Baucus has carefully cultivated an image as a steward of the nation's finances. Whether it is an accurate impression or not -- liberals will profoundly disagree, calling Baucus indiscreet in his relationship with corporate interests he regulates -- is a matter best left for political debate. But it is quite clear that Baucus enjoys leverage from his reputation as someone who would not abuse the power granted to him. That is one reason why the White House and the Senate Majority Leader put so much faith in Baucus and allowed him, almost singlehandedly, to craft the health care legislation that keeps the Senate in session today. Baucus's spokesperson denied that his relationship precipitated his divorce in June of this year, though there is both innuendo and an on-the-record acknowledgment that, well, it just might have.
The White House and Baucus's colleagues are no doubt furious with the senator, and they are also probably sympathetic to someone who has worked so hard and by most accounts been a credible representative of his state's values and interests. So far as health care goes, it's a distraction. And Democrats don't need distractions. They need Baucus to be a spokesperson for his bill. Now, they're going to have to figure out a way around his self-created image crisis.
It's always hard to predict where these scandal waves will end up. It certainly does not help the Democrats make a case that Republicans have ethical issues; it may help build onto a case that Republicans are making about Democrats (although John Ensign and David Vitter tear down that case in the Senate). It may make Mr. Baucus vulnerable to a Democratic challenger the next time he runs for office in 2014. And it will almost certainly precipitate an internal investigation by the Senate.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/12/sen-max-baucuss-private-option/31309/
