Olympia Snowe may not be out of a Frank Capra movie but, as an independent-minded Republican in an era of hard-line party politics, she is certainly an anachronism.
When Time Magazine picked her as one of “America’s 10 Best Senators” in 2006, it noted: “Because of her centrist views and eagerness to get beyond partisan point scoring, Maine Republican Olympia Snowe is in the center of every policy debate in Washington.”
As the Senate Finance Committee votes today on health care, Snowe is in the spotlight, wooed by Democrats including the President and being blackmailed by GOP colleagues threatening to deny her chairmanship of a powerful committee to which her seniority entitles her.
But as a Republican who supports legalized abortion and gay rights, voted against the impeachment of Bill Clinton and supported Obama’s economic stimulus, Olympia Snowe, whichever way she goes today, is a throwback to the last century when party label did not require a member of Congress to go brain-dead.
In those days, there were Senators like Republican Jacob Javits of New York and Democrat Henry “Scoop” Jackson of Washington, universally respected for independence and bipartisan on issues where their views did not conform to the party line.
Snowe’s life story, which has suddenly become media fodder, suggests what shaped her.