Via The Corner:
In Monday night’s senatorial debate in Massachusetts, David Gergen, the moderator, looked straight at Scott Brown, the Republican nominee, and asked him this question:
GERGEN: You said you’re for health-care reform, just not this bill. We know from the Clinton experience that if this bill fails, it could well be another 15 years before we see health-care reform efforts in Washington. Are you willing under those circumstances to say, I’m going to be the person, I’m going to sit in Teddy Kennedy’s seat and I’m going to be the person who’s going to block it for another 15 years?
Brown, in what I call his ‘Nashua moment,’ responded with what’s become the remark that’s defining this race:
BROWN: Well, with all due respect, it’s not the Kennedy’s seat, and it’s not the Democrats’ seat, it’s the people’s seat. And they have the chance to send somebody down there who is an independent voter, and an independent thinker, and going to look out for the best interests of the people of Massachusetts. And the way that this bill is configured, I’d like to send it back to the drawing board because I believe people should have insurance — [just not] this particular bill because it’s not good for the entire country.
I heard Brown in an interview last week with Sean Hannity. I am impressed with this guy. He seems to be self confident and is clearly his own man, refusing to be stereotyped as having this or that kind of political leanings. California could use a couple folks like this to run against the two batty democrats currently occupying the California people’s Senate seats.
Typical elitist nonsense. Gergen had a pretty good start decades ago but he partooked of Teh Kool-Aid. I like what I hear of this guy Brown. Mebbe not a true conservative but close enough to smell like one.
Finally, can we let go of the Ted Kennedy nightmare.
He was an insult to his brothers legacy,
Teddy was an insult to all good Democrats’ legacy. Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Adams, JFK and Will Rogers are rolling over in their graves today because of the current party attitude.
What ever happened to principled Democrats?