It turns out that the one thing Republicans thought they were good at - "No!" - they can't get right. Congressional Quarterly has taken a mid-year look at voting patterns on the Hill, and if one thing is clear, a heck of a lot of GOPers seem to love doing exactly what Obama asks. In the House, fourty-four Republicans (fully a quarter of their caucus) have voted in support of measures where the President has "clearly indicated his preferences" at least 50% of the time. This includes hardcore conservatives like Vern Buchanan and Adam Putnam. By contrast, not a single Dem even hit the 40% mark last year when Bush was still in the White House.
The Senate side is even more remarkable. Thanks in part to the GOP's refusal to put up much of a fight on Obama's nominees (despite a whole lot of bluster and ugly, antidemocratic holds), fully thirty-two out of the mere 40 Republicans in the Senate have backed the Obama agenda at least half the time. Even serious mouth-breathers like Jeff Sessions and Saxby Chambliss are on this list. And half of this group has voted with Obama at 60% or greater clip:
State | Senator | %age |
ME | Collins | 92 |
ME | Snowe | 92 |
OH | Voinovich | 83 |
NH | Gregg | 82 |
IN | Lugar | 78 |
AK | Murkowski | 70 |
FL | Martinez | 69 |
TN | Corker | 68 |
MO | Bond | 67 |
TN | Alexander | 65 |
UT | Hatch | 65 |
MS | Cochran | 64 |
SC | Graham | 63 |
NE | Johanns | 63 |
AZ | McCain | 62 |
Collins & Snowe are worthy of extra attention. CQ also offers a second metric, called "party unity," which judges how often a member of Congress votes with their party overall. Snowe has voted with the Republicans just 44% of the time, and Collins 49%. This means that on all matters, routine and profound, the two Senators from Maine vote with Democrats more often than with Republicans.
I would say that they ought to follow Arlen Specter's lead and just switch sides already. But since such a huge chunk of the GOP - including a majority of its Senate caucus - prefers to support the President's vision for this country more often than not, I can see why Collins & Snowe might stay put. After all, it's just the party that pretends to say no.