Obama: Most Liberal Senator In 2007

Obama: Most Liberal Senator In 2007

1,314

    Mar 31, 2008#1

    This guy is going to reach across tto the "otther side" and change Washington?
    He's the #1 leftest in the Senate.
    Nothing in this man's political history points to him reaching out to republicans for anything if he were to become President of the United States.
    He's completely full of crap.


    Obama: Most Liberal Senator In 2007













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    How The Vote Ratings Are Calculated



    Obama & Clinton's Key Votes



    Q&A: From The Editor




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    By [url=mailto:bfriel@nationaljournal.com]Brian Friel[/url], [url=mailto:rcohen@nationaljournal.com]Richard E. Cohen[/url] and [url=mailto:kvictor@nationaljournal.com]Kirk Victor[/url], National Journal


    © National Journal Group Inc.


    Thursday, Jan. 31, 2008


    Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., was the most liberal senator in 2007, according to National Journal's
    27th annual vote ratings. The insurgent presidential candidate shifted
    further to the left last year in the run-up to the primaries, after
    ranking as the 16th- and 10th-most-liberal during his first two years
    in the Senate.


    Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., the other
    front-runner in the Democratic presidential race, also shifted to the
    left last year. She ranked as the 16th-most-liberal senator in the 2007
    ratings, a computer-assisted analysis that used 99 key Senate votes, selected by NJ
    reporters and editors, to place every senator on a
    liberal-to-conservative scale in each of three issue categories. In
    2006, Clinton was the 32nd-most-liberal senator.

    In their yearlong race for the Democratic presidential
    nomination, Obama and Clinton have had strikingly similar voting
    records. Of the 267 measures on which both senators cast votes in 2007,
    the two differed on only 10. "The policy differences between Clinton
    and Obama are so slight they are almost nonexistent to the average
    voter," said Richard Lau, a Rutgers University political scientist.





    But differences define campaigns. The yeas and nays matter. And in a
    Senate in which party-line votes are the rule, the rare exceptions help
    to show how two senators who seemed like ideological twins in 2007 were
    not actually identical. Obama and Clinton were more like fraternal
    policy twins, NJ's vote ratings show.


    As the battles for the 2008 Democratic and Republican presidential
    nominations have raged, the candidates have blasted each other for
    taking positions that are out of line with party dogma. Obama has
    repeatedly challenged Clinton's 2002 vote authorizing the Iraq war,
    labeling her foreign policy "Bush/Cheney-lite"; Clinton has pointed to
    Obama's "present" votes on the abortion issue in the Illinois
    Legislature to raise questions about his support for abortion rights.
    Meanwhile, Republicans have battled over the strength of their
    conservative credentials on taxes, immigration, and national security.

    When the campaign shifts into the general election, however,
    the two nominees may each seek to cast their opponent as a party
    extremist. During the 2004 presidential campaign, for instance,
    Republicans attacked Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., as an extreme liberal, including by pointing to his ranking as the most liberal senator in NJ's 2003 vote ratings.


    Such lines of attack are already apparent in this year's race. At a January 16 Republican National Committee meeting, Karl Rove, President Bush's
    former campaign architect, called Obama "a straight-down-the-line
    United States Senate national Democrat." Rove pointedly added:
    "Nonpartisan ratings say that he has a more liberal and a more
    straight-party voting record than Senator Clinton does. Pretty hard to
    do." How the eventual nominee handles criticisms of his or her voting
    record could help determine the next president of the United States.


    Contacted on January 30 to respond to Obama's scores in NJ's
    vote ratings, his campaign said that the liberal ranking belies the
    public support he has been receiving. "As Senator Obama travels across
    the country, and as we've seen in the early contests, he's the one
    candidate who's shown the ability to appeal to Republicans and the
    ability to appeal to independents," said campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki.


    But she also said that it's important to note the differences between
    Obama and Clinton on key issues. "The Democratic Party needs to
    nominate someone who shows a clear contrast with where Republicans are,
    on issues like the war in Iraq and the economy and the influence of
    lobbyists on Washington," Psaki said. "One of the reasons he's received
    such strong support is because he's drawn the starkest contrast on
    those issues."

    Asked whether the liberal ranking could be used against Obama
    in the campaign, Psaki said that voters appreciate that he is up front
    about his positions on issues, even if those positions don't line up
    with their own. "Part of the reason he's appealing to some Republicans
    and independents is, he has that authenticity," she said. "He's very
    clear from the beginning that we can't do this alone and we need to
    work across party lines and focus more on uniting than on dividing."


    Asked about Clinton's relatively moderate placement in NJ's
    rankings, one of her campaign advisers responded, "Her voting record as
    a whole shows she takes a comprehensive, balanced approach toward
    policy. Senator Clinton looks at the broader picture. She tries to see
    the challenges from not only the blue-collar worker's face, but also
    the white-collar worker's, not only Wall Street but also Main Street,
    and from that tries to put together a policy that's best for America as
    a whole."

    The Clinton adviser said that the Democratic candidates' shift
    to the left reflects the two parties' stark splits over Bush's
    policies. Asked how the differences between Obama's and Clinton's
    voting records have played on the campaign trail, the adviser
    emphasized that the two have not differed over the past year on the
    critical issue of the Iraq war. "The most interesting thing of this
    exercise is... it simply looks at the votes," the adviser said. "Did
    they vote yes? Did they vote no? What did they vote? For the most part,
    Senator Clinton and Senator Obama have identical voting records on
    Iraq."




    The Yeas And Nays

    Indeed, the similarities in Obama's and Clinton's voting
    records last year were extensive. Both supported most measures aimed at
    withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq. Both supported comprehensive
    immigration legislation including a path to citizenship for illegal
    immigrants. Both voted to support most Democratic positions on health
    care, education, energy, and the budget, and both voted against most
    Republican positions on those topics.


    But NJ's vote ratings are designed to draw distinctions
    that illuminate the differences among lawmakers. The calculations
    ranked senators relative to each other based on the 99 key votes and
    assigned scores in three areas: economic issues, social issues, and
    foreign policy. (House members were scored in a separate set of
    rankings. The full results for both chambers will be published in our
    March 8 issue.)

    On foreign policy, for example, Obama's liberal score of 92 and
    conservative score of 7 indicate that he was more liberal in that issue
    area than 92 percent of the senators and more conservative than 7
    percent. Clinton was more liberal than 83 percent of the senators on
    foreign policy and more conservative than 16 percent. The ratings do
    not mean that she voted with liberals 83 percent of the time, or that
    she was 83 percent "correct" from a liberal perspective.


    The ratings system -- devised in 1981 under the direction of William Schneider, a political analyst and commentator, and a contributing editor to National Journal
    -- also assigns "composite" scores, an average of the members'
    issue-based scores. In 2007, Obama's composite liberal score of 95.5
    was the highest in the Senate. Rounding out the top five most liberal
    senators last year were Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., with a composite liberal score of 94.3; Joseph Biden, D-Del., with a 94.2; Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., with a 93.7; and Robert Menendez, D-N.J., with a 92.8.


    Clinton, meanwhile, tied as the 16th-most-liberal senator in 2007 with Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich.; both had a composite liberal score of 82.8. Clinton's home-state colleague, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., was the 15th-most-liberal, with a composite score of 83.


    Members who missed more than half of the votes in any of the three issue categories did not receive a composite score in NJ's ratings. (This rule was imposed after Kerry was ranked the most liberal senator in our 2003 ratings despite having missed more than half of the votes in two categories.) Sen. John McCain,
    R-Ariz., the only other senator whose presidential candidacy survived
    the initial round of primaries and caucuses this year, did not vote
    frequently enough in 2007 to draw a composite score. He missed more
    than half of the votes in both the economic and foreign-policy
    categories. On social issues, which include immigration, McCain
    received a conservative score of 59. (McCain's composite scores from
    his prior years in the Senate, published in our March 2007 vote ratings
    issue, are available here.)


    Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, the lone House member still in
    the presidential race, had a composite conservative score of 60.2,
    making him the 178th-most-conservative lawmaker in that chamber in
    2007. His libertarian views placed him close to the center of the House
    in both the social issues and foreign-policy categories. He registered
    more conservative on economic issues.


    Overall in NJ's 2007 ratings, Obama voted the liberal
    position on 65 of the 66 key votes on which he voted; Clinton voted the
    liberal position 77 of 82 times. Obama garnered perfect liberal scores
    in both the economic and social categories. His score in the
    foreign-policy category was nearly perfect, pulled down a notch by the
    only conservative vote that he cast in the ratings, on a
    Republican-sponsored resolution expressing the sense of Congress that
    funding should not be cut off for U.S. troops in harm's way. The Senate
    passed the resolution 82-16 with the support of both Obama and Clinton.
    The 16 opponents included mostly liberals, such as Sens. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., and Sanders.


    Clinton took the conservative position four other times in NJ's 2007 ratings. (See how Obama and Clinton voted in the three issue categories in this PDF.)
    The one that registered the loudest on the campaign trail was a vote
    that she cast in favor of an amendment sponsored by Sens. Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn., and Jon Kyl,
    R-Ariz., that called on the Bush administration to reduce Iranian
    influence on Iraq and to designate the Iranian revolutionary guard as a
    terrorist organization. The "sense of the Senate" amendment was
    approved 76-22.

    Obama missed that vote, but said he would have voted no. In
    fact, on the campaign trail, he criticized Clinton for her position,
    arguing that the Bush administration could use the Senate vote to
    justify waging war on Iran. "I strongly differ with Senator Hillary
    Clinton, who was the only Democratic presidential candidate to support
    this reckless amendment," Obama wrote in an opinion article in The Union Leader,
    published in Manchester, N.H. To combat that criticism, Clinton signed
    a letter to Bush urging him not to attack Iran and co-sponsored
    legislation requiring the president to seek congressional approval
    before an attack.




    The Liberal Label

    As Obama and Clinton have wooed Democratic primary
    voters, both have emphasized their liberal policy positions. But
    neither has embraced the liberal label the way that the Republican
    presidential candidates have proudly stamped themselves as
    conservatives.


    In Obama's first splash on the national stage, as keynote speaker
    at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, he disparaged ideological
    labels as weapons used by partisans who have little else to offer.
    "Even as we speak, there are those who are preparing to divide us, the
    spinmasters and negative-ad peddlers who embrace the politics of
    anything-goes," he said. "Well, I say to them tonight: There's not a
    liberal America and a conservative America -- there is the United
    States of America."


    Talk like that is what makes Obama popular across the ideological spectrum, said Rep. Zoe Lofgren,
    D-Calif. "It's not the '90s all over again," she said. "Instead of
    focusing in on what divides us, it's focusing in on what can unite us.
    People are sick of the divisions. Republicans I know -- and I know
    quite a few -- are very enthused by this guy."

    For her part, Clinton at times has emphasized her
    nuts-and-bolts pragmatism. She cites her work with GOP colleagues such
    as Sen. Lindsey Graham
    of South Carolina, with whom she collaborated for three years to secure
    medical benefits for National Guard troops. Clinton hit that theme in a
    December ad aimed at independent voters in New Hampshire. "I've learned
    if you want to get things done, you have to know when to stand your
    ground and when to find common ground," she said as she looked into the
    camera.

    In recent interviews, both candidates' supporters contended
    that they can handle any charges that they are too liberal for the
    country. Whitehouse, a Clinton supporter, said that she weathered that
    storm throughout her years as first lady. "What people remember as
    polarizing was the rabid Republican smear attack that lasted for years
    against the Clintons," he said. "When you actually look at her on the
    record and working, she's solidly bipartisan and very productive."


    Rep. Robert Andrews, D-N.J., who has endorsed Clinton,
    said that she has been wise to defend her 2002 vote for the Iraq war.
    "I admire that," he added. "I think I give her credit for being
    resolute in her conviction that the vote was right at the time. Senator
    Clinton has this in her character. I'm hopeful that when she's elected,
    that will manifest itself from the White House."

    Obama's supporters likewise said that his record points to
    bipartisanship. "He has strong positions, but he doesn't demonize the
    opposition," Virginia Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine
    said in an interview. "He talks about the strength of his particular
    views, but he wants to hear from the other side and try to find common
    ground. He has a track record of always reaching out and trying to find
    someone on the other side of the aisle that he can partner with."


    Kerry, who has endorsed Obama, told NJ on January 29
    that attacks on his own liberalism had no impact on the outcome of the
    2004 presidential election. That line of attack wouldn't work against
    Obama either, he said. "The whole point, folks, is -- and the
    Republicans love to be simplistic and they also love to be wrong -- is
    that he represents somebody who's bringing together a broad coalition
    of people," Kerry said. "It's not going to stick. People are tired of
    the stupidity of these labels. They're tired of that game."

    Asked about the question of ideology in this year's campaign,
    Democrats generally said that most voters do not focus on labels such
    as "liberal" and "conservative." "By and large, your average person out
    there, particularly young voters, are less interested in labels and
    more interested in seeing that somebody is going to put up or shut up,"
    said Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark.


    Republicans, however, insist that they can make hay by showing how
    liberal the Democratic nominee is. "Senator Obama's voting record, from
    what I have seen of it, tends to be very left-leaning," said Sen. John Cornyn,
    R-Texas. "I saw Senator Kennedy's endorsement of him as both an
    acknowledgement of that similar ideological view, but also -- perhaps
    just as significant -- that he represents the future and [Clinton]
    represented the past."

    In the general election, Cornyn said, the ideological
    differences between the Republican and Democratic nominee "would be
    certainly a stark contrast." Drawing that distinction "would be
    important to present to people," he said, adding that notwithstanding
    Obama's appeal "really across party lines," his ideology "would be
    certainly what the election would focus on."

    Graham, a McCain supporter, was equally adamant that ideology
    would be very important. Whether Clinton or Obama is the nominee,
    Graham said, the differences between the two parties' candidates on
    taxes, judicial nominees, and war policy would be significant. "I mean,
    there would be big, huge thematic differences," he said.

    When asked about the Clinton ad featuring her work with him to
    show how she reaches across party lines, Graham noted he was proud that
    they extended military health care to the Guard and Reserves. "I don't
    want her to be president not because I don't like her," he added. "I
    know the judges that she will appoint will be the opposite of what I
    would like. I know what she would do with the tax problems we have --
    she will not make the tax cuts permanent. And I know what she would do
    in Iraq. She would withdraw. She said she would begin withdrawing in 60
    days of becoming president. That would be a disaster."
    "...government programs that will invade every area of freedom as we have known it in this country until one day...we will
    wake to find that we have socialism, and...one of these days we are going to spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children, what
    it once was like in America when men were free.


    -Ronald Reagan/Norman Thomas




    "In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem."


    - President Ronald Reagan (January 20, 1981)




    "We are a nation that has a government--not the other way around."


    - President Ronald Reagan (January 20, 1981)




    "From time to time we've been tempted to believe that society has become too complex to be managed by self-rule, that government by an elite group is
    superior to government for, by, and of the people. Well, if no one among us is capable of governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern
    someone else?"


    - President Ronald Reagan (January 20, 1981)

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