T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
112.1 | Rosy outlook for tort reform... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:41 | 9 |
|
This looks like one of those that will get bipartisan support
to me. A few of the terrible ten in Newt's list will be knockdown
dragouts. But a surprising number will draw considerable support
from Democrats, including Clinton.
The devil is in the details, however.
bb
|
112.2 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | Barney IS NOT a nerd!! | Tue Nov 29 1994 13:06 | 8 |
| Steve:
One thing that baffles me. The contract is merely the idea of bringing
these issues to debate and vote. I fail to understand why you would be
for this but not the rest of the contract, seeing as how the items can
be voted down!
-Jack
|
112.3 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Memories..... | Tue Nov 29 1994 13:09 | 3 |
|
If we're going to have reform, can we do away with the lemon ones?
|
112.4 | Not to hear them talk about it | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve | Tue Nov 29 1994 13:19 | 7 |
| Jack, tell Newt Gingrich and Phil Gramm that; they're talking
'mandate for change.'
As I said to someone else, if you voted Republican simply because you
wanted these issues *brought up for a vote*, you've been hornswoggled.
(How many of these items have been voted on before? I can think of
four offhand...!)
|
112.5 | too corrupt | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, SDSC West, Palo Alto | Tue Nov 29 1994 14:48 | 12 |
| > This looks like one of those that will get bipartisan support
> to me.
Trial lawyers opposing tort reforms have been among the largest PAC
contributors in the last several decades. Lots of congressmen have
already sold their votes to these critters, and that's why tort reform
has been consistently defeated every time its been mooted in recent
years. I expect the GOP to make a lot of changes in the way Washington
works, but frankly, given the way the money has been spread around, I
don't expect this to succeed.
DougO
|
112.6 | | USAT05::BENSON | | Tue Nov 29 1994 15:12 | 5 |
|
You're right Dougo; except trial lawyers are finally *the* largest PAC
contributors of all.
jeff
|
112.7 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Wed Nov 30 1994 07:10 | 1 |
| the Washington POST pac is one of the largest proponents of TORT reform.
|
112.8 | Looks like the ball is rolling | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Dec 01 1994 12:01 | 10 |
| There seems to be a movement, at least in the legal profession where
the gov't is trying to address this issue.
There is a book called Sanctions: The Federal Law of Litigation Abuse.
"The sanctions movement continues to gain momentum. The federal
courts have issued thousands of awards, many in excess of $1,000,000
against attorneys and parties engaging in litigation abuse. With
new rules 11,26(g), and 37 effective 12/1/93 - the federal courts
have created new regions of vulnerability for unwary attorneys."
|
112.9 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Memories..... | Thu Dec 01 1994 13:55 | 4 |
|
Raspberry ones are cool.
|
112.10 | Change in 1994 is long overdue. | STAR::OKELLEY | Kevin O'Kelley, OpenVMS DCE Security | Thu Dec 01 1994 14:54 | 140 |
| <<< Note 112.4 by TNPUBS::JONG "Steve" >>>
-< Not to hear them talk about it >-
> Jack, tell Newt Gingrich and Phil Gramm that; they're talking
> 'mandate for change.'
> As I said to someone else, if you voted Republican simply because you
> wanted these issues *brought up for a vote*, you've been hornswoggled.
> (How many of these items have been voted on before? I can think of
> four offhand...!)
No one is "hornswoggled" if they understand the contract. As I said
before, debate is a good thing. The final measure of the GOP reform
movement will not depend on the percentage of the contract that passed.
The changes won't even start with the Contract for America. If the GOP
cuts overhead in the House and Senate and improves the access for people
to look at legislation before it's voted upon instead of a single paper
copy, those will be welcomed changes. According to Gingrich, the first
order of business in the 104th Congress is to take Social Security off
budget for the first time since the Johnson Administration.
[1992: We need change]
"Change" was a key word in the 1992 Presidential campaign: Clinton used
the word constantly. I don't have my copy of _Putting_People_first_ here,
but I recall that Clinton proposed multiple changes in the Federal
Government:
o A 25% cut in the House, Senate, and Whitehouse staffs
o Line item veto
o Cuts in the federal payroll and waste
o Campaign finance reform
o Lobbying reform
[25% cut in staff]
You can make a case that the Whitehouse did, in fact, cut staff by
25%. However, as I recall, a couple of days after the election, the
Democratic leadership of the House and Senate went to Little Rock to
talk to the President-elect. Behind closed doors, Clinton asked them
to cut their staff, and they refused. Later, a dejected Clinton stood
before the press and announced that he was going to push ahead with
cuts in the Whitehouse staff. He also stated that the House and Senate
had already reduced their staffs, and that no further cuts would be made
there. He was clearly crushed, and he never brought up this issue again.
[Line item veto]
I recall Clinton stating: "They [House and Senate] don't have to make
the cuts, just add a line item veto to the [appropriations] bills, and
we'll make the tough decisions.
As far as I know, this idea was never discussed and was certainly never
implemented.
[Cuts in the federal payroll and waste]
Other than cuts in military spending -- and many of the tough decisions
such as base closings were already made -- this area was covered by
Al Gore's "Reinventing Government" initiative.
One year after Gore's document was released -- on expensive non-standard
type -- the GAO issued a report on the progress the Administration had
made on reinventing government. Of the hundreds of proposals, only
eleven had been implemented [the ABC news magazine with Sam Donaldson].
This is particularly disappointing because many of the proposed changes
can be done by executive order. [Bill Clinton stated this at the news
conference when the report was issued.] Furthermore, the Clinton
Administration has only submitted a few reform bills to Congress. All
are sitting in committee and will likely die when the 103rd Congress
adjourns. I can't think of one piece of legislation from the reinventing
government report that the Clinton Administration has brought to the
public's attention the way that they lobbied for the Crime Bill or NAFTA.
"Reinventing Government" is long on spin and short on substance.
[Campaign finance reform]
The bill that was recently debated and killed does not meet the needs
outlined in _Putting_People_First_. Clinton proposed spending caps on
House and Senate races, not voluntary guidelines. Furthermore, the bill's
disclosure clause on contributors raises serious privacy issues. And
finally, simply lowering the maximum amount that a PAC can give to a
campaign is too easy to bypass. For example, Charles Keating gave lots
of money to Congressmen and Senators through multiple PACs. You have to
limit the total amount spent, limit the total from PACs, or eliminate PAC
money altogether.
[I recognize that PACs have a constitutional right to free speech, but I
don't think that there is a constitutional right to give money to
political campaigns.
IMHO, neither party has been honest with the American people about this one.
The Democrats have traditionally received money for their House and Senate
campaigns through PACs, while the Republicans have received lots of
"soft money" channelled through the national Republican Party.
Predictably, Democrats favor restrictions on soft money, while Republicans
favor restrictions on PACs. Grrrrrr. "A pox on both your houses!"]
[Lobbying reform]
As promised, the Clinton Administration requires all appointees to
sign an agreement not to lobby for industries or foreign governments
until they have left office for at least five years.
[1994: We still need change]
People who voted for change in 1992 didn't get much change.
Perhaps they were "hornswoggled": perhaps Bill Clinton simply put a
pile of lies into _Putting_People_First_. Maybe the problem is that
Bill Clinton is just not up to the job. He certainly could have tried
harder to rally public opinion. The public is clearly fed up with the
status quo and would be easily convinced to pick up the phone and call
their Congressmen or Senators. Too late.
The irony of it all is that the Democratic leadership should have
listened to Clinton. They didn't want to cut their staffs, now the
GOP is going to do it for them. They didn't want a line item veto even
discussed. The GOP may send an amendment to the states for ratification.
They didn't want Clinton to cut spending with a scalpel. The GOP may
cut it with an ax -- or a chainsaw.
They were simply too arrogant to hear the train coming and too complacent
to get off the tracks. What a shame.
I feel their pain.
|
112.11 | You're willing to reward them for *talking*? | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:00 | 12 |
| Kevin, you are attempting to employ a preposterous double standard.
Candidate Clinton campaigned on pledges to do certain things. He did
some, he didn't do others; you criticize him for his failures, and
rightly so. But he didn't pledge to *talk* about making changes, he
pledged to *make* them.
Along come the Republicans with their Contract With America. You say
they only pledged to *talk* about making changes, and you commend them
for carrying out their plans to... talk, even if no changes result.
Nope, I still say you've been hornswoggled.
|
112.12 | Addendum -- some agreement | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve | Thu Dec 01 1994 15:01 | 3 |
| Kevin, I do agree with your analysis about the Democratic legislative
leaders and their arrogance in refusing to support President Clinton in
many areas. They are suffering now for their refusal to go along.
|
112.13 | | STAR::OKELLEY | Kevin O'Kelley, OpenVMS DCE Security | Thu Dec 01 1994 18:09 | 54 |
| <<< Note 112.11 by TNPUBS::JONG "Steve" >>>
-< You're willing to reward them for *talking*? >-
> Kevin, you are attempting to employ a preposterous double standard.
No. There is one standard here: will the GOP keep their word and do
what they said that they will do.
> Candidate Clinton campaigned on pledges to do certain things. He did
> some, he didn't do others; you criticize him for his failures, and
> rightly so. But he didn't pledge to *talk* about making changes, he
> pledged to *make* them.
That is correct. He, as all of us, should be held accountable for living
by his agreements. I'd even give him credit for a good try. One of my
complaints about Clinton is that he just doesn't put in the effort.
Many of his ideas would have done much better if he had proposed quickly,
gone on the television, and rallied support. He didn't even try. The
best effort he made on getting support for legislation was on the Crime
Bill, and that's about it. When I read _Putting_People_First_, I marked
all the little bills and simple things that Clinton could do early in
his administration to gain political capitol. I expected him to come out
early and get a few political wins under his belt. I completely over-
estimated his abilities and his resolve. History handed him a golden
opportunity, and he wasted it.
Perhaps he shouldn't have made commitments that he can't keep. I think
that all of us can learn something from that. The old saying goes,
"Don't make promises you can't keep."
> Along come the Republicans with their Contract With America. You say
> they only pledged to *talk* about making changes, and you commend them
> for carrying out their plans to... talk, even if no changes result.
>
> Nope, I still say you've been hornswoggled.
I don't agree.
If they succeed in doing what they say that they will do, then, yes,
I will commend them. As I stated earlier, there is value in having this
kind of debate. An open discussion is a welcome change from the closed,
static environment we have had in the past. Science cannot exist without
that kind of openness, let's bring debate back to Congress for a change.
Furthermore, I may be overly optimistic, but I find it hard to believe
that if we start a real debate, the momentum will be such that real change
becomes the expected norm.
I expect the GOP to make changes -- as part of the Contract for America
and totally outside of the Contract. There are possibilities for the
104th Congress that would be impossible under the old regime.
|
112.14 | | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Thu Dec 01 1994 20:00 | 4 |
| Hey, I think I'm ahead of the game here!
I wasn't hornswaggled! I was even more suspicious than the liberals
out there! Still am, for that matter...
|
112.15 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Fri Dec 02 1994 07:04 | 4 |
| Wordy:
I believe you got it wrong. The voters rewarded those democrats who
DID work with Clinton by voting them outta office!
|
112.16 | Loose talk can cost careers | VMSSG::LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Sat Dec 03 1994 00:00 | 7 |
| re hornswoggled by a promise to talk:
There's a very real danger in this: that if there's talk and no action
(without a well-understood and valid reason) the hands that swept out
so many pols in '94 may well backhand more away in '96.
Dick
|
112.17 | | STAR::OKELLEY | Kevin O'Kelley, OpenVMS DCE Security | Mon Dec 05 1994 09:52 | 7 |
| <<< Note 112.16 by VMSSG::LYCEUM::CURTIS "Dick "Aristotle" Curtis" >>>
-< Loose talk can cost careers >-
That could very well happen. The public will judge the harshly if their
isn't movement in other areas as well. For example, if welfare reform
or cuts in the size of government are not accomplished, the public will
be in a nasty mode in 1996. In any case, it'll be fun.
|
112.18 | Lobbyists Drop Girl Scouts as Example | ASABET::MCWILLIAMS | | Fri Mar 10 1995 12:07 | 47 |
| TORT REFORM - LOBBYISTS DROP GIRL SCOUTS AS EXAMPLE
copied without permission from
The Lawrence Eagle-Tribune
8 March 1995
WASHINGTON (AP) -- When advocates of tort reform went looking for
sympathetic symbols, they thought they had found a winner: the Girl
Scouts of America.
The story spread quickly among tort reform lobbyists and their
supporters on Capitol Hill, and it was compelling: Girl Scouts in the
nation's capital have to sell 87,000 boxes of cookies each year just
to cover the cost of their liability insurance.
The lobbying and public relations machinery went into high gear. The
U.S. Chamber of Commerce produced a radio ad using the information,
and a business coalition began planning a television spot showing a
Girl Scout trudging door to door with a basket of Thin Mints and
Samoas.
But when the Girl Scouts got wind of it, they called a halt. The
87,000- box statistic was undocumented, they said. The Girl Scouts do
not consider damage suits much of a problem, and the organization
takes no position on tort reform legislation.
So the girl in the TV spot donned a Little League outfit instead, and
the focus changed to the legal problems of children's baseball.
The radio and television ads have been just the most visible part of
an intense lobbying campaign that Climaxes with House votes this week
on bills designed to curb damage and injury lawsuits. While reform
proponents are doing battle over the airwaves, lobbyists for both
sides are plying congressional corridors.
The trial lawyers have legendary clout in Congress; they have held
changes in the tort system at bay for more than a decade.
Meanwhile the Little League says it has no position at all on the
various tort reform proposals. League spokesman Dennis Sullivan said
the coalition did have permission to use the Little League's name in
its ads.
Mr. Sullivan declined to provide any details about the cost of
liability insurance for Little League baseball, except to say it
starts at about $750 per year for a local league.
-30-
|
112.19 | Death spiral... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Fri May 05 1995 16:31 | 14 |
|
If you are a real CSPAN masochist, check out the recent shenanigans
in the Senate. Two Senators voting to table their own amendments,
the sponsors voting against cloture while fillibustering their
own bill, the endless amendments that have rendered the whole thing
unrecognizable compared to the House bill. As it stands now, there
are enough votes to pass several different forms, composed of quite
different collections from both parties including 75 senators, but
there are not 60 votes for cloture on ANY of the alternatives.
It is, in a way, amusing, I suppose. The Senate is the killing
ground of legislation.
bb
|
112.20 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Fri May 05 1995 17:20 | 9 |
| -1
I'd really like to know who the 9 Republicans were who sided with
the dims to kill this.
If any of them are from Georgia they can kiss my vote goodbye next
time.
|
112.21 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon May 08 1995 12:46 | 6 |
| The Senate went overboard, writing absolutely irresponsible
restrictions on the ability to sue for damages into the law.
Clinton's sound-bite called it the Drunken Driver Protection Act,
which was actually not far off. They blew it. They're starting over.
DougO
|
112.22 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue May 09 1995 17:30 | 47 |
| GOP Tries to Save Legal Reform Bill
Washington
Senate Republicans retreated again yesterday in hopes of salvaging a
bare-bones legal reform bill, confining the legislation to product
liability lawsuits and modifying proposed limits on punitive damages in
these cases.
Key backers of the legislation, which is in its third week of
contentious debate, said they now believe it will pass.
The latest compromise was offered after it became clear that the first
retreat, a scaled-back version proposed Friday by majority leader Bob
Dole, R-Kan., was still too far-reaching to get the 60 votes necessary
to limit debate and bring the bill to a final vote.
The scaling back was forced after the Senate loaded up a relatively
narrow product liability bill with broader litigation curbs, including
a proposal to limit punitive damages in all civil lawsuits, and then
fell well short of the 60-vote mark. When Dole's Friday compromise came
up for a vote late yesterday, it also fell far short, winning only 43
votes.
The new proposal is a far cry from the broad bill approved by the House
earlier this year and closely resembles the product liability bill
originally introduced in the Senate by Senators Slade Gorton, R-Wash.,
and John D. Rockefeller IV, D-W.Va.
As explained by Gorton, the latest version -- hammered out in a day of
bipartisan negotiations -- had the backing of Dole as well as
Rockefeller. Rockefeller said he believed the measure would command
enough votes to win final passage later this week.
But it posed potential difficulties for a House-Senate conference
because the two houses are so far apart and the Senate demonstrated so
strongly in debate on the measure that it has little wiggle room for
compromise.
The latest proposal seeks to limit punitive damage awards only for
lawsuits against manufacturers of allegedly faulty products. The Friday
proposal would have limited punitive damages in all lawsuits against
small businesses and people of relatively modest resources. The broader
bill would have covered medical malpractice and other civil lawsuits as
well.
Published 5/9/95 in San Francisco Chronicle
|
112.23 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue May 09 1995 17:37 | 4 |
| I asked it before in 99.336, and I'll ask it again here:
What's the constitutional basis for the various tort reform bills' ability
to affect suits in state courts?
|
112.24 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu May 11 1995 19:59 | 52 |
| Senate Passes Product-Liability Bill
Washington
The Senate yesterday passed a bill limiting punitive damages in
lawsuits involving injuries from defective products.
The 61-to-37 vote came after the bill was stripped from a broader
measure that would have limited punitive damages in all civil cases,
including medical malpractice.
The bill now goes to a conference with the House of Representatives,
which passed the broader version in March as part of the House
Republicans' Contract with America.
President Clinton has promised to veto the final bill if he thinks that
it goes too far in limiting the rights of injury or accident victims to
sue.
Supporters of the bill, including business groups such as the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce that have tried for years to change tort laws, said
it is needed to curb excessive liability awards and discourage
frivolous lawsuits.
``Passage today is an important victory for common sense and the
American people,'' Senate majority leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said after
the vote. ``I think we've had a dramatic step forward. We had strong
opposition.''
But opponents said that liability cases are only a small percentage of
total court cases and that excessive awards are rare. ``This is not an
epidemic or a crisis,'' said Senator Byron Dorgan, D-N.D.
``It is the threat of litigation that is the problem,'' replied Senator
Jay Rockefeller, D-W. Va.
The final version of the Senate bill applies to product-liability cases
only. It would limit punitive damages to two times compensatory
damages, which include economic and noneconomic losses, or $250,000,
whichever is greater.
Judges could add higher punitive damages if they thought they were
justified. Punitive damages are awarded for willful misconduct by a
defendant.
The bill took almost three weeks to pass because opponents blocked
action until the broader provisions were dropped.
California's senators were divided on the issue, with Dianne Feinstein
voting in favor of the bill and Barbara Boxer voting against it.
Published 5/11/95 in SF Chronicle
|
112.25 | Is dog licensing next? | DECWIN::RALTO | It's a small third world after all | Sat May 13 1995 00:12 | 5 |
| Why is this a federal issue? This looks like one of those things
that should be up to the states. Don't these guys have anything
better to do? Like cut the budget...
Chris
|
112.26 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon May 15 1995 15:32 | 10 |
| Re: .25
>Why is this a federal issue?
Interstate commerce, at a guess. If the product was manufactured in
one (or more) states by a company headquartered in another state, and
then purchased by someone in a third state (and possibly given to
someone in a fourth state), which state's product liability laws apply?
And why should someone in one state have better or worse protection
from defective products than someone in another state?
|
112.27 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150kts is TOO slow! | Mon May 15 1995 15:37 | 10 |
| re: .26
> And why should someone in one state have better or worse protection
> from defective products than someone in another state?
Accepting this argument would lead to the practical elimination of state
and local government. There are very, very few issues where I couldn't find
a reason for the above to apply to.
Bob
|
112.28 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon May 15 1995 16:06 | 1 |
| Whatever. It's still a matter of interstate commerce.
|
112.29 | How does one sue a foreign corporation these days? | AMN1::RALTO | It's a small third world after all | Tue May 16 1995 13:36 | 9 |
| >> Accepting this argument would lead to the practical elimination of state
>> and local government.
...which would probably suit the bureaucrats in the Federal
government just fine. If this argument is extended to take
international trade into account, it could get even more
interesting.
Chris
|
112.30 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed May 17 1995 14:46 | 74 |
| Legislators -- Make Haste Very Slowly
ANTHONY LEWIS
GETTING LEGISLATION through Congress is notoriously difficult, with all
the obstacles in the two houses. But the framers of the Constitution
wanted it that way. They valued reflection more than speed. The wisdom
of a deliberate system is being demonstrated now, in a fascinating way,
on the legislation to impose new federal limits on damage suits. It has
gone through the House and, last week, the Senate in very different
forms. The process has exposed the dangers in the proposed ``reform.''
Newt Gingrich's juggernaut got a bill through committee and the floor
of the House in weeks. As passed there, it was a collection of devices
aimed at making it harder for the victims of torts -- civil wrongs --
to win damages from manufacturers, doctors and other defendants.
One device was a modified version of the English rule that the loser in
a civil lawsuit pays the legal fees of the winner. That idea has been
an ideological crusade for a number of conservative thinkers. Its
effect would be to scare many victims out of suing, for fear that they
would be bankrupted if they lost -- as happens in Britain. The House
bill imposed new federal rules on all tort law, an area of the law that
for 200 years has been left to the states. This radical move toward
centralization was in striking conflict with the Gingrich's professed
aim to cut back the power of the federal government.
In the Senate, Bob Dole, the Republican leader, tried to get a broad
bill passed, no doubt trying to advance his presidential candidacy by
pleasing the right. But he overreached, and in the end the Senate
passed a bill dealing only with faulty manufactured products. Because
almost all products reach a national market, imposing federal rules on
state tort law there is less absurd than, for example, trying to make
the malpractice law of 50 states fit into a national box. But there are
still serious problems.
The Senate bill, for instance, says punitive damages can be awarded in
product-liability cases only when the manufacturer has shown
``conscious, flagrant indifference to the safety of others.'' Judges
all over the country, state and federal, would have to decide what that
slippery phrase means. There would be differences, perhaps chaos, for
years.
Is there a tort crisis in this country, a plague of worthless lawsuits
that burden business and the courts? Some of my lawyer friends think
there is. If so, the way to deal with it is not to try tilting
substantive tort law against victims. It is to speed up the legal
process by winnowing out worthless cases early on.
A proposal that would work to that end has been shaped by Michael J.
Horowitz, a conservative legal thinker, together with others both
liberal and conservative. It would apply in all personal injury cases
where the plaintiff's lawyer is to get a percentage of what the
plaintiff wins: a contingency fee.
First, the plaintiff would have to detail for the defendants his or her
injuries and medical and other costs. The defendant would then have 60
days to offer a settlement figure. If the settlement is accepted, the
plaintiff's lawyer would get only hourly fees for work he actually did,
with some further limitations. If the offer is rejected, and the
plaintiff wins an award at trial, his lawyer would get a percentage
only of the excess over the rejected settlement figure.
That idea would curb some abuses by some plaintiffs' trial lawyers, who
now demand as much as 50 percent as a contingency fee, even if a case
is settled after little work. But it would not discourage lawyers from
taking cases at all, as the cap on punitive damages in both the House
and Senate bills would.
I have been able to give only a sketch of Horowitz's proposal. But it
shows how to approach the tort problem: Avoid rigidities and delusive
certainties. And leave substantive tort law to state courts and
legislatures, where it belongs.
5/16/95 , San Francisco Chronicle, All Rights Reserved
|
112.31 | not the votes to override | GAAS::BRAUCHER | Welcome to Paradise | Fri May 03 1996 14:40 | 10 |
|
At a White House ceremony, Bill Clinton vetoed the Tort Reform
bill, arguing against placing any limits on "punitive" damage awards.
This is a shrewd political move, aimed at California electoral votes.
Recall that the American Trial Lawyers' Association is bankrolling
a "Green" presidential candidacy by Ralph Nader in California, which
could only draw off Democrats. This move buys off the lawyers.
bb
|
112.32 | | HIGHD::FLATMAN | [email protected] | Sun May 05 1996 17:26 | 9 |
| RE: .31
> This move buys off the lawyers.
It should be noted that the lawyers have already bought off Clinton.
The trial lawyers are the laregest contributors to the Clinton
campaign.
-- Dave
|
112.33 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | I'd rather be gardening | Sun May 05 1996 18:13 | 6 |
| And large corporations are financing most of the republicans, including
Dole, so what is your point?
In either case it is the fox guarding the henhouse.
meg
|
112.34 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | I'd rather be gardening | Sun May 05 1996 18:20 | 1 |
| Question, Who wrote the tort reform bill?
|
112.35 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Mr. Logo | Sun May 05 1996 20:24 | 3 |
|
I really hope they reform tarts. BAN ASSAULT POPTARTS!
|
112.36 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun May 05 1996 20:31 | 5 |
|
I dunno, I like mz_deb and she's a tart....;*)
|
112.37 | 8^o | POWDML::HANGGELI | Little Chamber of Nightmares | Sun May 05 1996 20:32 | 2 |
|
|
112.38 | \ | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun May 05 1996 20:36 | 5 |
|
:*)
|
112.39 | | HIGHD::FLATMAN | [email protected] | Tue May 07 1996 18:13 | 13 |
| RE: .33
> And large corporations are financing most of the republicans, including
> Dole, so what is your point?
Large corporations are financing most of both sides (can you say Tyson
Foods?), no sense in being on the losing side. So meg, what's your
point?
My point was that the trail lawyers are the LARGEST contributor to
Clinton. Obviously money well spent.
-- Dave
|
112.40 | | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Wed May 08 1996 10:29 | 6 |
| Re: .39. Now you stop that. Laura Tyson got her cabinet job as Finance
Director and High Poobah because she was qualified.
The very idea.
|