Booman Tribune

No Sportsmanship

by BooMan
Thu Jun 26th, 2008 at 11:51:44 PM EST

If you have ever watched World Cup soccer (better known as football) you've seen the following. When a player is injured and unable to run up and down the field, the other team will not press their advantage but will kick the ball out of bounds, granting an opportunity for the injured player to be tended to and replaced. It's called sportsmanship. In American sports you will occasionally see the same thing happen in basketball and even ice hockey. Well...

In politics we sometimes have something similar happen. Sen. Tim Johnson of South Dakota suffered cerebral bleeding in December 2006 and has suffered through a long recovery. Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia has been hospitalized more than once in this congress with infections and other maladies. And Sen. Edward Kennedy was recently diagnosed with brain cancer and underwent intrusive brain surgery. All of these cases left the Democrats short of their normal 51-49 advantage in the Senate chamber. The Republicans have generally been sportsmanlike in not pressing any advantage from momentary illnesses of Democratic members. That changed today.

Today we had a vote to invoke cloture (cut off debate and move to a vote) on the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008. The vote required 60 members to approve cloture and we only gained 58. But, if you look at the vote, we actually had 59, just one short of the necessary number. For procedural reasons, Majority Leader Harry Reid has to change his vote from 'aye' to 'nay' in order to have standing to reintroduce the vote at a later time. Including Harry Reid's 'aye' vote, the Medicare Act actually garnered 59 votes. There were two people that did not vote. John McCain did not vote because, presumably, he is on the campaign trail. The other senator that didn't vote was Teddy Kennedy. And he didn't vote because he is recovering from brain surgery.

In a sportsmanlike world, one Republican, any Republican, would have cast a vote for cloture in recognition that the only reason the cloture vote was failing was because Teddy Kennedy was unavailable to vote. But they didn't do it. They pressed their advantage.

I think that is contemptible.



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not conservative, and they are certainly not sportsmanlike. It's about winning. At least they have not gotten to the point that a lot of professional sports have with all of the high-fives, yesssssssssing, end-zone dancing and general gloating, smirking and unsportsmanlike conduct. That's why so many ex-sports types are so good in business and politics, they don't mind screwing over the next guy to get what they want. They have been trained to enjoy it since childhood.

The greatest service which can be rendered any country is to add an useful plant to its culture -- Thomas Jefferson
by tommurphy (industrialhemp at mac dot com) on Fri Jun 27th, 2008 at 04:17:10 AM EST
Pretty soon, they are going to start holding press events on the steps of the capitol.

I can see it now:

"I'd like to thank Jesus for helping us deny children health insurance, and a proper education".

"Some men see things as they are and say why - I dream things that never were and say why not." George Bernard Shaw.

by benjamink on Fri Jun 27th, 2008 at 06:56:45 AM EST
Wait wait wait. What do you mean, "even ice hockey?" Can you name another team sport where, after a hard-played, vicious series, the teams line up and shake hands? Unlike sports like basketball, ice hockey is built on an underlying foundation of sportsmanship.
by Cynicor on Fri Jun 27th, 2008 at 07:55:41 AM EST
Um, baseball.
by MNPundit on Fri Jun 27th, 2008 at 09:50:56 AM EST
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