Opponents of the anti-contraception Blunt Amendment needed a simple majority on the Senate floor this morning. They got it, but just barely.
The proposal failed on a 51-48 vote. (The procedural mechanics were a little awkward: “yes” votes were against the amendment — “yes” they wanted to table it.)
Most members voted along party lines, but not all. One Republican, Maine’s Olympia Snowe, broke ranks to oppose the measure. Meanwhile, three Democrats — West Virginia’s Joe Manchin, Nebraska’s Ben Nelson, and Pennsylvania’s Bob Casey — sided with the right.
Casey was the only real surprise here, though it’s worth noting that he’s an opponent of abortion rights who’s running for re-election this year. Snowe and Nelson, by the way, are both retiring at the end of this term, and were free to vote however they pleased.
And what of the other so-called Republican moderates? Massachusetts’ Scott Brown championed the far-right measure and voted with his party; Maine’s Susan Collins backed the amendment despite reservations; and Illinois’ Mark Kirk is still recovering from his recent stroke and was the only member to not vote today.
It led Greg Sargent to raise a good point:
Olympia Snowe’s announced retirement has prompted a great deal of hand-wringing about how supposed “centrist” politicians no longer have any meaningful role to play in Washington. The demands for ideological purity on both sides, we’re told, have grown so strident that the possibility of bipartisan compromise has vanished.









