Tom Coburn: A profile in courage
Tom Coburn, R-Okla., was a part of the famous Class of ’94—the rambunctious Republican elephants who stampeded to victory in the first election cycle of the Bill and Hillary Clinton years. Then, he was a congressman.
Dr. Coburn, a practicing ob-gyn, continued to commute back to Oklahoma, where he delivered babies when he wasn’t midwifing new laws. He brought a refreshing sense of reality to the often-isolated corridors of Congress.
Congressman Coburn, however, didn’t make too many friends in the House GOP conference when he denounced reckless spending not only by Democrats but Republicans as well. He apparently had never heard Speaker Sam Rayburn’s stern injunction to freshman congressmen: “To get along, you should go along.” There were plenty of “go-along” congressmen on both sides of the aisle who weren’t all that sad to see the flinty Oklahoman keep his promise to serve only three terms in the House.
Today, House Republicans are once again an embattled minority. Free spending and scandals toppled the House that Newt built and sent the GOP into political exile in 2006, with the hole made even deeper in 2008.
Many of today’s minority Republicans likely wish their elder brothers had listened to Coburn back in the 1990s. They certainly seem to have learned their lesson. Today’s GOP House members have been solid against Obamacare.
As the political wheel turns, Dr. Coburn came back to Washington—this time, as the Sooner State’s junior U.S. Senator.
Sen. Coburn’s finest hour may have occurred yesterday when he held a news conference in which he addressed the majority no votes in the House—the 39 Democrats who voted “nay” on Obamacare last fall.
These House members have been romanced, wined, and dined by the Obama White House this week. Little Dennis Kucinich even got a plane ride on Air Force One. What fun. That must have been almost as exciting for Congressman Kucinich as sighting a UFO with Shirley MacLaine. He swooned and promptly announced he would vote for Obamacare.
But beware, said Sen. Coburn, “If you voted no [then] and you vote yes [now], and you lose your election, and you think any nomination to a federal position isn’t going to be held in the Senate, I’ve got news for you: It’s going to be held.”
So, if the administration is hoping to persuade skittish congressmen to walk the plank in November with promises of sweet ambassadorships or cushy sub-Cabinet jobs, watch out.
Tom Coburn will come after you.
And that’s not all he said. If that comment was a shot across the wilters’ bow, his next one put the cannonball squarely into their wheelhouse: “We will look at every appropriations bill at every level, at every instance, and we will outline it by district, and we will associate that with the buying of your vote.” So don’t think you can bury your sweetheart deal in some 1,000-page bill, Coburn said, “If you think you can cut a deal now, and it won’t come out until after the election, I want to tell you that isn’t going to happen. Be prepared to defend the selling of your vote in the House.”
This fight on Capitol Hill has been ugly. Even President Obama admitted to Bret Baier that the process is ugly.
But there are some beautiful moments in it. To see Tom Coburn stand up and brave the contempt of the left-wing media and face the scorn of liberals everywhere is a beautiful thing. On Thursday, March 18, this tough-talking, resolute man stood up and was counted.
Sen. Coburn’s actions merit another chapter in John Kennedy’s classic book, Profiles in Courage. And I would add that Coburn made me think of Henry David Thoreau, who cried out:
“O for a man that is a man, that has a bone in his back that you cannot pass your hand through!”
Tom Coburn is that man.

















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back to top19 Comments to “Tom Coburn: A profile in courage”
Thanks for the thread Ken!
We need to elect many more Tom Coburns in November!!!
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We need more men of priciple like Tom Coburns.
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WOW!
Glad to hear there IS someone in DC who has a backbone.
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Good for Sen. Coburn. He can work with them and he can work against them equally well.
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Good job, Ken. It’s nice to put the positive front and center at a time when negativity and cowardice prevail.
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What breath of fresh air. Backbone … is a beautiful thing.
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“But beware, said Sen. Coburn, “If you voted no [then] and you vote yes [now], and you lose your election, and you think any nomination to a federal position isn’t going to be held in the Senate, I’ve got news for you: It’s going to be held.”
You are calling this courage?! It’d be courage to disregard Coburn’s threat do the right thing–regardless of any fears for how this might work out for you politically.
Yet more evidence that WMB has lost its bearings.
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I find it interesting that Blackwell finds the need to ridicule Dennis Kucinich because of his short statute.
How can one say that that he cares for the weak, such as the unborn, when he has no guilt about discounting someone merely because the person is short.
These are the tactics of playground bullies. It’s not clear to me why an evangelical magazine is providing a forum for this kind of disgusting garbage.
Of course, it’s not surprising that WorldMag’s resident bullies applaud Blackwell.
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CT,
Your ad hominems grow so very tiresome.
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RSD,
The unborn is innocent. Kucinich is not. His actions make him little.
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Montyfisherwoof-10
You beat me to the explanation.
I thought that the pagorative was lacking in Christian charity, but decided to re-interpret it as an adjective describing Dennis’ character.
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Monty & BrotherDan,
So, according to your logic, bullying and ridicule–acts which Jesus clearly condemns as a type of murder–are justifiable, so long as the object of those attacks is not “innocent.” Please provide Scriptural support for this distinction, as I’m not aware of any.
These are the reasons why people have such a hard time taking evangelicals seriously on issues like abortion. Evangelicals say that they care about the weak. And yet, in my observation, evangelicals generally have few qualms about denigrating others because of perceived weaknesses. Blackwell has done that here, and has generally received applause from his evangelical audience for having done so. Moreover, the two of you have practically tripped over each other to defend Blackwell’s ridicule of Kucinich.
It’s not that the statement “lack[ed] Christian charity”; the statement was sinful and wrong. It says a lot about the state of the evangelical conscience when a random sampling of evangelicals can’t recognize that.
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“Courage” is a highly misused term these days, but it is well applied (for obvious reasons) to Sen. Coburn. Having the courage of our convictions means backing them up and standing by them in the good fight.
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RSD,
please contact a doctor and /or a psychiatrist. You talk about ‘weak’ with a very weak ad hominem attack. Your ‘little bits’ of rhetoric are reminiscent of the playground bully who then whines when no one will play with him. Sad indeed.
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I’ve been a fan of Sen. Coburn for awhile now. What some here refer to as Coburn’s “bullying” is what makes me like him. If you think he’s bluffing about exposing these people and their deeds, and holding potential poliical appointments to account for their actions on healthcare, you’d be mistaken. There is a daily blog from Coburn called the “Pork Report”, where he exposes the waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption in Congress, along with the back room deals they try to sneak thru. Check it out.
http://coburn.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=WashingtonWasteOfWeek.Home
or at
http://biggovernment.com/author/porkreport/
You’ll find all kinds of lovely stuff like this thanks to Coburn.
“National Institutes of Health spends $3.9 million to develop ‘Avatar’ sex-ed video game for kids”
“The Wine Institute receives $7 million grant to promote wine in foreign countries; Raisin Administrative Committee receives $3 million and the California Walnut Commission pulls in $4.5 million”
“More than half of the companies that have received federal stimulus dollars to do highway work in Massachusetts have a history of breaking the law
Monterey wine association receives $98,5000 federal stimulus grant
$2 million of federal stimulus money paying to teach Ohio residents how to cut, color and style hair”
“Nearly one in five federal employees paid $100,000 a year or more, and that doesn’t count overtime pay or bonuses”
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Wait … I thought we were against strong-arm politics of reprisal. “Chicago style,” I believe it’s …. OH … I get it. We only oppose it when a Democrat does it.
As always, IOKIYAR.
You guys want a robe for your naked hypocrisy?
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MFW: The unborn is innocent. Kucinich is not. His actions make him little.
Riiiight.
Even you can’t possibly believe this twaddle.
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Doctor Coburn is just fine. What I would like to know, however, is why he did not ask for a reading of the health takeover bill on the Senate floor?
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Bravo for Sen Coburn!
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