By DICK
MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
November 9, 2006 -- House Speaker Dennis Hastert
(R-Ill.) has been a disaster and the rest of the House and Senate leadership has
not been any better.
The lean, ascetic, ideological purity of the
Gingrich Republicans of 1994 had yielded to the corrupt, feather-your-own-nest
psychology of the current Republican congressional leadership. They assumed that
the partisan gerrymandering of 2000 left them invulnerable and they dipped into
the till to get earmarks for their favorite lobbyists in return for
contributions and free vacations. It's time to get rid of this kind of
leadership and to bring in people with a fine, tough partisan and ideological
edge.
In the Senate, the problem is a little different.
There the issue is not impurity but incompetence. Former Senate Majority Leader
Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) was not a man of the Senate. He didn't know how to make the
trains run on time. He was helpless when it came to using the tools and
procedures of the body to control the floor and force action. Whether the
Republicans are in the majority or the minority in the Senate, they need new
leadership. Since Frist is retiring, they will get it in the person of Kentucky
Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell, a partisan in the mold of a Newt Gingrich or a
Phil Gramm.
But McConnell needs someone to run the shop and tie
up the Democrats in knots with procedural moves and skillful parliamentary
tactics. The man for the job is Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott (R). The Republican
Senate caucus should make Lott the whip. As majority whip, he would make the
Senate an effective instrument of McConnell's and Bush's will. As minority whip,
he would stop the Democrats from passing crazy legislation and befuddle them
with his maneuvers.
It's time to bring in the "A" team again. The
Republican congressional caucus needs leaders who put ideas ahead of patronage
and who know how to get the job done. They need to reach back into their past
and recapture the tough, raw partisanship that animated their return to power
after 40 years in the wilderness.
The Democrats, for their part, will use their new
House majority to plague the administration with investigations. While the left
would be appeased by investigations into why we invaded Iraq in the first place,
it is financial scandals that will do the greatest damage to Bush and the
Republicans.
Democratic committee chairmen will examine
Halliburton contracts in Iraq, royalty deals for offshore oil drilling, defense
procurement scandals, and resource leases in national forests and wilderness
areas. They will examine the nexus between campaign contributions and favors
from the trough of the executive branch.
Immunized from congressional scrutiny by a
compliant Congress, the administration has been getting away with pork politics
of the worst sort and the Democrats will find sufficient fodder for years of
hearings and investigations.
The last two years of the Bush administration will
most closely resemble the Clinton years, where scandal after scandal after
scandal battered the president's image and ratings. But, unlike the GOP assault
on Clinton, the Democrats will stay on financial issues rather than stray into
the personal. The results will be devastating for the Republicans and their
prospects in 2008.
To contain the damage and to develop a
counteroffensive, the Republicans need good leaders in the House and to bring in
a McConnell-Lott team in the Senate. Otherwise, a President Hillary will be
waiting in the wings.
Eileen McGann co-authored this
column.