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From: Jeff Jacoby mailing list <l...@pundicity.com>
Date: Sat, Aug 22, 2009 at 10:30 PM
Subject: Jeff Jacoby: Do the right thing, Senator Kennedy. Resign /
8-23-2009
To: t.ma...@gmail.com


  <http://www.jeffjacoby.com> Jeff Jacoby <http://www.jeffjacoby.com> [image:
Pundicity] <http://www.pundicity.com>  Do the right thing, Senator Kennedy.
Resign

*by Jeff Jacoby
The Boston 
Globe<http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2009/08/23/kennedy_should_resign/>
August 23, 2009*

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RUNNING FOR RE-ELECTION in 1982, Senator Ted Kennedy aired a series of
sentimental
television 
ads<http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1367&dat=19820926&id=GZsWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=bhMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3285,7010278>in
which longtime supporters spoke of him as an empathetic human being
who
was no stranger to suffering and sorrow. One of those supporters was
83-year-old Frank Manning, founder of the Massachusetts Association of Older
Americans. "He's not a plaster saint, he's not without his faults," Manning
said in the ad. "But we wouldn't want a plaster saint."

I didn't vote for Kennedy in 1982 or any other year, and I have certainly
never thought of him as a
saint<http://www.jeffjacoby.com/3253/mired-in-kennedy-country>,
plaster or otherwise. Play-to-win politics, not piety, has been the essence
of his long career in the Senate. He has a gift for the poignant gesture,
the moving turn of phrase; there is no denying he is a deft hand at evoking
the affection of his many admirers. But beneath the tug at the heartstrings,
there is always shrewd political calculation. Those 1982 TV spots, for
example, had less to do with Kennedy's re-election in Massachusetts, which
was never in doubt, than with the prospect of another presidential campaign
and the need to improve his image in neighboring New Hampshire, where he had
suffered a crushing defeat in the Democratic primary two years earlier.

Today Kennedy is gravely ill with brain cancer, but his political instincts
are as sharp as ever. Given his condition, the letter he
sent<http://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Third_Party_PDF/2009/08/20/kennedy_letter__1250757221_6262-2.pdf>to
Massachusetts political leaders last week could not help but generate
a
fresh wave of sympathy -- "I am now writing to you," it said, "about an
issue that concerns me deeply -- the continuity of representation for
Massachusetts, should a vacancy occur." As a human being, Kennedy is surely
grateful for that sympathy. As a canny political navigator, he reckons it
may provide the cover needed to change Massachusetts law so as to benefit
his party.

Kennedy wants the Legislature to upend the succession law it passed in 2004,
when -- at his 
urging<http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2004/06/11/special_election_bill_gets_new_life>--
it stripped away the governor's longstanding power to temporarily fill
a
Senate vacancy. Back then, John Kerry was a presidential candidate and
Republican Mitt Romney was governor; Kennedy lobbied state Democrats to
change the law so that Romney couldn't name Kerry's successor.

They followed his advice with gusto. When the final vote took place, the
Boston Globe 
reported<http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2004/07/31/romney_veto_overridden>,
"hooting and hollering broke out on the usually staid House floor," and
House Speaker Thomas Finneran acknowledged candidly: "It's a political deal.
It's very raw politics."

It still is. Now that Massachusetts has a Democratic governor, Kennedy is
lobbying to restore the gubernatorial power to name an interim appointee who
would serve until a new senator could be elected. That would guarantee
Democrats in Washington two reliable Senate votes from Massachusetts, even
if Kennedy isn't there to cast one of them.

Needless to say, Kennedy's letter says nothing about raw politics. No, it's
all lofty principle and good
government<http://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Third_Party_PDF/2009/08/20/kennedy_letter__1250757221_6262-2.pdf>.
"It is vital for this commonwealth to have two voices speaking for the needs
of its citizens and two votes in the Senate during the approximately five
months between a vacancy and an election," he writes.

Well, if Kennedy is sincere -- if his chief concern is that Massachusetts
not be left for months without the services of a full-time senator -- then
he should do the right thing right now: He should resign.

For well over a year, Massachusetts has not had the "two voices . . . and
two votes in the Senate" that Kennedy himself says its voters are entitled
to. Sickness has kept him away from Capitol Hill for most of the last 15
months. He has missed all but a handful of the 270
roll-calls<http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/k000105/votes/missed/>taken
in the Senate so far this year, including votes on the Children's
Health Insurance Program, the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, the confirmation
of Justice Sonia Sotomayor, and numerous appropriations and budget acts.
Through no fault of his own, he is unable to carry out the job he was
re-elected to in 2006. As a matter of integrity, he should bow out, and
allow his constituents to choose a replacement.

"Democrats are keenly feeling the absence of Ted Kennedy," reported The
Politico <http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0809/26265.html> from
Washington last week. "Senate Democratic insiders . . . say there's been
little contact with the Massachusetts Democrat recently." Though his staff
tries to keep up appearances, it is clear that Kennedy is no longer an
active participant in Senate business. Few things are harder for those
accustomed to power than letting it go. But there is no honor in clinging to
office till the bitter end.

Senator Kerry told ABC News <http://www.abcnews.go.com/print?id=8375376> the
other day that his friend and colleague "doesn't believe that under any
circumstances, now or ever, Massachusetts should have anything less than
full representation in the United States Senate." But it has less than full
representation -- much less -- right now. For the sake of the state and
Senate he loves, Edward Kennedy should step down.

(*Jeff Jacoby is a columnist for The Boston Globe*. To follow him on
Twitter, *click here. <http://twitter.com/Jeff_Jacoby>)*



*Related Topics:*  Edward M.
Kennedy<http://www.jeffjacoby.com/topics/74/edward-m-kennedy>,
Massachusetts 
Politics<http://www.jeffjacoby.com/topics/10/massachusetts-politics>



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