Top Dems Prop Up Scandal-Ridden Colleague

Since the Lauer news broke this morning I’ve seen a half-dozen variations of the joke that he’s now qualified to run for Congress. But there’s more to it than that. Unlike “Today” host Lauer, Congressman Lauer would still have his job today. You’re about to see why. Here’s James Clyburn, the number three Democrat in the House, fielding a good question. If Harvey Weinstein and Kevin Spacey and Bill O’Reilly and Charlie Rose and now Matt Lauer were all held accountable for their misdeeds by losing their jobs, why shouldn’t Conyers lose his?

To which Clyburn replies, without missing a beat, “Who elected them?”

You don’t often see arrogant power displayed as grossly as that in front of a camera. Kathleen Rice, the first House Democrat to call for Conyers to step down, walked out of a Democratic caucus meeting this morning because she knows a sham when she sees one:

Essentially Clyburn’s arguing that democratic government makes public servants *less* accountable than employees in the private sector, which is certainly true descriptively but should not be true prescriptively, which is what Clyburn’s suggesting. I wish I could huff and puff about that being an example of the liberal big-government mindset at work, in which the administrative ruling class exults in getting to play by special rules, but all he’s doing here is previewing the argument you’ll hear from 99 percent of conservative media next month if Roy Moore wins. “The people have spoken.” If the voters of a given jurisdiction are comfortable being represented by someone who’s been credibly accused of preying on women and/or girls, who is Nancy Pelosi or Mitch McConnell to tell them they’re not allowed to be? We just elected a president based on that logic, in fact. I’d be surprised if there’s any member of Congress, left or right, who holds a safe seat that doesn’t embrace Clyburn’s reasoning privately.

Read more at Hot Air.

Loading...