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George Mitchell: Majority Rule
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15631 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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2 / 1989 |
2,938 Words |
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Bill Whalen Bill Whalen covers the campaign trail for Insight Magazine. |
For an institution that takes pride in cloaking itself in a veil of mystery, the Senate sometimes does things that are crystal clear. Take the recent selection of Maine Democrat George J. Mitchell as majority leader, a role that makes him the principal national spokesman for the Democratic Party.
While Mitchell's margin of victory over his two competitors--Sens. J. Bennett Johnston of Louisiana and Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii--was a surprise, the explanations given by his colleagues were not. Sen. Howell Heflin, a Democrat from Alabama who supported Johnston's candidacy, said of the new majority leader: "He speaks well and he goes over well on television." Heflin's colleague from Alabama, Richard C. Shelby, neatly summed up another of Mitchell's key attributes: "I think he will lead and not drive."
The two statements go a long way in explaining why the Democratic-controlled Senate, which is fast becoming dominated by Southern moderates such as Sam Nunn of Georgia and Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, would opt for a Northeastern liberal. Although he has not served two full terms in the chamber and is not even the senior senator from his state, Mitchell fits the two most pressing needs for the majority Democrats: competence and articulateness.
First, the latter factor. After two years of rule under Speaker of the House James C. Wright, Jr., of Texas and former Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia, Senate Democrats simply desired what one member calls a "Meet the Press" leader--a spokesman who can credibly represent the party on nationwide television. Although most Democrats praise the legislative record of the Byrd-Wright years,
... (1996 of 17408 Characters)
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