On Senate Commerce, the ‘bipartisan party is over’
The politics on the Senate Commerce Committee are likely to change tempo after the retirement of Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) this year: The grand waltz she’s had with Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) could be replaced by a mosh pit. Committee Democrats — even if they retain control — are expected to face a more conservative bloc of Republicans next January, likely led by firebrand Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC).
Sen DeMint has seniority and political clout in his favor. And if tapped to lead panel Republicans, his rise would mark a departure from the committee’s more recent affable relations at a time when tech issues, more than ever, are on its radar. “After years of reckless spending and big government intervention from Washington, the Senate commerce committee needs to lead a new freedom agenda to overhaul outdated communications regulations, keep the Internet free from government control and new taxes and shrink the federal bureaucracy,” said Sen DeMint.
On Senate Commerce, the ‘bipartisan party is over’