NYT: A Partisan Leaves; Will an Era Follow Suit?
By ROBIN TONER
Published: April 5, 2006
(NYT)
....For 11 tumultuous years, Mr. DeLay proved remarkably effective in pushing the Republican agenda through the House — tax cuts, budget cuts, an overhaul of Medicare and energy bills — pulling the necessary 218 votes together from often narrow and fractious Republican majorities.
But he was also a man who, perhaps more than any other, embodied the fierce partisanship of his era — a prime mover behind the impeachment of President Bill Clinton, a practitioner of take-no-prisoners electoral politics and a legislative strategist who many Democrats asserted saw no real role for the minority in the legislative process....
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Mr. DeLay tested the limits — of ideological change, of partisan politics and of the use of money and interest groups in the service of maintaining power. He departs as his party scrambles to find a new formula for an increasingly dissatisfied electorate that gives low marks in the polls to Congress and to President Bush....
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Many Democrats said Mr. DeLay left...a House whose rules and civilities will need to be painfully restored. They cited the roll-call votes held open way beyond the normal time limits and quickly closed when Republicans formed majorities, and the conference committees where Democratic participation was in name only.
Martin Frost, a longtime Democratic member who lost his seat after his district was dismantled in the Texas redistricting that Mr. DeLay pushed through, said: "The means he used damaged the House as an institution. And it will take some time to restore democracy to the House."...
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/05/us/05assess.html?hp&ex=1144209600&en=392ceda16c5e03dd&ei=5094&partner=homepage