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Cantor: Dems' Presser Proves Lack Of Transparency

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Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA)

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House Minority Whip Eric Cantor claimed on Fox this afternoon that the House Democrats' press conference, which was broadcast on several cable news channels, proves a lack of transparency.

Cantor (and others) are saying that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's staff blocked people from attending to presser, where Democrats unveiled the House version of the health care reform bill.

Pelosi unveiled her bill "on public grounds, on the West Lawn of the Capitol, and frankly denied access to the public," Cantor said. "You know, I think that says a lot about what's going on behind closed doors and the process through which the Democrats are going about crafting this legislation. The people in this country need to know exactly what's at stake."

Video after the jump.

Cantor also posted a short video on YouTube, which shows a security guard telling an unidentified person that they're not authorized to attend.

But the event was broadcast live on several channels and CSPAN's web site. Although a small group of tea partiers were held by Capitol Police about 50 yards away from the event, they were close enough for Pelosi to hear them when they heckled her.

Republicans have been attacking Democrats for holding closed-door negotiations on the wording of the bills.

Barring a successful filibuster, of course, the bills will be debated on the House and Senate floors.

Late update: Cantor's spokesman, Brad Dayspring, forwards along another video of someone being turned away from the presser. He couldn't identify the videographer, but said the first video came from a Republican staffer.

Dayspring claimed the press conference was "representative of the closed-door manner in which Democrats have conducted this entire health care discussion."

When TPM asked him if the presser, broadcast live on TV, was really "closed-door," he responded, "Shouldn't the public be permitted to attend an event on land that, after all, belongs to them?"

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7 comments

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October 29, 2009 3:23 PM   

FFS, do the Republicans have no shame? They act like Bush never kept people out of meetings or speeches because they disagreed with him.

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October 29, 2009 3:39 PM    in reply to Matt Jones

"Free Speech Zones" certainly have precedent.

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October 29, 2009 3:30 PM   

Gosh, Eric, not even possible that they closed it because you and your pals were trying to whip the gun-waving inbreeds on your mailing and tweet lists into another frenzy of crazy over this bill, is it? No connection at all.

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October 29, 2009 3:32 PM    in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve

Well, if they were trying, they failed on the "mob of frenzied inbreds" front; all of what, 10 people showed up without Faux News pushing the thing?

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October 29, 2009 6:54 PM    in reply to Matt Jones

How many of those were paid?

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October 29, 2009 3:31 PM   

Speaking of transparent, it's pretty easy to see through canters motivation. Complain, criticise & cry about everything & hope like hell people forget how truly terrible & rotten the right-wing is.

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slb

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October 29, 2009 4:20 PM   

Given past behavior by people trying to agitate against health care reform, given the animosity they have been directing towards Nancy Pelosi, and given that these same people have insisted on stripping the DC area of its gun control laws, I'd be extremely leery about allowing someone without press credentials to attend a press conference she was giving without pretty thorough screening.

Under George Bush, people with unfriendly T-shirt slogans were sometimes barred from attending events in the Capitol building, even when the T-shirts were covered up. And the Capitol building is public property, too, Mr. Cantor.

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