Sen. Arlen Specter To Become A Democrat

(CBS)
His decision opens the door to the Democratic Party achieving a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.
Specter, a 79-year-old fifth-term senator, wrote in a statement that he has been a Republican since 1966 and was elected nearly 30 years ago "as part of the Reagan Big Tent." Since then, he said, "the Republican Party has moved far to the right."
At an afternoon news conference, Specter acknowledged that part of the reason he made the decision to switch parties was his grim prospects of surviving Pennsylvania's GOP primary.
"I have traveled the state and surveyed the sentiments of the Republican Party in Pennsylvania and public opinion polls, observed other public opinion polls and have found that the prospects for winning a Republican primary are bleak," he said. "I am not prepared to have my 29-year record in the United States Senate decided by the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate -- not prepared to have that record decided by that jury, the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate."
Watch Specter discuss his decision:
Democrats now hold 58 Senate seats, and are likely to have 59 if and when Minnesota Democrat Al Franken is seated, most likely in June. (Former Sen. Norm Coleman is now appealing his apparent loss to Franken to the Minnesota Supreme Court.) Specter's vote would give the party the 60 votes it needs to avoid a Republican filibuster and pass legislation without the support of the minority party.
"What this means, if we are not successful in Minnesota, as you know, is that the Democrats, at least on paper, will have 60 votes," said Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell. "I think the danger of that for the country is that there won't automatically be an ability to restrain the excess that is typically associated with big majorities and single-party rule."

(AP /APTN)
"I will not be changing my own personal independence or my own approach to individual issues," he said. "I will not be an automatic 60th vote." He cited his continuing opposition to the union- and Democrat-backed Employee Free Choice (or Card Check) bill.
The Pennsylvania senator suggested the fallout from his support for the economic stimulus package ultimately led to the decision to switch parties. He was one of just three Republican members of Congress to back the bill.
"It has become clear to me that the stimulus vote caused a schism which makes our differences irreconcilable," he wrote in his statement. Specter said he knew his support for the bill would not be popular in the party but that it was "indispensable to vote aye in order to avoid the possibility of a 1929-type depression."
Specter has not said when he will begin caucusing with the Democrats, though the Associated Press notes that he took a seat on the Democratic side of the dais at a Senate subcommittee hearing today.
Specter had been facing a tough GOP primary fight in Democratic-leaning Pennsylvania. A March poll found that he was trailing Republican Congressman Pat Toomey 41 percent to 27 percent among primary voters in the state. The fact that the state's GOP primary is closed meant that the relatively moderate Specter could not depend on the support of independents or moderates to get him past Toomey.
“Senator Specter’s decision today represents the height of political self-preservation," U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), Chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said in a statement. "While this presents a short-term disappointment, voters next year will have a clear choice to cast their ballots for a potentially unbridled Democrat super-majority versus the system of checks-and-balances that Americans deserve.”

(White House )
The White House released the above photograph of the call. Specter said at his news conference that Mr. Obama will campaign for him in the Senate primary, and Gibbs said the president is "happy" to raise money for the senator.
“I welcome Senator Specter and his moderate voice to our diverse caucus," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said in a statement. Reid will treat Specter as if he were a lifelong Democrat, allowing the senator to keep his seniority in the chamber.
"This is a painful decision," Specter said at his press conference. "I know that I'm disappointing many of my friends and colleagues but, frankly, I have been disappointed by some of the responses. So the disappointment runs in both directions."
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."
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See all 596 CommentsYup, typical rightie profile.
The uninformed following the unenlightened.
That's how the GOP has managed to get their base to continuously vote against their own best interests this past 30 years.
Never heard of Spector until the last few days, but if he is joining the ranks of Pelosi, Reid and killer Teddy he should have retired.
How is that on-topic?
I'm sure Boehner's defending rightwing extremists contributed to Arlen's career move.
Do you think Obama is going to have a town hall meeting in Detroit anytime soon? For that matter anywhere up north anytime soon?
Posted by specialty8 at 4:30 AM : Apr 29, 2009
And Sarah can see Russia from her porch...
Funny stuff. I wish i'd logged all the posts that INSISTED there was no way for BHO to win the election.
The republican party is being drowned by it's extremists.
Sen. Snow (maine) made clear the neocons have no qualms about fielding opponents in their own primaries if the incumbent is not far enough right.. Now the neocons will increase their pressure on these two senators from maine to move more right or face the wrath of their 'leaders'... maybe it will be just enough pressure to make these two ladies rethink their own party affilliation... LOL... wouldn't that be a hoot if they both jumped to the democratic side...
The neocons have destroyed the republican party like they destroyed this country... I only hope peoples memories are long enough to keep the neocons out of power for the next hundred years... that would be a very fitting epitaph to their ilk... with idiots like boner, mcdoogle, gingrich and their talking heads on radio and tv...
God bless America...
Posted by hamiltongrad at 9:59 PM : Apr 28, 2009
You might disagree with his stated logic. But to say it's a "disgrace" sounds suspicious. After all is said and done, a politician can't do anything for his constituents if he can't get elected/reelected. THAT is a politician's Job One.
Think it through. It's our Democracy & how it works.
If these fruit cake hacks are the 'real' Republicans then the party is doomed. The two have done a trillion dollars plus damage to the US each.
You mean like the previous administration?
Republicans---Gotta love um, no memory, no plan, no leadership, No new ideas, but they do know one thing. NO!
babooph
Actually, their social policies are quite different.
But unfortunately, since Obama, there is no difference between their Constitutional abuse. In fact, Obama is claiming even more unconstitutional power than Bush.
ST
"Two Parties.
One fate."
SearingTruth
A Future of the Brave
"I am not prepared to have my 29-year record in the United States Senate decided by the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate -- not prepared to have that record decided by that jury, the Pennsylvania Republican primary electorate."
Senator....your record is the history of what you've done, not where you can run to in order to keep your job.
Posted by enjoylife63 at 2:22 AM : Apr 29, 2009"
It is people and posts like yours that are turning more and more people away from the Republican party. Keep it up. You are not helping your cause, especially after your appeasement of the disaster of the last 8 years.
When should you have whined?
Try in 2004.
Posted by richardj3901 at 8:17 PM : Apr 28, 2009
I see you didn't take many French classes ...
enjoylife63
Actually, the honorable Senator Arlen Specter is just what America, and the Democrats, need.
As a non-partisan voter I disagree with many of his positions, but am glad and respect that he has principled ones.
ST
"I choose reality over comfort."
SearingTruth
A Future of the Brave
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