Chuck Grassley is not a knucklehead

Salon.com published a feature today on 12 U.S. senators who “for reasons of questionable IQ or eccentricity, because they are vapid, stubborn or ornery, can fairly be called knuckleheads.” Here’s why Chuck Grassley made the list:

Evidence of knuckleheadedness: Oh, pretty much just the entire debate over healthcare reform. Grassley’s the primary Republican negotiator on healthcare in the Senate, and Democrats have been working hard to please him, but at this point no one besides Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., understands why.

Never mind that Grassley has said there’s almost no chance he’ll actually vote for the final bill, no matter how many concessions to him are included in it. He’s actually gone so far as to claim that provisions in the legislation that would provide coverage for end-of-life counseling are really setting up a “government program that determines if you’re going to pull the plug on grandma.” What he didn’t mention? He’s voted for end-of-life counseling before.

And don’t even get us started on his use of Twitter.

I’m old enough to remember when first-term U.S. Senator Grassley was known as “Tweedle Dumber,” but let’s be honest–Salon’s staff have shown here that the man is shrewd. Although he seems to have no intention of voting for health care reform, and his vote is not needed in a chamber with 60 Democrats, Grassley has made himself a major player on this issue.

Moreover, Grassley has strung along President Obama so successfully that the White House press secretary still supported the “gang of six” bipartisan health care negotiations, even after Grassley fueled unsubstantiated rumors about “pulling the plug on Grandma.” Who’s acting like a knucklehead?

Anyway, Grassley’s use of Twitter can be quite entertaining.

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desmoinesdem

  • Okay

    So he’s an uncaring, corporate-money-grabbing, lying, snake-in-the grass prostitute. Is that better than a knucklehead? Furthermore, it can be argued that he is indeed a knucklehead when you consider that he doesn’t care one bit about the economic health of our country and the future of our democracy.

    • point taken

      I was just talking to a friend who grew up in southern Iowa and visited there recently. I hadn’t brought up politics or Grassley, but he mentioned how Grassley doesn’t seem to get how badly people in rural southern Iowa need real health care reform.

      • I'm Glad To Hear

        that people like your friend are talking about it. You know, I don’t think Grassley is as popular as some of the polls show. I do think people are starting to wonder about this former conservative. I think the Bush years changed him. He’s become so radical.  

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