CBS/AP/ February 17, 2010, 7:07 AM

Bayh Latest in Congress' Moderate Exodus

A federal agent takes part in a raid Tuesday, June 12, 2012, at a ranch near Lexington, Okla. Federal agents raided a sprawling ranch in Oklahoma and a prominent quarter horse track in New Mexico on Tuesday, alleging the brother of a high-ranking official in a Mexican drug cartel used a horse-breeding operation to launder money. (AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Garett Fisbeck) TABLOIDS OUT

A federal agent takes part in a raid Tuesday, June 12, 2012, at a ranch near Lexington, Okla. Federal agents raided a sprawling ranch in Oklahoma and a prominent quarter horse track in New Mexico on Tuesday, alleging the brother of a high-ranking official in a Mexican drug cartel used a horse-breeding operation to launder money. (AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Garett Fisbeck) TABLOIDS OUT / Garett Fisbeck

Updated at 7:00 a.m. Eastern.

The moderate middle is disappearing from Congress.

Evan Bayh is just the latest senator to forgo a re-election bid, joining a growing line of pragmatic, find-a-way politicians who are abandoning Washington. Still here: ever-more-polarized colleagues locked in gridlock - exactly what voters say they don't like about politics in the nation's capital.

"Washington right now is broken," Vice President Joe Biden told "Early Show" co-anchor Harry Smith. "I don't ever recall a time in my career where, to get anything done, you needed a supermajority - 60 out of 100 senators."

"I've never seen it this dysfunctional," added Biden.

Politics runs in cycles, and the Senate has seen flights of self-styled centrists before. In 1996, for example, 10 senators who could boast strong bipartisan credentials chose to retire rather than re-up. Many of them complained how lonely a place the middle ground of American politics had become. But to some, the center has become even lonelier.

More than their feelings are at stake. The moderates in the middle are the ones who tend to make deals and sometimes resolve standoffs blocking decisions that affect programs - not to mention taxes - that touch virtually every American.

Former Sen. William Cohen says what's happening now is a continuation of the "hollowing out of the middle." An article he wrote when he left his Senate seat in 1996, lamenting partisan gridlock, could just as easily be reprinted now, subbing his name for that of Bayh, the Indiana Democrat who announced on Monday he won't run again.

"There is this sort of purging in both parties," Cohen said in an interview. "They insist on moving to the left or moving to the right, and I think you're seeing over the years the moderates have disappeared and continue to disappear."

GOP Sees Opportunity in Bayh's Exit

The few left in the middle can gain outsized power to decide the fate of closely fought issues. But that comes at a price more and more of them say is too high: crushing pressure to conform, shrill media barbs and the increased fight for cash to shape one's own campaign narrative.

"I simply reached a conclusion that I could get more done to help my state and the American people by doing something in the private sector," said Bayh, the two-term senator and former governor, on ABC's Good Morning America on Tuesday. "Real accomplishments in a real way."

That's an extraordinary statement on the anniversary of the $787 billion stimulus package that was supposed to energize the economy. Rather than heed President Obama's appeal for pragmatism, Congress is losing its value as a problem-solver and becoming more unworkable, according to Bayh.

To see how stalled the Senate has become, CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes reports, you need only look at the numbers; Senate Democrats voted along straight party lines an average of 91 percent of the time in 2009 -- a record high. Republicans threatened filibusters to block legislation 100 times, far outstripping their previous high of 62.

Polls say voters hate that about national politics. Lawmakers profess to dislike the polarization, too, but they still engage in it, on the House or Senate floor, in private meetings, or both. And on the campaign trail, the truth is there's cash to be made by taking sides and, in effect, becoming a dependable brand.

"If you're on either fringe of the party, you have an easier time raising money," said one who would know, Sen. Arlen Specter, who left the GOP for the Democrats when he found he could not win a Pennsylvania Republican primary. "I have to work a lot harder than somebody who has an ideological base."

"I understand the political motivation," Biden told "The Early Show" in the exclusive interview, adding that the Democrat's loss of their crucial 60th Senate seat in a Massachusetts special election was a message to the party, which still holds a considerable majority in Congress: "Hey, guys, get your act together. Get something going."



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Calling from a fundraising swing through California, Nevada, Arizona and Tennessee, Specter said sticking around awhile - three decades in his case - can produce a brand of independence he is hoping fits the public's populist streak.

"I think the independents are going to be in a position to pick the winners and losers," he said.

And moderates? An endangered species?

Moderates, said Darrell West, vice president and director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution, are "going the way of the dinosaur."

"Soon we're going be able to go to museums to the see the skeletons of the centrists and learn about what they were," West said.

It could be argued that fresh blood may be a good thing for an institution many view as broken.

But some fresh faces are turning down the chance to run, even after being asked by the president.

In Illinois, a would-be strong candidate, Lisa Madigan, spurned Obama's pressure to run. That could reflect Obama's lack of pull - one year into office - but it also says something about the desirability of serving on Capitol Hill given the public's disdain for Congress.

The lament of partisan gridlock is a well-worn element of lawmakers' farewell speeches. Former Republican Senate leader Bill Frist of Tennessee, a physician, lectured his colleagues about it on the way out the door in 2006. Former Republican Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi appeared with former Democratic President Bill Clinton and former GOP House Speaker Newt Gingrich earlier this year to urge the parties to get along.

But tellingly, no Republicans were present in the Senate when Democrat Paul Kirk, turning over the seat held by the late Sen. Edward Kennedy to Republican Scott Brown earlier this month, spoke about the lack of comity in the chamber.

Not so long ago, Senate seats were among the most sought-after positions in the land. They meant power and prestige, some posturing but also some significant problem-solving.

Now, many believe the $174,000 salary just isn't worth it.

Besides the personal costs - being a lawmaker means being screamed at during summer town hall meetings and vilified around the clock in multimedia fashion - the more polarized Congress becomes, the less its members can accomplish.

There's "too much narrow ideology and not enough practical problem-solving" on Capitol Hill, Bayh said as he announced his retirement. "I do not love Congress."

Veteran Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., said Bayh could do more to change that by staying.

"I don't understand how you make things better from the outside. I share the frustration, but I would have hoped he would have stayed around."

Plenty of lawmakers are still hoping to do that. But a long and bipartisan list of Senate leaders who have chosen to fight for re-election - from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada to California Democrat Barbara Boxer and Sen. John McCain, the GOP's nominee for president last year - are feeling the anti-incumbent squeeze.

Others are saying the congressional life is simply not worth it, and the list of casualties is bipartisan.

Bayh and veteran Democratic Sens. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., are choosing to retire. So is Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H. Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., and other GOP House members from Michigan, Indiana, Arkansas and Arizona have announced retirements.

Vice President Joe Biden's son, Beau, chose not to run for a legacy seat in Delaware. No Kennedys, let alone political heavyweights of any sort, ran for the Ted Kennedy's seat in Massachusetts.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
22 Comments Add a Comment
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afrazier1 says:
The whole congress is corrupt. Too many people on K street twisting congressmens collective arms behind there back. Look at it this way. When you retire from congress what happens? You go to K street and get a job as a lobbyist. So you're one guy in congress former congressmen offer you every perk they possibly can to get you to see it their way. How long before you actually become corrupt? Think about this and you'll understand why our government is now NOT of the people, by the people. It's all about corporate interests. Our forefathers are turning in their collective graves.
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rightbehind says:
The republicrats report to corporate masters. Bayh's wife works for one of the health care insurance companies.
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soap-suds says:
I totally agree with Senator Bayh!

There are not two plus parties in Congress: there are 435 parties in the House and 100 parties in the Senate. Then there are about 300 million parties in the country. In other words it is "Every person for themselves." That is why nothing happens for the general good of the country.

The senate is dysfunctional! It is not just Democrats versus Republicans! The Democrats are already the minority since they are too philosophically fractured, disorganized, greedy, and ignorant to take advantage of their voter mandate and work together! The Republicans have their own problems as well.

Get rid of filibusters, get rid of holds, etc., and get the Senate back to doing the People's work!!!!

I would recommend replacing all of the obstructionist methodology with a capability that only one senator, one time, could delay debate and votes on any issue by a couple of days to allow more evaluation and prevent a rush to bad judgment.
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Empire-George- says:
by chonder2 February 17, 2010 10:13 AM EST

It makes you wonder.How can Senator Bayh truly do the will of the people when his wife is a board member for Wellpoint?
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chonder, did it ever occur to you, that spouses of politicians actually have their own careers and jobs ? does everything have to be some conspiracy.....ooooh, his wife is on the board of a company....that company might have some remote connection with something possibly relating to healthcare in some fashion.....he must be corrupt, right ?

I found Bayh to be one of the few democrat voices of sanity, while the Obama train was crashing.....now you target him, because he's fed up with how things are going.
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rightbehind says:
No real democrats will vote for republicrats. These guys have exposed themselves. They are done.
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golfered2 says:
And you all thought Bush was bad!!! PLEASE BING HIM BACK!!!!
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A_Moderate replies:
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You gotta be kidding? How do you think we ended up here in the mess today? Do you honestly thing we got here in the short time Obama has been in office. Bush/Cheney were pawns of big business! But we keep the same people in office year after year. I say vote everyone out next time and get rid of the lobbiyist in Washington!
A_Moderate replies:
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And might I also say most so called 'Tea Party Conservatives' are mum about the fact that George W. Bush erased our budget surplus and put us deep in the red by drunken spending on a pointless war in Iraq and by, yes, granting massive tax rollbacks for the loaded country clubbers who fund the GOP. Another bothersome detail: The bailouts were also initiated by Bush. Obama simply continued that direction (which I disagree with).
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msimamaji says:
CBS news failed to mention one important fact, something that Bill Maher pointed out on CNN. Evan Bayh's wife is on the board of directors for Wellpoint. That explains the reason Evan Bayh helped contribute to the "gridlock" that he deplores. Centrist Democrats and the GOP have one thing in common, they're for sale to the highest bidder. Rather than voting out all incumbents, we need to vote out Congressmen who are puppets of large corporations.
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Jawathewhale says:
Problem is, that you don't have a multi party system. If it was practically possible for, say the Tea Party or a socialdemocratic party - any other party than Dems og GOP, to actually get seats, the politicians would have to up their game significantly. Multiple parties means multiple opportunities and greater competition amongst parties.
Your current two-party system is not good enough. Constitution needs to be re-written to make more parties possible.
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sandy19731 replies:
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You don't know much about the constitution, do you?
Jawathewhale replies:
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Not really, but I do now that your two party system needs an overhaul. It's such a pity watching a major democracy at the brink of failure. Very few people benefits from it.
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lambor59 says:
Go tea parties,

Get rid of this crooked prez who replaced the another crook at the white house, we are being abused by one crook after another, they all lied to the American people, this new crook knows how to speak too, unlike the dumbo Bush.
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pollroller1 says:
Yep these politicians get tired of trying to help us dumb folks. Maybe he can get a job as a lobbyist.
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