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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Congressman Formerly Known as Crazy: Why Alan Grayson is now the most effective member
By David Weigel Posted Friday, July 19, 2013, at 6:52 PM
Alan Grayson is running 40 minutes late, but his reason is sound. At 11:30 a.m., the House Science Committee started marking up NASAs funding bill, adding and subtracting whatever they could. At 5 p.m., the committee was still at it. When the members finished a half hour later, the only headline theyd generate would be about the killing of a program to send a robotic mission to a small asteroid by 2016.
Grayson, once again, had walked under the radar. The Democratic congressman from Orlando had convinced the Republican-run committee to adopt five of his amendments. One would bar the federal government from awarding contracts to corporations convicted of fraud, and another would force NASA to consider American public-private partnership human space flight before it partnered with foreign space programs. Each was getting him closer to an unheralded title: The congressman whos passed more amendments than any of his 434 peers.
Weve passed 31 amendments in committee so far, says Grayson. Hardly any Democrats who put in amendments put in any effort to get to 218. They just think theyve accomplished something when its ruled in order, and thats the end of the story.
The last time the media noticed Alan Grayson, he was a freshman Democrat, a member of the 2008 Obama wave, trying and failing to survive 2010. Grayson joked that Dick Cheney left a torture rack in the White House, said that the Republican health care plan was for people to die quicklyso on and so on, all very helpful to a press trying to prove that the Tea Party had an ideological match on the left. Grayson went down by 18 points to the blandly conservative former state senator Daniel Webster, or Taliban Dan, as a Grayson ad called him. The Washington Post eulogized him as a controversial liberal icon that many in the Democratic Party werent sad to see lose.
Graysons back because the last round of redistricting created a new, safe seat in metro Orlando. He won it, reclaiming a job he says he wants to keep for a long, long time. In doing so hes stopped being a Republican target and started getting along with the majority. In his office, the only evidence that he used to irritate the other party is a plaque on his desk: I Have Flying Monkeys and Im Not Afraid to Use Them. He doesnt use them on Republicans anymore. I dont think they feel the same sort of glee, he says. I dont see them using me as a fundraising ploy.
The new strategy is simple. Grayson and his staff scan the bills that come out of the majority. They scan amendments that passed in previous Congresses but died at some point along the way. They resurrect or mold bills that can appeal to the libertarian streak in the GOP, and Grayson lobbies his colleagues personally. Thats how he attached a ban on funding for unmanned aerial vehicles, i.e. drones, to the homeland security bill. He swears that they dont back away from him because of his old personawell, his relationship with Webster is strained, but he points out that Webster won re-election by 5,000 votes and Grayson won with 70,000. Never mind that. Are the members of Congress more forgiving than members of the press?
full: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2013/07/florida_democrat_alan_grayson_is_the_most_effective_member_of_the_house.html
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Enrique
(27,461 posts)KittyWampus
(55,894 posts)LuvNewcastle
(16,846 posts)It's better to accomplish what you can than to moan about all the places where compromise isn't possible. Grayson's busy and he's doing important work. If he keeps it up, Congress just might be able to do something about the NSA.