Frank’s sneering insults won’t be missed
http://www.jeffjacoby.com/10808/frank-sneering-insults-wont-be-missed
BARNEY FRANK may be the only member of Congress who has ever made headlines for not acting like a jerk.
When the longtime Massachusetts representative found himself last year facing — for the first time in decades — a surprisingly strong Republican challenge, journalists noticed something strange: He wasn’t being as nasty as usual. He wasn’t responding to questions with his trademark put-downs. He wasn’t condescending to critics with quite as much sneering contempt.
“Barney Frank reinvents himself as a nice guy,” wrote Jonathan Strong in a story for The Daily Caller. The Boston Herald’s Margery Eagan, “bracing to get hammered” when she asked Frank some questions, was amazed when, instead of insulting or berating her, he answered her questions “almost diplomatically.”
But Frank’s unwonted restraint vanished on election night. In what may have been the most graceless victory speech in US congressional history, he savaged the Herald, accused Republicans of engaging in “vituperation [and] anonymous smears,” and proclaimed his re-election “a victory for a concept of government which eschews anger and vitriol.”
Which was quite a proclamation, coming from someone who is as renowned for his invective and browbeating as for his liberalism and smarts. When Frank eventually goes to his eternal reward – and I wish him many more years of activity and good health – it’s safe to assume that the words “He eschewed anger and vitriol” will not be engraved on his monument.
Frank said last week that he plans to retire when his current term ends at the end of next year. That made him the 24th House incumbent to announce that he won’t seek re-election. But only in Frank’s case did the media coverage include printing roundups of his “oftentimes acerbic comments,” or collecting tweets from “the many journalists who have felt his wrath,” or posting a greatest-hits reel of Frank on the House floor, belittling and excoriating his Republican colleagues.
Politics and passion have always gone together, and all other things being equal, a quick-witted congressman with strong views and the ability to defend them is preferable to a colorless drudge. No one has ever doubted Frank’s intelligence or wit, and it isn’t only liberals who could appreciate his gift for wry retorts. (“My colleagues on the other side have decided to adopt a Marxist idea,” he said during one House debate. “The Marx in question, of course, is Chico.”)
But it’s one thing to be a quotable curmudgeon. It’s something quite different to be a bully.