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Walter Jones Was the Real Maverick

February 12, 2019 โ€” He was a Republican and a staunch conservative, but he often worked with Democrats, and won their affection. He supported the Iraq War in 2003, but was troubled by the human cost. He was one of President Donald Trumpโ€™s most outspoken critics within the GOP, and his death after a long illness leaves an unfillable hole in Congress.

That sounds a lot like a certain senator from Arizona who died recently, but itโ€™s not John McCainโ€”itโ€™s Representative Walter Jones of North Carolina. Jones died Sunday, on his 76th birthday. (Jonesโ€™s illness had kept him from Congress since September, though he was easily reelected in November.) Although the late Arizona senator became identified with bucking his party, Jones, far more than McCain, epitomized the โ€œmaverickโ€ sobriquet. Itโ€™s folly to value heterodoxy for its own sake, but Jonesโ€™s ability to make friends and allies across the aisle and to buck his own leaders was a clear, rare demonstration of political courage. Jones was the kind of independent-minded, bipartisan-curious politician whom Americans often say they want but seldom actually elect.

Most Americans knew of Jonesโ€”if they knew of him at allโ€”as a driving force behind the bizarre 2003 episode in which Republicans directed the U.S. House cafeteria to change the name of French fries to โ€œfreedom friesโ€ as revenge for French opposition to the war in Iraq. (The move was inspired by a restaurant in Jonesโ€™s heavily military district in eastern North Carolina.) But โ€œfreedom friesโ€ didnโ€™t make for a good epitome of Jonesโ€™s political career. They made him appear to be a cartoonish lockstep Republican, when in fact Jones was consistently one of the members of Congress most likely to vote against his party. And they made Jones seem like a super-advocate for the Iraq War, yet he eventually became one of its loudest critics.

Jonesโ€™s background hardly telegraphed the unpredictable politics he eventually adopted. He served in the North Carolina General Assembly for 10 years as a Democrat, but switched to the Republican Party when he ran for Congress in 1994. Jones was one of many southern Democrats to make that switch, as the party became more reliably liberal and they stayed (or became more) conservativeโ€”though that switch had an often dark history, especially in North Carolina. Jonesโ€™s father, also Walter, was a longtime Democratic congressman, but when Jones Jr. ran to replace him after his death in 1992, he lost the primary. Two years later, he ran as a Republican in another district (including large parts of his fatherโ€™s old constituency) and won. His early years in Congress didnโ€™t offer much indication of what was to come either.

Read the full story at The Atlantic

John McCain urges delay in new catfish inspection rules

September 1, 2017 โ€” Sen. John McCain is mounting a last-minute plea to the U.S. Department of Agriculture to delay implementation of new catfish inspection rules slated to fully kick in Friday, saying all catfish inspections should be returned to the jurisdiction of the Food and Drug Administration.

Mr. McCain said the new inspection regime under the USDAโ€™s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is a thinly-disguised trade barrier against Asian catfish imports at the hands of domestic farmers in southern states.

โ€œThis wasteful program is a classic example of shortsighted, anti-free market protectionism at its worst,โ€ Mr. McCain wrote in a letter to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue this week.

โ€œI request that you delay implementation of the USDA Catfish Inspection Program until Congress has an opportunity to reverse this duplicative, wasteful program,โ€ he wrote.

Most fish is inspected by the FDA, but Congress โ€” led by southern Republicans looking to protect their stateโ€™s industry โ€” included language in the 2008 Farm bill that set the stage to transfer catfish inspections to a more intrusive process under FSIS.

Read the full story at the Washington Times

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