A Brief, Concerning Conversation With Dianne Feinstein… “I’ve been here. I’ve been voting.” Updated with the audio

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She has to go


“Oh, you’re an eager one,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein said as the elevator door opened and she saw me on Tuesday afternoon.

The senior California senator had just voted, after returning to the Senate last week after an extended absence following a case of shingles. The 89-year-old Feinstein, whose physical and mental capacity has deteriorated in recent years, and whose ability to continue serving in the Senate has come under question, is working an admittedly “lighter schedule” under doctors’ advice. She has, though, voted both days this week. On Tuesday afternoon, a male staffer escorted her on his arm to vote against a Republican bill to block a District of Columbia policing law. She was on and off the floor in an instant—but on her own two feet.

It was about a minute later that I encountered Feinstein coming off an elevator, sitting in a wheelchair and flanked by staff. It’s been hard to find the senator since her return; she’s kept her movements mostly to the least-populated passageways and skipped luncheons and non-urgent committee hearings.

I asked her how she was feeling.

“Oh, I’m feeling fine. I have a problem with the leg.” A fellow reporter staking out the elevator asked what was wrong with the leg.

“Well, nothing that’s anyone concern but mine,” she said.

When the fellow reporter asked her what the response from her colleagues had been like since her return, though, the conversation took an odd turn.

“No, I haven’t been gone,” she said.

OK.

“You should follow the—I haven’t been gone. I’ve been working.”

When asked whether she meant that she’d been working from home, she turned feisty.


“No, I’ve been here. I’ve been voting,” she said. “Please. You either know or don’t know.”

After deflecting one final question about those, like Rep. Ro Khanna, who’ve called on her to resign, she was wheeled away.

It is true that Feinstein has been in Washington and voting for the past week, while coming to committee hearings on a need-to-be-there basis. Last Thursday, for example, she attended a Judiciary Committee hearing to approve several partisan nominees who had been held back by her absence. That—as well as close nomination votes on the full Senate floor—is all that Democrats need from her at the moment.

But it is not true that she had been “here,” in a physical sense, for the two-and-a-half-month stretch between February and last week. It was odd for that to skip her mind. The senator’s absence, and her insistence on not resigning, has been one of the biggest political stories of the year, given her critical role not just on the Judiciary Committee but as a pivotal Democratic vote in the full body. (Feinstein’s office declined to comment.)

You either know or don’t know.

On Monday, I had asked another member of the committee, Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, whether there really was any optimism that Feinstein could return to being a fully functioning, contributing member of the committee like her old self.

“There’s one job that no one else can do for us, which is to vote,” Blumenthal said. “And she’s been doing that job in the last few days, and so far as I can tell, she’s been doing well.”

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, whom I asked separately, had a terser response: “I’m gonna leave that to the medics.” :frozen:
 
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The only people to blame are California voters.

They knew during the Obama Administration her time was up, but continued voting for her.

She started out as a progressive liberal with her political career back in the 70s and rose up from there. Her major claim to fame was being in politics during the Harvey Milk days when he was assassinated.

But when Reagan came in she slowly moved over to being a “Blue Dog Democrat” and fully drank the Kool-Aid later in the Clinton Administration.

Time for her to go.
 
The only people to blame are California voters.

They knew during the Obama Administration her time was up, but continued voting for her.

She started out as a progressive liberal with her political career back in the 70s and rose up from there. Her major claim to fame was being in politics during the Harvey Milk days when he was assassinated.

But when Reagan came in she slowly moved over to being a “Blue Dog Democrat” and fully drank the Kool-Aid later in the Clinton Administration.

Time for her to go.
It's been time for her to go. She shouldn't have been to reelected and the party should have also gotten on her about stepping away. I know that it's a position of power but I don't get staying at it until you're on your deathbed particularly when you're not trying to change things and help the ordinary person.
 
The only people to blame are California voters.

They knew during the Obama Administration her time was up, but continued voting for her.

She started out as a progressive liberal with her political career back in the 70s and rose up from there. Her major claim to fame was being in politics during the Harvey Milk days when he was assassinated.

But when Reagan came in she slowly moved over to being a “Blue Dog Democrat” and fully drank the Kool-Aid later in the Clinton Administration.

Time for her to go.

It's the party, too. Not just the voters. Did anyone primary her last election? I thought the DNC was covering for her.
 
It's the party, too. Not just the voters. Did anyone primary her last election? I thought the DNC was covering for her.
Feinstein is an institution in California, she is so entrenched and has such name recognition, she’d probably win again :smh:

She was challenged in 2018 by Kevin de León, so… there’s that. Some party people were backing him, he won the endorsement of the party, but beating Feinstein wasn’t going to happen.
Fuck that Mexican too
 
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The issue is that if she resigns, the Republicans have already stated they will block any replacement for judicial assignments. This means that Biden would not be able to appoint any new judges through 2024. Folks really want more judges like the bitch in Florida who is overseeing Trump's classified documents case?:smh:

She should have retired a LONG time ago, but she has that Ruth Ginsberg disease. All these so called good liberal white elite women are closeted racist bitches. Ginsberg quietly hated the thought of Obama replacing her, and fucked Roe v Wade. Feinstein knew that Newsom was going to replace her with Barbara Lee and said nope.
 
The issue is that if she resigns, the Republicans have already stated they will block any replacement for judicial assignments. This means that Biden would not be able to appoint any new judges through 2024. Folks really want more judges like the bitch in Florida who is overseeing Trump's classified documents case?:smh:

She should have retired a LONG time ago, but she has that Ruth Ginsberg disease. All these so called good liberal white elite women are closeted racist bitches. Ginsberg quietly hated the thought of Obama replacing her, and fucked Roe v Wade. Feinstein knew that Newsom was going to replace her with Barbara Lee and said nope.
Gavin Newsome saying that he'd replace her with a black female has a lot to do with it as well. If he did that it would pretty much have to be Barbara Lee which would give her a leg up going on next year's ballot as an incumbent in what should be a highly contested race with Lee, Katie Porter and Adam Schiff all running for the seat.
Coincidentally Nancy Pelosi wants Schiff to get the seat which may explain why Pelosi's daughter is acting as a caretaker for Feinstein.
 
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