Politics | Republican True Believer Chris Dodd a Great Senate Role Model Veteran lawmaker contends liberals 'make it easy for the other side' By Nick McMaster Posted Aug 9, 2010 2:40 PM CDT Copied This photo provided by CBS shows Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., on CBS's "Face the Nation" in Washington Sunday, May 9, 2010. (AP Photo/ CBS, Chris Usher) EJ Dionne is no lover of the Senate—he thinks it should be abolished, actually—but he has to respect the faith of Chris Dodd, a venerable lawmaker and one of the chamber's fiercest advocates. Dodd, who is retiring this year, says liberals have hindered their progress by "agonizing" over failures and should be prouder of passing health care and financial reform. "We're arguing against ourselves when we say we can't get anything done," he tells Washington Post columnist Dionne. Dodd believes the Senate functions well, he tells Dionne, but he says the Democratic majority ceded momentum to the Republicans when the Senate Finance Committee failed to find consensus on a health care bill last summer, when bipartisanship on the issue still seemed possible. "We lost all that ground, all of that momentum," Dodd said. "We gave them all this time to define the bill." Read These Next New York Times ranks the best movies of the 21st century. A man has been deported for kicking an airport customs beagle. White House rolls with Trump's 'daddy' nickname. Actor Sam Rockwell gets residuals from movie he wasn't in. Report an error