McMalaprop left whimpering in dust

 Last week, the famous federal California drought bill fizzled in a pool of bile. Republican Majority Leader of the House, Kevin "Malaprop" McCarthy, R-Bakersfield, and his rural California Republican delegation, condemned the characters of the state's two Democratic senators, Diane Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, both from the Bay Area.

“Sadly,” McCarthy said Friday, “our senators have once again failed to rise and meet the challenge with us.” 

 
Feinstein's complaint was more specific:
 

“The bill that Republicans tried to place in the omnibus last week – in my name and without my knowledge – hadn’t been reviewed by me, Sen. Boxer, the state or the White House,” Feinstein said Friday.

 
McCarthy, who cannot seem to manage to speak idiomatic English, is no match for former Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Tracy, whose slight-of-hand management of anti-Endangered Species Act bills evidently is still  remembered by Mme. Senior Senator. (1) Since Feinstein plans to offer another California drought bill next year and the Temperance Flat and Sites reservoirs are the only items California Republicans and Democrats can agree on, we think that our senior senator adheres to the policy: Learn nothing; forget nothing.
As is typical for contemporary journalism, the best is saved for last.
 

“It’s like two bulls in a corral, and they’re trying to find out who’s the toughest and the meanest,” Garamendi said. “There’s a lot of stomping and snorting and pushing each other around, and at the end of the day, what’s it all about? It’s throwing dust in the air.”

 
We are grateful to the reporter for capturing the quote and happy to hear that Garamendi, after all these years, has finally scraped Harvard Business School off his cowboy boots.
-- blj
 
12-11-15
McClatchydc.com
Drought worries weren’t enough to force agreement on Calif. water bill

After intense negotiations, GOP legislators agree there will be no bill this year
Republicans blame Democrats; Democrats blast what they call GOP secrecy

Did GOP misrepresent Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s position on a proposed compromise?
Michael Doyle
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/congress/article4931...
 
California lawmakers’ repeated failures to agree on legislation to resolve the state’s seemingly endless battle over how to use its water resources raise new questions about whether they’ll ever be able to find a compromise.
This year, the climate looked ripe for an agreement. The state endured another year of drought. The tracks seemed greased, with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfield, conducting. The staffers worked tirelessly, and in Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, Central Valley Republicans had an experienced negotiating partner.
Now, cold rain and snow have returned to California, dampening the sense of urgency. McCarthy and Feinstein are denouncing each other in ways that won’t soon be forgotten, and frustrated lawmakers are left to either pick up the pieces or point fingers. Late Thursday, Republican representatives admitted defeat, acknowledging that no legislation would happen this year.
“Sadly,” McCarthy said Friday, “our senators have once again failed to rise and meet the challenge with us.”
The No. 2 Republican in the House of Representatives, McCarthy joined 12 other California GOP lawmakers at a Capitol Hill news conference designed to both pressure Feinstein and shape public impressions about the water bill’s failure. They did not pull their punches, even as Feinstein said a compromise remained possible.
“Our senators,” said Rep. Doug LaMalfa, R-Redding, “have basically pulled the football away from us once again.”
Northern California Democrats countered that Republicans have only themselves to blame for the failure to achieve a compromise.
“It’s not a good bill, and it’s not good policy,” said Rep. John Garamendi, D-Walnut Grove. “Beyond that, it’s dead because it was grossly mismanaged by Republicans.”
At issue is the effort to address California’s drought with legislation. Proposals ran from new studies of water storage to funding for recycling and desalination programs. Central Valley Republicans wanted to expand the amount of water available for irrigation.
The lawmakers wanted to fold what eventually became 92 pages of California water proposals into the $1.1 trillion so-called omnibus spending bill needed to keep the federal government operating. Republicans observed Friday that Feinstein herself had agreed with using the must-pass spending bill as the vehicle for the water legislation.
But the Republicans could not win agreement from Feinstein and Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer in time for the water package to make it into the omnibus bill, which is set for congressional approval early next week.
“There were at least a half-dozen items in the bill that I had rejected and that would have drawn objections from state or federal agencies; some of them would likely violate environmental law,” Feinstein said, adding that “several more provisions were still being negotiated.”
Feinstein said negotiators had “come to closure on virtually all” the remaining disagreements, and she indicated that she hoped to have a bill finished as early as next week that can move through “regular order.”
Regular order would mean going through the standard committee process sometime next year. Multiple House Republicans said Friday that they were skeptical of the prospects, though they don’t rule it out.
“I wish her luck,” said Rep. Ken Calvert, R-Corona.
The problems that sank this year’s effort were political, substantive, procedural and, to some degree, personal.
Late last week, under circumstances that remain murky, a McCarthy staffer presented a water bill package as having been signed off on by Feinstein. In fact, Feinstein had not approved the final language. While Calvert complained that “Feinstein took umbrage to what was at most a staffer error in a closed-door meeting,” the state’s senior senator resented the move.
“The bill that Republicans tried to place in the omnibus last week – in my name and without my knowledge – hadn’t been reviewed by me, Sen. Boxer, the state or the White House,” Feinstein said Friday.
Politically, the House GOP members had failed to secure support from Gov. Jerry Brown, the Obama administration and a slew of Northern California Democrats whose districts include the environmentally sensitive Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
In a memo dated Dec. 1 and marked “confidential,” Obama administration officials warned of “the prospects of a fresh round of litigation” being prompted by the proposed legislation. The 10-page memo further said officials were “deeply concerned” about new burdens being imposed.
Substantively, negotiators did reach agreement in a number of areas, including consideration of new water storage projects and funding for recycling and desalination. Republicans say their proposal also preserved the Endangered Species Act, a crucial question for both sides.
Negotiators, though, were unable to resolve key questions related to increased water pumping to farms.
Procedurally, Democrats complained repeatedly that they were shut out of meaningful negotiations.
“It was the same old stuff from the same interests who appear uninterested in getting to yes with Democrats like me and others, who have to be part of the conversation,” Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, said Friday.
Republicans say the Democratic complaints of exclusion are overblown, and there was, in fact, Democratic participation for a time. Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Elk Grove, claimed that “half of the provisions” in the final House proposal were taken straight from Feinstein.
Garamendi said Friday that he had one meeting this fall with four senators and four House Republicans, which was followed by daily bipartisan staff discussions in McCarthy’s House office through mid-November.
In the end, though, the respective parties collapsed back into their respective camps.
“It’s like two bulls in a corral, and they’re trying to find out who’s the toughest and the meanest,” Garamendi said. “There’s a lot of stomping and snorting and pushing each other around, and at the end of the day, what’s it all about? It’s throwing dust in the air.”
 
NOTES:
(1) Tim Findley, "Pombo the Great," Range Magazine, Winter/2006