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Massa Backs Off Healthcare Conspiracy

The latest moves on healthcare reform from Kucinich, Massa and Stupak.

Lindsay Beyerstein

March 10, 2010

Former Representative Eric Massa punked conservative talk show host Glenn Beck yesterday by recanting his earlier statement that House Democrats forced him out of office because he refused to vote for healthcare reform. Massa resigned on Monday amid allegations that he sexually harassed one or more male staffers.

Adele Stan has a nice recap of the implosion of Massa’s political career at AlterNet. Massa initially said he was stepping down because he had cancer. Then the news broke that the House Ethics Committee was probing the accusations of harassment.

Beck gave Massa the entire show. Clearly, Beck was hoping the former Congressman would lay bare nefarious wheeling and dealing by House Democrats to pass healthcare reform. Steve Benen of The Washington Monthly argues that the Massa train wreck shows the weakness in the whole Beck shtick. Beck didn’t bother to find out whether there was a conspiracy. He just assumed Massa was going to tell him what he wanted to hear.

Massa and the Healthcare Reform Conspiracy

As Tim Fernholtz points out in TAPPED, the notion that Massa was forced out over his stance on healthcare reform was never very promising, even by conspiracy theory standards: Why would Massa take this moment to start listening to the Democratic leadership, having blithely ignored them throughout his brief political career?

More to the point, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel didn’t force Eric Massa to act like a drunken sailor in front of his staff. Clearly, the Dems are relieved to see Massa go. In addition to a near total lack of interpersonal boundaries, he was an unshakable "no" on healthcare reform. The guy is clearly a loose cannon, in the saltiest and most nautical sense. If House Dems had seized the opportunity to get rid of him, that would have been more sound management than conspiracy.

‘I Failed.’

But under the bright lights, Massa dropped the conspiracy allegations and blamed himself for ethical lapses, according Eric Kleefeld of TPMDC. "I wasn’t forced out. I forced myself out. I failed," said Massa.

In fact, Massa seemed eager to pre-emptively confess to even more inappropriate behavior: "Now, they’re saying I groped a male staffer. Yes, I did. Not only did I grope him, I tickled him until he couldn’t breathe and four guys jumped on top of me," Massa told Beck, "It was my 50th birthday. It was kill the old guy."

Massa even brought visual aids to assist in his own indictment. He showed Beck a scrapbook of a "crossing the line" ceremony from his Navy days. "It looks like an orgy in Caligula," Massa chirped. His point being that he never got out of the creepy, gropey habits he picked up in the Navy.

He even whipped out an x-ray of his own gut to prove that he really does–or at any rate, really might–have cancer.

By the end of the show, Beck apologized to America for wasting the country’s time.

Kucinich Still Opposed to Reform

Meanwhile, Representative Dennis Kucinich remains steadfast in his opposition to healthcare reform, calling it a giveaway to the insurance companies. On the Ed Schultz Show, insurance company whistleblower Wendell Potter urged Kucinich to quit posturing and take the deal, according to Ruth Conniff of The Progressive. Potter agrees that the deal is a massive giveaway to insurers, but he thinks Kucinich is unrealistic to hold out for a better deal.

Stupak Smoke Signals

Fervent antichoicer Rep. Bart Stupak has been threatening for months to derail healthcare reform over the abortion issue. This week, Stupak was back in the news with some cryptic remarks. He told a town meeting that there was "no such thing as a compromise" on the abortion issue, but he also said that he was more optimistic than he was a week ago that the House leadership could offer him some kind of acceptable accommodation. Stupack insisted that any such deal would have to be written before the bill goes to the Senate for a vote.

Lindsay BeyersteinLindsay Beyerstein writes about health care for the Media Wire project at the Media Consortium. She is a freelance investigative journalist and photographer based in Brooklyn, NY. Her reporting has appeared in Salon, Slate, In These Times, AlterNet, RH Reality Check, the New York Press, and Raw Story. Her photojournalism has been published in TIME Magazine. Lindsay covered the 2008 election for Firedoglake’s Campaign Silo. She received a 2009 Project Censored Real News Award for her reporting on homeland security and civil liberties. In 2007 she delivered the Norman E. Richardson lecture at the University of Gettysburg on journalism and philosophy. She covered the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 with the help of a grant from the Rappaport Foundation.


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