Losing It


Times have changed.

Junior Senator Scott Brown is getting the boot from the big old office he inherited from Teddy Kennedy.  And the prospect of the once-golden boy who took the Senate by storm not yet a year ago getting literally kicked out of office doesn't seem to be sitting well with him.

He certainly seems unusually testy these days, if an anecdote from Gail Collins in today's Times op-eds is any indication:

...[S]taff members for the leading Democratic and Republican senators on the health committee actually got together and worked things out the way they used to do in olden days. Most of the negotiators were women, and while I am certainly not saying that made a difference, I am, sort of, just saying.

Not everybody was impressed by the achievement.

“Oh, my gosh! It’s so important,” said Senator Scott Brown of Massachusetts, his voice dripping with sarcasm. “I’m glad I rushed back from our break to work on food safety.”

Brown felt the Senate should have been focusing on economic issues, particularly his effort to stop the extension of unemployment compensation benefits until the Senate agrees to the Scott Brown Unemployment Compensation Funding Plan.

“Is it because I’m a Republican that we’re not going to pass that? Is it because I’m the new guy?” he demanded.

We will now have a moment of silence to contemplate the suffering of Senator Brown. Who had to come back the week after Thanksgiving in order to vote on a major bipartisan bill aimed at keeping people from being poisoned by contaminated food. And then became a victim of discrimination.

Looks like Scott Brown is discovering the Obama Effect.

I guess it should be heartening somehow that losing "it" is a bipartisan phenomenon.
 
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Comments

  • 12/2/2010 7:33 PM Will wrote:

    Why is it, I wonder, that I somehow cannot find it within me to give a fuck about poor dear, inconvenienced and deprived Senator Brown?

    Reply to this
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