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Olympia Snowe Retirement: Maine Senator Leaving Amid Frustration With Gridlock

By ANDREW TAYLOR   03/02/12 05:38 AM ET  AP

WASHINGTON -- Maine Republican Olympia Snowe says the Senate spends too much time in political battle and not enough on solving problems, and more than a few of her colleagues agree.

Snowe, the Senate's most liberal Republican, found herself in a familiar spot Thursday as the only member of her party to join with Democrats on a politically freighted vote. This time, it was a vote to affirm an Obama administration directive requiring employers to provide contraception coverage to their workers regardless of religious or ethical concerns.

The vote, originally demanded by Republicans in a political battle that Democrats came to embrace, provided ample fodder for political ads but had nothing to do with an underlying highway bill. That measure continues to twist in the wind despite widespread support, trapped in a divisive, polarized Senate that rarely seems to legislate and often seems incapable of tackling politically challenging problems.

So Snowe, 65, is leaving at the end of the year, voicing frustration that the Senate is simply too polarized and that she doesn't know whether she could be "productive" in a fourth Senate term.

"It's a reflection of the political dynamic in America, where we don't look at America as a whole. We look at it through the red and blue prism," Snowe said in an interview. "And so it becomes more divisive and I think ultimately has manifested itself in the Senate and an overall process that lends itself to dysfunction and political paralysis that doesn't allow problems to be solved."

Snowe's departure continues a steady exodus of the chamber's moderates. Centrists like Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., are also leaving, following on the heels of the recent departures of Evan Bayh, D-Ind., Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., and Republican-turned-Democrat Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania.

"People in the center are increasingly vilified by the far left and the far right," said Sen. Susan Collins, Snowe's home-state GOP colleague. "We used to be applauded for bringing people together to solve problems. Now we tend to be criticized by both sides."

Snowe is leaving even though she would have been poised to take the helm of the Commerce Committee if Republicans take control of the chamber. She also serves on the Finance Committee, which has sweeping jurisdiction over health care, taxes and trade.

There's little real legislating going on in the Senate these days, however, as the chamber lurches from one politically staged vote to another.

The chamber hasn't debated a budget since 2009. Annual spending bills are passed in huge omnibus measures with little discussion, much less amendment.

"There's a rank-and-file rebellion brewing here," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. "Most people who come to the Senate work hard to get here and have done things in their lives of accomplishment. And I think a lot of us are getting tired of sitting around looking at each other."

"This body is supposed to be a great deliberative body. It's supposed to do what's right for the nation," said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. "If everything here is political, it it's to score points rather than solve problems, then what good is the United States Senate?"

Added Feinstein: "It's a heartbreak. And it's a heartbreak to lose (Snowe), candidly."

Republicans say Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is too quick to employ parliamentary maneuvers – used frequently by leaders in both parties – to block Republicans from offering and getting votes on their ideas. And they charge that Reid, when he does schedule votes, is more interested in painting Republicans into a political corner, as he did during last fall's debate on extending a 2 percentage-point cut in the Social Security payroll tax and on a tax surcharge on millionaires pressed by Democratic leaders.

Democrats, who control the Senate with 53 votes, counter that Republicans require Democrats to produce 60 votes for virtually everything and deny Reid approval for parliamentary steps that were considered routine just a few years ago. A long roster of presidential nominees remains stuck in limbo, blocked by Republicans.

"It's supposed to be deliberative. Instead now the floor is just a wasteland of quorum calls and lurching from one filibuster to another," said the Senate's No. 2 Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois. "It really, I'm afraid, has damaged the institution."

Since it takes 60 votes to do anything, virtually nothing passes that doesn't have the approval of Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. What that often means is that much of the real legislating is done by a handful of top leaders and committee chairmen, leaving most senators out in the cold.

After a meeting at the White House on Wednesday, GOP leaders emerged optimistic that the House and Senate would work together more productively on bipartisan jobs and energy legislation.

Snowe sounded unconvinced in a statement announcing her retirement.

"Unfortunately," she said, "I do not realistically expect the partisanship of recent years in the Senate to change over the short term."

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02:01 PM on 03/04/2012
UNITED WE STAND
APART WE FALL
NO ONE PERSON CAN BE RIGHT ON IT ALL, WE MUST HUMBLE OURSELVES TO SEE A MISTAKES AND AGREE TO DISAGREE YEST KEEP OUR FOCUS ON WHAT REALLY MATTERS. IS IT NOT CARE, LOVE, FAMILY, NOT A CELL PHONE, TV, COMPUTER ? WHAT MATTERS MOST IN YOUR LIFE ? THIS IS WHAT WE AS INDIVIDUALS MUST DECIDE AND ACT ON NOW, GIVE YOUR CHILD A HUG, A FRIEND ETC. UNITED WE ARE HUGE AND CAN DO ANYTHING, LETS DECIDE TO GET BACK TO WHAT MATTERS MOST AND STOP WASTING TIME AND MONEY ON PARTY NONSENSE, MAYBE OUR REPRESENTATIVES CAN AGREE TO DISAGREE AND GIVE MONEY THEY ARE USING TO A HOMELESS CHILD ?
MAYBE THEY CAN HUG EACH AND PRAY IF THEY WISH TO START MEETINGS.
SET TERM LIMITS ETC. OUR COUNTRY HAS ALOT OF GOOD HEARTED PEOPLE TO WHOM CAREING OF FRIENDS AND FAMILY MATTERS MOST, MANY PARENTS WANT WANT TO STAY HOME WITH CHILDREN BUT CAN'T AFFORD TO , SO WHAT KIND OF CHOICE IS THAT FOR THEM ? LETS WORK TOGETHER AND SHOW HOW AWESOME WE ARE, THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA !!!
03:32 PM on 03/02/2012
Don't blame her a bit. Must be terribly debilitating to have to live and work in a poisoned environment every day.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerentrans
You can't have everything..where would you put it?
03:00 PM on 03/02/2012
Been searching for that "non essential commodity" called "Principle"
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hstdem
In search of the 4th Estate
12:21 PM on 03/02/2012
"Unfortunately," she said, "I do not realistically expect the partisanship of recent years in the Senate to change over the short term."

SHE helped with the partisanship by voting lockstep with the Rs for the past 3 years and stayed quiet while the Rs lied about and attacked the president continuously.

If she had taken the high ground from the beginning, maybe the partisanship would have been avoided.
04:58 PM on 11/08/2012
You don't know what you are talking about. Of all the Senators, Olympia Snowe has crossed party lines more times than anyone else from either party. The extreme partisanship began with Bush's judicial nominees in the early 2000's. I'm independent and not aligned with either party, but to say that Ms. Snowe is the cause of the current Senate partisanship is wrong in the extreme!
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12:12 PM on 03/02/2012
Left, Right, and Center. They ain't what they used to be. Snowe was considered to be a rational and reasonable conservative at one time. Now she's called a "centrist" because the "grand" old party has moved ever- increasingly to the right.

It's unfortunate that she is stepping down but it is because she is so at odds with the extremists that have taken over her party.
FoundersFan
right = correct
12:17 PM on 03/02/2012
You do know, don't you, that independents view Democrats as much more to the left than they view Republicans as being to the right.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hburns1351
I'm too old to be diplomatic
12:46 PM on 03/02/2012
Actually no I don't know that and I doubt anyone else knows that as well.
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08:22 PM on 03/05/2012
So you're saying that Senator Snowe decided not to run for re-election after reading an article in The New Republic?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack Davies
THEY OWN BOTH SIDES!
11:42 AM on 03/02/2012
Perhaps lawmakers should focus less on being PRODUCtive and more on being EFFECtive.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jnesteljr
Occam's Razor
11:37 AM on 03/02/2012
It looks like even Snowe quits as she does not want her rights trampled on!!

I can respect that!
11:36 AM on 03/02/2012
Snowe is a republican in name only (RINO). The democrats in the senate can usually look to her for support of their agendas. She is a part of the problem she claims as the reason for leaving the senate. In order to get rid of gridlock in congress, term limits are the way to go. Same for the supreme court.
FoundersFan
right = correct
11:15 AM on 03/02/2012
And why hasn't the senate debated or passed a budget since 2009? Harry Reid and the Democrats is the answer.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
picval
11:11 AM on 03/02/2012
I used to vote for Ms. Snowe type Republicans.....haven't voted Republican for a decade.
FoundersFan
right = correct
11:16 AM on 03/02/2012
So, you just vote for extreme left wingers.
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picval
11:31 AM on 03/02/2012
Rather stay with the left...FREEDOM then with the religious nuts.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bahkey
12:18 PM on 03/02/2012
As opposed to the repub/bagger klan right - wing
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MistryMan
From out of everywhere
11:04 AM on 03/02/2012
:"The chamber hasn't debated a budget since 2009" ....This a crime considering our current position.
FoundersFan
right = correct
11:16 AM on 03/02/2012
And who has controlled the senate for that entire time?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jd n sf
Liberal with strong San Francisco values
01:12 PM on 03/02/2012
The Minority party and their filibuster.

Glad I could clear that up for you. It was in the article though if you read it:

"Since it takes 60 votes to do anything, virtually nothing passes that doesn't have the approval of Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky."
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hburns1351
I'm too old to be diplomatic
01:23 PM on 03/02/2012
And who submits the budget? The House, that's who. And who has controlled the House for the last two years?.
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AlwaysRight213
Your micro-bio is empty
10:56 AM on 03/02/2012
Why is it that Snowe is a "Pragmatic" Republican but Nelson and Lieberman are "Sell-out" Democrats?
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tombaan
Live and let live
10:52 AM on 03/02/2012
All senators should have a term limit, like should the supreme court judges...it will reduce the acrimony and distrust by a lot.....turnover in this positions is good....change is good
FoundersFan
right = correct
11:18 AM on 03/02/2012
I would love to see every senator up for re-election this year defeated. Boy that would certainly make the senate look a million times better.
10:51 AM on 03/02/2012
She needs to stay on, for atleast one more term.
10:48 AM on 03/02/2012
So, shes the last GOP moderate.
Sad to see her go, really, this is a sign of things to come though. I can see our political discourse getting more and more rocky. With our rights as Americans hinging on keeping the GOP out of office.