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House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., said the letter was a political ploy. "This threat stinks of partisan politics," he said in a statement. "If Henry McMaster wants to write federal law he should run for Congress not governor." Meanwhile, Nelson is taking his message on health care reform directly to his constituents. In a television ad beginning during Wednesday night's Nebraska-Arizona Holiday Bowl football game, the Democrat says he stuck by his principles throughout the debate and doesn't want Nebraskans to be confused on his position. While it's not uncommon for states to challenge federal laws in court, one legal expert said political bluster was likely behind the letter. "I do think that it is some combination of the losers just complaining about the officiating, or complaining about how the game was played, in combination with trying to make the bill look as seedy and inappropriate as possible, for political purposes," says Andy Siegel, a former University of South Carolina School of Law professor now teaching at Seattle University School of Law. "It is smart politics to try to tarnish it and make it look less like an achievement and more like some sort of corrupted bargain," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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