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Snowe: Moderate role still counts
BY: Christopher Williams,
Sun Journal Staff Writer
As the U.S. Senate veers right, Maine's Olympia
Snowe says she still prefers the middle of the road.
Republican senators boosted their Senate majority
from 51 seats to 55 on Nov. 2, pushing moderates
like Snowe into an even smaller corner of the party.
But just because conservatives now dominate the
Senate doesn't mean all Republicans need to shift to
the political right, she says, nor does it mean
moderates' power has diminished.
Maine's senior senator represents what she calls the
"traditional wing" of the GOP: conservative on
fiscal matters, moderate on social issues. That has
never changed, she said.
"I grew up in my party," she said during a recent
interview with the Sun Journal. "That party may have
changed. That doesn't mean that as a moderate
Republican I shouldn't play an equally valuable role
in this party."
Vermont used to be the most Republican state in the
country. The South now holds that distinction,
catapulting those conservative views on social
issues to the fore, she noted.
"That's fine," she said. "We have to accept that as
moderates we now have a more conservative base in
our party."
But that does not mean her swing vote will be less
important in the upcoming congressional session, she
said.
In fact, she predicts just the opposite will be
true.
In order to advance their agenda, President Bush and
the Republican leaders in the Senate need 60 votes
to overcome any Democratic filibusters on major
legislative initiatives. To do that, they will need
to galvanize support of moderate Republicans like
Snowe as well as centrist Democrats, she said. That
will give her ilk even more clout than before, she
said.
Amy Fried, a professor of political science at the
University of Maine, said Snowe is probably right.
There are fewer moderate Democrats in the Senate
now, having been replaced by Republicans, Fried
said. So, although there may be more Republicans,
the political center of the entire Senate likely has
not shifted much, she said.
The abortion question
Although social issues have crept to the
forefront of the Republican Party's platform - gay
marriage leading them all - Snowe said she will
continue to press leadership on issues she believes
most important.
Just this week, Snowe called for a meeting of Senate
centrists, a group she co-chairs, to map their
agenda for the 109th Congress and to strategize
implementation. (See related story.)
Key among the issues for Snowe is a balanced-budget
amendment, which she would like to see added to the
Constitution.
Snowe said she's troubled by the growing federal
deficit and, for that reason, has not supported Bush
on the size and depth of every proposed tax cut.
Another issue of likely contention is abortion.
During his second term, President Bush is expected
to have several vacancies to fill on the Supreme
Court, possibly as many as three of the nine seats.
If he nominates a jurist who is likely to vote to
overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling on
abortion, Snowe said she would vote against
confirmation.
"Obviously, if I have to, I would," she said. "If it
does have implications for Roe v. Wade, I will
certainly be concerned," she said, having always
supported abortion rights.
But she hopes - and expects - it will not come to
that.
It would be divisive and therefore wrong for Bush to
appoint a litmus-test nominee whose judicial record
suggests an inclination to overturn Roe v. Wade, she
said. Instead, he should pick someone considered
centrist, she said.
"I hope we don't engage in that process," she said.
That process has started with conservatives and
anti-abortion groups opposing Sen. Arlen Specter's
possible chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, which oversees confirmation of Supreme
Court nominees. Specter, a centrist from
Pennsylvania, is the ranking Republican on that
committee.
Snowe supports his appointment. The opposition is
based on a statement Specter made recently
suggesting an anti-abortion Supreme Court nominee
would never win Senate confirmation.
Clubbed by conservatives
Whether Snowe's determination to remain a
moderate will inspire some in the party to work
against her remains to be seen. Snowe's vote against
Bush's 2003 tax cuts sparked protests from some
conservative groups, notably the tax-hating Club for
Growth. That well-financed organization unleashed
television ads last year aimed at Snowe, suggesting
her opposition was un-American.
Snowe says she's planning to seek a third Senate
term in 2006. But she doesn't expect a primary fight
from the right.
Why not? First, she points to Sen. John Kerry's
recent decisive win in her home state, along with
big wins for both of Maine's Democratic congressmen
this month.
Second, she says she's been given assurances from
conservative groups, including the Club for Growth,
that they won't oppose her candidacy.
In April, Specter fended off a primary challenger
backed with more than $2 million from the Club for
Growth. Following Specter's win, Stephen Moore, the
club's president, told a Philadelphia Inquirer
reporter that Snowe "may be as good as we are going
to get in Maine," despite her being "a little more
of a troublemaker than (Maine Sen. Susan) Collins."
"I think people pretty much understand that this
is a diverse state and you need more centrist-based
Republicans to win," Snowe said.
However, David Keating, the club's executive
director, said this week that his group has not
ruled out bankrolling a primary fight against her
especially if a Republican candidate emerges with a
strong record of tax cutting.
Among Senate Republicans, Keating said Snowe's
voting record on economic growth issues is "near the
bottom." He claimed that Snowe has demonstrated a
willingness to vote for new spending despite her
pledge of fiscal conservatism,
Snowe counters that her occasional votes on programs
critical to Americans, such as the Medicare
prescription drug benefit, does not contradict her
fundamental fiscal conservatism.
Snowe press secretary Antonia Ferrier said Snowe
believes the best way to secure a path of economic
expansion is to "confront our deficits and our
national debt, not by deferring it to our children.
This is the most fundamental and logical
'pro-growth' policy - one that Mainers and Americans
alike understand and expect."
Red, white and blue
She said she's concerned about the deep-seated
division between Republican and Democratic states,
as reflected in the presidential electoral map.
The solid blocks of red and blue states signal a
"very troubling trend," Snowe said. She blames them,
in part, on efforts by the two parties to draw
political lines that create less-diverse
congressional districts. That leads to fewer
moderate lawmakers.
While she expects Bush to set an agenda important
to his political base, she said she hopes those
issues will not further divide the country by
separating Congress into ideological camps.
Congressional leaders and Bush have "a greater
obligation to do everything we can to unite the
country," she said.
Paraphrasing from a newly elected senator from
Illinois who gave the keynote address at the
Democratic National Convention, Snowe said: "I don't
think it's healthy for America to be divided into
red and blue. I say, 'Can't we live under the red
white and blue for all Americans?'"
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