re my children, but I’m angry."
And Cobleigh confided to us it was the first protest he'd ever participated in in his life!
Also among the crowd that grew to 400 plus was 87-year old Bonney Simons of St. Johnsbury.
Why was she there?
"Because they are ignoring the Constitution and in order to get this war stopped we have to get them out of office."
And what was retired school teacher Jim Waters of Milton doing at the Statehouse?
"I’m here because this administration has set about systematically dismantling and destroying the Constitution of the United States.
"Secondly I’m hear because this administration has perpetrated a fraud on the American people and it has used that fraud to send more than 3000 American young people to their death, to say nothing of more than 500,000 innocent Iraqi civilians."
In my 20-plus years of covering the goings-on under the golden dome in Montpeculiar, I have never witnessed the powers that be - the political leaders who run both House and Senate - completely reverse their dug-in public positions in the face of a grassroots outpouring of political opinion, passion and and determination.
Let me tell ya, it's been beautiful to watch.
Ten days ago, Senate Boss Peter Shumlin, Ol' Pistol Pete from Putney, told his hometown Brattleboro Reformer:
...impeachment proponents should feel free to travel to Montpelier, but his mind is made up. "I welcome them on Tuesday. I welcome them any day. But we're not doing impeachment this year," he said.
As everyone knows, Shumlin pulled a 180-degree switcheroo last week. Shummy took advantage of Republican Lt. Gov. Brian Dubie's absence to slip the "Impeach Bush & Cheney Resolution" onto the "orders of the day" and it was adopted within 10 minutes on a roll-call vote 16-9.
Four hours later at her Friday "Brown-Bagger" with the press, Democratic House Speaker Gaye Symington was still insisting the House would not take it up - more important things to do.
"What I would like to do," said Simple Symington, "is be able to focus on what matters most to Vermonters, and the work that I was elected to do as Speaker of the House."
Whatever you say, Madame Speaker, you're the boss!
Speaker Gaye had her "impeachment conversion," or rather, "democracy conversion" sometime Monday. "Political" minds finally impressed upon the Tuxedo Park, New York native, and consensus-building policy-wonk, the importance in a democracy of actually listening to actual people, ordinary people, people incensed by the high crimes of the most corrupt regime to ever control our government.
On Tuesday the word officially got out that Speaker Symington would allow the resolution to be debated on the House floor Wednesday afternoon and brought to a vote.
Of course, Symington also knew that the common folk from every corner of Vermont were planning to rally at the Statehouse Wednesday to do just that - urge her to allow the House to debate it.
Even though they knew the prospects of winning a House vote were slim - since Symington, herself, strongly opposed it and would bring many Democrats with her - the ordinary folks had the strange notion that having the House address it was, in and of itself, a significant victory for democracy.
And they were right.
The Impeachment Resolution Progressive Rep. David Zuckerman [left] introduced with two dozen co-sponsors was defeated 87-60. But it's worth noting that Democratic Speaker Symington lost the Democratic vote 52-39. The Dems who voted "no" were for the most part Symington recruits which means they're middle-of-the-road to conservative Democrats.
More significant is the fact that the House Speaker lost her own House leadership team!
Both House Democratic Majority Leader Carolyn Partridge, and House Democratic Whip Floyd Nease voted "yes."
So did 11 of the 14 committee chairs Symington appointed, including former House Speaker Michael Obuchowski (Ways & Means). Only three House committee chairs, one of whom is Republican, voted "no."
Dare we suggest that a House Speaker who can only hold three of the 14 committee chairmen she appointed, is a House Speaker who ought to be thinking of a career change?
*****************************************
Did you catch Bill Moyers' chilling return to PBS last night with a 90-minute documentary pointing out in specific detail how the major mainstream press - The New York Times and Washington Post along with CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN and Fox - collaborated with the Bush Administration in spreading, unchallenged, the lies used to lead us to war in Iraq?
"Buying the War" is a must see. This horror could not have happened without the help of the corporate-controlled major media.
Shocking and shameful!
Even The New York Times and Washington Post.
Finally, the truth is coming out, mes amis. And the truth will set us free.
In the dictionary definition, democracy is "government bythe people in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised directly by them or by their electedagents under a free electoral system."
In the phrase of Abraham Lincoln, democracy is a government "of the people, bythe people, and for the people."
What we are about to witness today in Montpelier, Vermont, the smallest state capital in the United States, is a biggest demonstration of democracy in action that I have witnessed since the injustice of racial segregation and discrimination was broken down by the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.
Here in Vermont, the "people" exercised their "supreme power" at 37 Town Meetings last month. The good common people of Vermont adopted resolutions calling for the impeachment of a person we all know to be the most corrupt, dishonest and dangerous president in American history.
George W. Bush has had, and will continue to have, a devastating impact on life in America and on life in Vermont. Make no mistake about that. Forget the hundreds of billions of dollars Vermonters and all Americans will be shelling out for years to come. We have paid for President Bush's War in Iraq with Vermont lives and Vermont blood and it is a war we now ALL know never should have happened.
There were absolutely NO WMDs in Iraq, as President George W. Bush repeatedly told us.
Saddam Hussein had absolutely NO ties to al Qaeda and absolutely NO ties to 9/11, a President Bush repeatedly told us and continues to tell us!
Iraq was in no way, shape or form a threat to the people of the United States of America.
George W. Bush lied to every single one of us and the price of his lies has been staggering. His senseless Iraq War continues with NO end in sight.
People with no prior political activism have become active. The grassroots have never been greener.
Last week the Democratic leader of the Vermont Senate finally realized that most Vermonters are sickened by it all. Despited repeatedly saying the Senate had no time to do an Impeachment Resolution, Sen. Peter Shumlin experienced something akin to a religious conversion. Suddenly, Shummy saw the light! And on Friday the Senate quickly took up and passed the resolution.
Today the spotlight shifts to the Vermont House, the "People's House," right?
There, as everyone knows, Democratic Speaker Gaye Symington is going to do something she has sworn up and down for months she would NEVER do: Madame Speaker is going to let the Bush-Cheney Impeachment Resolution she's wished would just go away, come up for floor debate and a vote.
Symington has repeatedly argued her House had "more important" matters to tackle, at which point she'd rattle off the usual list we hear every year: property tax reform, health care reform, education reform, environmental protection...they've done a great job, haven't they?
God forbid the People's House would devote an hour to an issue that is actually more important to a whole lot of Vermonters right now - the TRUTH.
Speaker Gaye opposes the resolution and will vote against it, she told fellow Dems at the party caucus Tuesday.
About 25 Democrats will have to join her and the 50 Republicans to vote "no" in order to defeat it.
Karl Rove's probably working the phones, eh?