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Tuesday, April 25, 2006

And, now for you sports fans

It's rumored that George Soros is considering buying the Washington Nationals. The Republicans don't like this so they are threatening to end major league baseball's exemption from anti-trust laws if Soros is allowed to buy the team.

The Republicans are also grousing about amateur baseball issues:

Starting this week, hundreds of young Capitol Hill aides will indulge in an annual rite of spring here by changing out of their business suits and heading over to the National Mall to play in the Congressional Softball League.

Amid all the partisan rancor of congressional politics, the softball league has for 37 years been a rare case of bipartisan civility, an opportunity for Democratic and Republican aides to sneak out of work a bit early and take the field in the name of the lawmaker, committee or federal agency they work for.

This year, the league will be missing something: a lot of the Republicans.

During the off-season, a group of Republican teams seceded from the league after accusing its Democratic commissioner, Gary Caruso, of running a socialist year-end playoff system that gives below-average teams an unfair chance to win the championship.

The league "is all about Softball Welfare -- aiding the weak by punishing the strong," the pitcher of one Republican team told Mr. Caruso in an email. "The commissioner has a long-standing policy of punishing success and rewarding failure. He's a Democrat. Waddya' expect?" read another email, from Gary Mahmoud, the coach of BoehnerLand, a team from the office of Republican Majority Leader John Boehner.

The softball coup is a "reflection of how partisan and Republican this town has really become since Republicans took control," responds Mr. Caruso, a longtime Democratic aide who worked for congressmen in the 1980s and '90s. "Republicans come here and want to bash your head in. And if they don't get their way, they pick up the ball and go home."


What will we tell the children?

1 Comments:

Blogger ChiTom said...

Soros can't buy a baseball team? After all their free-market blah-blah (most recently over the Internet)? [Yes, I know baseball is an exemption, but when did the political affiliation of owners become an issue?]

Now if Osama were to try to buy the Rangers. . . .

10:44 AM  

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