Hillarysworld -> 2010 Elections US Senators -> 2010 U.S. Sen-IN "Democratic Senator Evan Bayh: 'I Do Not Love Congress'" (ABC News 2/15/10) ".. Retirement" (CBS News)
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TOPIC: 2010 U.S. Sen-IN "Democratic Senator Evan Bayh: 'I Do Not Love Congress'" (ABC News 2/15/10) ".. Retirement" (CBS News)
Democratic Senator Evan Bayh: 'I Do Not Love Congress'
Two-term Senator from Indiana Says He Will Not Seek Re-election, Pans Partisanship in U.S. Congress
By RICK KLEIN, HUMA KHAN and JONATHAN KARL Feb. 15, 2010
Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh announced today that will not seeking a third term, handing a huge blow to Democrats and giving Republicans a key opportunity to pick up another Senate seat in 2010.
Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., center, speaks while flanked by his sons Nick, left, and Beau, right and wife Susan at a news conference announcing he will not seek re-election in Indianapolis, Monday, Feb. 15, 2010. Bayh, a centrist Democrat from a Republican-leaning state, is serving his second six-year term in the Senate.(AJ Mast/AP Photo)
"There are better ways to serve my fellow citizens," Bayh said at a news conference this afternoon. "I love working for the people of Indiana. I love helping our citizens make the most of their lives, but I do not love Congress."
Bayh, who served two terms as governor of Indiana, said he was concerned about the excessive partisanship in Congress.
There is "too much narrow ideology and not enough practical problem solving," Bayh said today, surrounded by his wife and two sons. "People's business is not getting done."
Bayh, 54, said Congress is in "need of significant reform," but he praised some of his colleagues, including his fellow senator from Indiana, Republican Dick Lugar.
"If Washington, D.C. could be more like Indiana, Washington would be a better place," Bayh said.
He added that concern about winning the Senate seat again was not a reason behind his decision.
"My decision was not motivated by political concern," Bayh said. "Even in the current challenging environment, I am confident in my prospects for re-election."
The two-term senator's decision came as a surprise to many Washington insiders and it blows a sizeable hole in the Democrats' 2010 lineup. The party faces several other retirements -- Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., and Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., both have said they will not seek reelection -- and challenges ahead in trying to hold on to those seats, among a range of others.
Centrist Democrat from Indiana Criticizes Partisanship in Washington; Seat Could Swing to GOP
CBS/AP) Updated 2:52 p.m. EST
Sen. Evan Bayh, a centrist Democrat from Indiana, announced Monday that he won't seek a third term in Congress, giving Republicans a chance to pick up a Senate seat.
Speaking to staff members and reporters in Indianapolis Monday afternoon, Bayh called the decision "very difficult, deeply personal one" but said he felt it is time for him to "contribute to society in another way," either by creating jobs with a business, leading a college or university, or running a charity.
The senator criticized the partisan atmosphere in Washington but took pains to make clear that his departure was not a reflection on his Senate colleagues or the president.
"After all these years, my passion for service to my fellow citizens is undiminished, but my desire to do so by serving in Congress has waned," Bayh said. "To put it in the words I think most people can understand: I love working for the people of Indiana, I love helping our citizens make the most of their lives, but I do not love Congress."
The departure of Bayh, who was on Barack Obama's short list of vice presidential candidate prospects in 2008, continues a recent exodus from Congress among both Democrats and Republicans, including veteran Democrats Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island. More . . .
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Evan Bayh is a centrist. This is a HUGE blow to the Dems.
I like Evan Bayh and am sad to see him go. I believe he is a good person. He was a strong supporter of Hillary Clinton, which mattered a lot for the Indiana Primary which was a real close call.
Looks like he may have had a falling out with the WH on moving the Health care proposal further to the center or shifting gear to focus more on the economy.
Read this:
"Retiring Dem's W.H. sit-downs" (Politico44 2/15/10) Excerpt: He also got fleeting attention from White House press secretary Robert Gibbs in a Jan. 18 briefing, after Bayh complained that the administration had spent too much political capital pushing health care. Gibbs's terse rejoinder: "I thank Sen. Bayh for his support on health care."
-- Edited by Sanders on Monday 15th of February 2010 03:35:05 PM
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
Millions of Americans long to tell their bosses “take this job and shove it.” Hardly any have the power and money to do so, especially in these recessionary times. Sen. Evan Bayh (D) of Indiana, however, is the exception. His stunning retirement from the Senate is essentially a loud and emphatic “screw you” to President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. For months now, Bayh has been screaming at the top of his voice that the party needs to reorient toward a more popular, centrist agenda -- one that emphasizes jobs and fiscal responsibility over health care and cap and trade. Neither the White House nor the Senate leadership has given him the response he wanted. Their bungling of what should have been a routine bipartisan jobs bill last week seems to have been the last straw. (Emphasis added)
I don’t doubt that Bayh could have won re-election -- though he probably did not relish the prospect of a very nasty campaign revolving around GOP attacks on his wife’s business activities. Let it never be forgotten that Bayh is a perennial Democratic golden boy, the keynote speaker at the party’s 1996 convention, scion of a political dynasty, proven vote-getter in a red state and, in his own mind, prime presidential timber. For him, then, the question was: even if I win, who needs six more years of dealing with these people, after which I might be 60 years old and trying to pick up the pieces of a damaged political party brand?
And don’t get him started on the Republicans! I think we have to take Bayh at his word when he quite justifiably expressed disgust not only with the jobs bill fiasco, but also when he lashed out at the Senate Republicans who opportunistically voted down a bipartisan budget-balancing commission they had previously endorsed.
Quitting the Senate was a no-lose move for the presidentially ambitious Bayh, since he can now crawl away from the political wreckage for a couple of years, plausibly alleging that he tried to steer the party in a different direction -- and then be perfectly positioned to mount a centrist primary challenge to Obama in 2012, depending on circumstances. (Emphasis added) More . . .
Sen. Evan Bayh will not run for re-election, a decision that will shock Democrats and Republicans alike in Indiana.
In prepared remarks, Bayh, 54, cited excessive partisanship that makes progress on public policy difficult to achieve as the motivation for his decision.
“After all these years, my passion for service to my fellow citizens is undiminished, but my desire to do so in Congress has waned,” he said. (Emphasis added)
Anyone who voted for this horribly flawed health care giveaway to Big Pharma and the insurance companies needs to quit now - so good! No disrespect meant to anyone here, of course.
-- Edited by Alex on Monday 15th of February 2010 04:29:23 PM
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Barack/Barry: If you're NOT LEGIT, then you MUST QUIT!!
I am upset with him for voting for that health care fiasco. I am glad he said what he said. Iam sick of both parties. You know Obama reminds me of Bush and the Republicans in the early 2000s. They didn't have to reach out to the Democrats and didn't. We got sucky laws like the horrible Leave No Child Behind Act The American people finally got fed up and said No more and the Dems won control of the congress. Now I see the Dems and Obama doing the same thing. People are fed up with this sort of thing and this time they are not going to wait for years before they do this. They are going to lose control of both houses after only four years. I reckon the Pubs will keep it until the Dems are out of the White House and then the Pubs will lose control when they retake the White House. That is the best way.
Bayh to Obama: take this job and shove it (Politico44 2/15/10) posted above
Millions of Americans long to tell their bosses “take this job and shove it.” Hardly any have the power and money to do so, especially in these recessionary times. Sen. Evan Bayh (D) of Indiana, however, is the exception. His stunning retirement from the Senate is essentially a loud and emphatic “screw you” to President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. For months now, Bayh has been screaming at the top of his voice that the party needs to reorient toward a more popular, centrist agenda -- one that emphasizes jobs and fiscal responsibility over health care and cap and trade. Neither the White House nor the Senate leadership has given him the response he wanted. Their bungling of what should have been a routine bipartisan jobs bill last week seems to have been the last straw. (Emphasis added)
From this I read that the centrist Dems were left with no chance but to support the bills.
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EDITORIAL
"Bayh-bye!" Bayh's departure is not good for Dems and America (Chicago Tribune EDITORIAL 2/15/10)
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Bayh-bye!
February 15, 2010
Monday's news stories on Evan Bayh brimmed with reasons why the Indiana Democrat would be a compelling candidate for re-election in November:
• With nearly $13 million on hand, money wouldn't be a problem, and …
• He had won his first two Senate races by massive margins with, respectively, 64 and 62 percent of the vote, and …
• Bayh already had gathered his ballot petitions, was polling as recently as last week (with upbeat results), and had scheduled his first TV ad shoot for this Wednesday, and …
And yet, no. Monday morning, the 54-year-old Bayh told Reid he won't seek a third term, a scoop that Politico.com aptly headlined "Bayh burns Dems."
Bayh's departure is a loss to Indiana and to the Senate. And it's a bad sign for American politics: Bayh was too centrist — and not concerned enough about placating interest groups — to make him a comfortable fit in Washington.
Here's a former governor who had balanced his state's budget, cut taxes and bequeathed to his successor a $1.6 billion surplus. Here's a senator who specialized in federal fiscal issues and who had the temerity to believe that official Washington has been spending the nation into oblivion. Yet the far left wailed every time he was mentioned as a candidate for president or vice president. (Emphasis added)
Bayh: Love serving constituents, 'but I do not love Congress' (The Hill 2/16/10)
Excerpt: A centrist as governor, Bayh has cast several votes distressing to Senate Democrats, usually about fiscal issues. In 2008, for example, he cast a lone vote against the Democratic-passed federal budget, arguing that it was fiscally irresponsible.
I am glad to know that at least in one place he stood ground on his centrist position.
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
Hillarysworld -> 2010 Elections US Senators -> 2010 U.S. Sen-IN "Democratic Senator Evan Bayh: 'I Do Not Love Congress'" (ABC News 2/15/10) ".. Retirement" (CBS News)