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Just
when we think the Legislature can’t drop any lower in our collective
esteem,
they how us once again that there are no depths to which they
can’t sink. Consider the
recent antics of Senator Robert Brown, (D-Macon), chairman of the Senate
Insurance and Labor committee. I’m
not sure how the State Senate selects their leadership, but after what
Brown did, I can only assume they flip a coin or draw straws. Surely, this guy didn’t land this chairmanship on merit.
Brown had a bill in his committee that would allow people who had
lost their jobs due to domestic abuse to collect unemployment benefits,
which sounds like a reasonable proposal to me. For reason to which I am not privy, the committee Brown chairs
defeated it on a voice vote, according to a number of people who were
present. That result didn’t
suit Chairman Brown, who declared the bill had passed and then scampered
out of the room, refusing to allow a show of hands. He later claimed he had to catch a bus to Macon. Yeah, right. The
Greyhound bus station is always packed in the afternoon with legislators
trying to make it home before dark.
Does anybody in state government understand? Does anybody comprehend how disgusted we are with that kind of
behavior? Or does anybody
care what we think? First,
the General Assembly rigs redistricting to accommodate their personal
political needs and then the leadership refuses to accept a legitimate
vote of the representatives you and I elected because the answer the
representatives gave wasn’t what the leadership wanted.
The fault is ours, you know. We
have become so apathetic that we have allowed a democracy of the people,
by the people and for the people to become the private province of a bunch
of arrogant and self-serving politicians, who think they are accountable
only to Governor Roy Barnes and House Speaker Tom Murphy. You and I sit on the sidelines and tell ourselves that the whole
system stinks but we won’t do anything to change it because we have come
to believe that we can’t. People like Robert Brown are not only reelected but
they actually serve in positions of leadership, God help us.
The reaction to Brown’s underhanded methods was interesting.
The Republicans, who opposed the bill, were handed a ready-made issue that
they used to the best of their limited abilities. They strung up
crime scene tape and made a lot of speeches about how the Democrats
mistreat them. The Democrats for the most part ignored the
Republicans – and Brown’s actions – and went on with business as usual,
which is passing whatever legislation suits them. Just another
routine day under the Gold Dome.
Both sides should have come together in joint session and agreed
that what happened was unconscionable and unforgivable. They should
have censured that bozo of a chairman and stripped him of his position and
put him on the first bus back to Macon in time for supper. Then the
whole crowd – the Governor, Lt. Governor, the Speaker and everybody in the
Legislature – should have publicly apologized to us all for abusing the
responsibilities we have entrusted to them. After that,
everybody could have gone back to work, knowing they had done the right
thing and had gained some much needed respect from the public. The
first order of business would be to debate the merits of unemployment
benefits for domestic violence victims, except to go about it the right
way this time.
Of course, all of the above will happen when pigs fly. If
the government is a food chain of power, you and I are the amoebae.
Our job is to keep mindlessly reelecting these people and then stepping
out of their way so they can spend our tax dollars as they choose –
subject to input from lobbyists and political consultants, of course – and
with no accountability for their actions.
I have said on more than one occasion that the majority of men
and women we elect to public office are honest and hard-working people
intent on doing the right thing. Regrettably, they are overshadowed
by the likes of Senator Robert Brown, who gives democracy a swift kick in
the groin whenever the process doesn’t work the way he wants it to.
The good news is that a bus ready to take this guy to Macon.
The bad news for us is that Greyhound goes both ways, and that
Brown always seems to come back. |