http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/01/AR2010030103401.htmlBy Dana Milbank
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
In his 17 years pitching in the big leagues, Jim Bunning was known for his graceful curveball, his rising slider and his sidearm fastball. Now 78 years old and about to retire from the Senate, the Republican of Kentucky is apparently down to only one pitch: the screwball.
For four days, he has been on a one-man campaign to cut off unemployment benefits, kick the unemployed off of health insurance, cut Medicare payments to doctors, deny satellite TV to rural Americans, shut down federal flood insurance and highway projects, and furlough thousands of federal workers.
Democrats can hardly believe the gift Bunning has given them by single-handedly shutting down these popular programs. Bunning's fellow Republicans are aghast. If this were baseball, the Hall of Famer would be on his way down to triple-A. But this is the Senate, where any one of the 100 members has the ability to bring proceedings to a halt, and Bunning continues to hurl his wild pitches.
The leadoff hitter Bunning faced on Monday was ABC News producer Z. Byron Wolf. Wolf, intercepting Bunning as he left his office, asked the senator to stay and talk to the cameras. Bunning, according to Wolf, flashed him the middle finger.
more @ link