… I heard Neal Boortz quote Spector as having said, a few years back when he lost a committee chairmanship because another senator switched parties, that he was going to propose a rule that forbade such things in mid term.
… Still looking for a source - but Boortz is accurate, most of the time. He regularly prefaces his remarks by saying 'don't take my word for it unless you know it to be true, or you have verified it etc etc.'
It appears that Mr. Boortz is somewhat correct. Senator Specter’s motivation for the rule he proposed in 2001 was to prevent disruption in the middle of a congressional session resulting from a shift of the minority party to the majority. Notably, his own current change of party affiliation does not cause a change in the present majority status of the Democratic Party.
When a Senate Republican left his party in 2001 … [Specter] proposed a rule forbidding party switches that had the effect of vaulting the minority to majority status in the middle of a congressional session. [LA Times]
ALWAYS REMEMBER
Don't believe anything … you hear on The Neal Boortz Show, unless it is consistent with what you already know to be true, or unless you have taken the time to research the matter to prove its accuracy to your satisfaction. This is known as “doing your homework.” [Boortz]























