THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2021 A5 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Landlords deserve more help from Legislature D on’t throw people out of their homes in the middle of a global pandemic. As a policy choice, that was a fairly easy one for Oregon legislators to make. But what then should the state of Oregon do about the landlords who aren’t being paid rent? The Legislature has marched on a journey through distinct stages: 1. Extend the eviction moratorium. It’s now through June 30. 2. Give landlords help. Landlords that are willing to forego 20% of their back rent can apply for payments for the re- maining 80%. The state put about $150 million in that fund — for starters. 3. Get sued. The allegation in a suit filed for landlords in U.S. District Court says the state action and actions by local governments should be void because they are an unconstitutional taking of property and violate con- tract guarantees. Landlords question if they will ever get their past due rent. We can’t tell you what the courts will decide. 4. Do something else? Now a new stage is taking shape as the Legisla- ture gets set to meet again. Before the Legislature extended the eviction moratorium, it discussed the 80% state payback program for landlords or another option — tax credits. State Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, proposed tax credits that would en- able landlords to get back 100% of lost rent. It failed to pass. But it will be back on the table when the Legislature convenes. Senate Bill 87 creates a similar in- come tax credit “for lost rental income of landlord, forgone due to prohibition on evictions and rent nonpayment ac- tions during COVID-19 emergency period.” As written, it may be that a landlord would not get back 100% of lost rent immediately. It might be paid off over the years because the credit “may not exceed the tax liability of the taxpayer for the tax year.” We don’t question the importance of an eviction moratorium during the pandemic. But the state also should not balk at bills such as SB 87 that attempt to make landlords whole. Tenants deserve protection. So do landlords. Editorials reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board, Publisher Heidi Wright, Editor Gerry O’Brien and Editorial Page Editor Richard Coe. They are written by Richard Coe. My Nickel’s Worth Bentz ignores his oath Cliff Bentz took less than a week to ignore the congressional oath of office he took Jan . 3 . Recall that Pres- ident- elect Joe Biden received over 7 million more popular votes and 74 more electoral college votes than the incumbent. Despite over 60 court cases and 90 judges finding that claims of widespread voter fraud in the presidential election were unsub- stantiated, Mr. Bentz joined 146 other Republicans and voted to ignore the will of the people and overturn the election results. He should know better. He is an at- torney. He knows the law. He, like all of us, heard the hour long phone con- versation the president had with the Georgia secretary of state pressuring him to “find votes” and ”recalculate.” In the United States, it’s not who yells the loudest, makes the most unsub- stantiated claims and bullies the most election officials to change results who earns the office. It is the person the people choose with their votes. That is democracy. So do us a favor, Mr. Bentz. Take the American flag pin off of your la- pel. You’re not fooling anyone. We can clearly see by your actions that your allegiance is not to our country, de- mocracy, or the Constitution, but to your political party and maintaining power at any cost. Shameful. — Ginny Adams, Sunriver Bentz should go Rep . Cliff Bentz should be removed from office, as three days after he was sworn to protect and defend the United States of America from ene- mies, both foreign and domestic, he for voted to reject the Electoral Col- lege votes from the state of Pennsylva- nia for Joe Biden. There was no voter fraud, the secretary of state approved the votes and Joe Biden won. Under the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, Section 3 states “no person shall be a Senator or Rep- resentative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, un- der the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.” The Bulletin reported that Rep. Cliff Bentz, Oregon’s sole Republi- can member of Congress, said in an interview impeachment wouldn’t be a “productive exercise.” He also said “Trump shouldn’t resign.” The residents of the 2nd Congres- sional District need a representative who supports the U.S. Constitution and works to improve the lives of cit- izens, and Bentz should not continue to support domestic terrorists. Cliff Bentz should resign. — Jerry Hubbard, Sunriver What kind of Republican? When U. S. Rep . Cliff Bentz was elected to Oregon’s District 2, I was hopeful. His record suggested com- Letters policy We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and ad- dress for verification. We edit letters for brevity, gram- mar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. monsense and bipartisan skills. But his first official act challenged certi- fying the election of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. This encouraged conspiracy theorists, who sided with President Donald Trump, falsely claiming he and Mike Pence had won the election. This fantasy was de- bunked in over 50 lawsuits and dis- puted by Democratic and Republican election officials in every state. More- over, it led to violent armed insurrec- tion by Trump supporters who occu- pied the U.S. Capitol and prevented the Congress from doing their con- stitutional duty, an act of sedition. So, Rep . Bentz, what kind of Republican are you? Full disclosure: I come from three generations of Midwestern Republi- cans and have associated them with family values, fiscal restraint, law and order and taking responsibility for one’s actions. We need to have those conservative ideals represented, but President Trump has violated them attempting to remake Republicans in his image: corrupt, immoral, anti- democratic and delusional. Like all would -be fascist dictators, Trump promised to make the country great Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Guest columns Your submissions should be between 550 and 650 words; they must be signed; and they must include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal again by denigrating and persecut- ing some “other” who was victimiz- ing fellow citizens, blaming Mexicans first, then blacks, gays, women, fi- nally Democrats and even Republi- cans who disagreed with him. Trump claimed journalists were “enemies of the people” and replaced them with his propagandists who invented “al- ternative facts” and QAnon conspir- acy theories. In this way, 74,000 voters were conned into voting for his re elec- tion and lost. So, Rep . Bentz are you a traditional or Trump Republican? — Don Kunz, Bend Leave the violence behind How did we get here? Is this who we really are? Retired Republican U.S. Sen . Alan K. Simpson tells us: “Part of the Re- publican Party is heading toward cultism, and there are various kinds,” “There’s the homophobe cult, the abortion cult, the conspiracy cult and the no-mask cult. There’s the follow- law-and-order cult and the get-gov- ernment-out-of-your-life-and-leave- me-alone-cult. “Hate,” Alan Simpson says, speaking of toxic partisanship reasons. We reject those submitted elsewhere. Locally submitted columns alternate with national columnists and commentaries. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. How to submit Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s and cultural tribalism, “corrodes the container it is carried in.” The Trump cult has shown the world that it embraces all of these cults and has inflicted domestic ter- rorism on all of us. Yes, this is who we really are. The recent chamber of commerce discussion by newly elected Central Oregon legislators was an example of the choices we face. Here is what I heard. Sen. Tim Knopp led off stating a goal of getting our small businesses open by getting big government off their backs. Rep. Jason Kropf ad- dressed the same goal and proposed a concrete, science-based, care for your- self AND your neighbor, empower- ing plan: wear your mask, wash your hands, get the vaccine when you can, we will save lives and livelihoods and reopen safely. COVID-19, with the worst times still ahead, and cults are the enemies assaulting us, not a specter “big gov- ernment” and not the need to wear a .5 oz mask. We are the democracy in this coun- try. You and I. Do your part. Vote for someone not defined by a cult. Leave the violence and the hate and the blame behind. — Steve Carlton, Bend Please reconsider One of Rep . Cliff Bentz’s first acts as Oregon’s newest congressional rep- resentative was to voice support for those who question the legitimacy of Joe Biden’s election. He should recon- sider that position and get on the right side of history. As a law school grad- uate, Bentz presumably gained suffi- cient knowledge of the Constitution to know that there is no legitimate constitutional basis for challenging Biden’s election. Even if he did not, that more than 60 state and federal judges found no such basis should provide him a clue. History will not look favorably on lawmakers who cynically chose politics over law and reason. Bentz, therefore, should give more thought to his decisions going forward. His entry into national politics was a decidedly inauspicious beginning. — Rob Brazeau, Bend Worth or Guest Column and mail, fax or email it to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel’s Worth/Guest Column P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 A surprising first impression of Cliff Bentz “T he difference between the Senate and the House,” Lyndon Johnson famously said, “is the difference between chicken salad and chicken shit.” There are a few sobering realities about being a freshman in the U.S. House. For all of the esteem of being a member of Congress, Westerners especially reside too much on a com- mercial jet. When I covered those men and women as a Washington, D.C., correspondent, I often won- dered which time zone their body clock was in. In that often weekly commute, they take a beating. The second reality is that be- ing a freshman means you’ve only been given access to a coffee klatsch or cocktail party with 435 others. Once inside, the challenge is to move through that population and make deals and alliances. To get ahead in the House demands shoe leather and relentless energy. And that gets to my initial skepti- cism about Cliff Bentz’s decision to succeed Greg Walden, who repre- sented Oregon’s vast 2nd Congressio- nal District for 22 years. Walden was a freshman at the age of 42. Bentz is 69, which gives him relatively little time to gain seniority. Oregon’s most con- sequential freshman congressman, Ron Wyden, became a House fresh- man at the age of 32, half Bentz’s age. In his first term, Wyden tore up the track. If you talk to people who watched Bentz in the Oregon Legislature, you gain the impression that he runs very deep. “Thoughtful” and “smart” are the adjectives you hear about the man. The leap from a statehouse to Con- STEVE FORRESTER gress is profound. Congressman Les AuCoin, who represented Astoria in the House for 18 years, told me: “Con- gress is not a bigger version of a state legislature.” Going from the state capi- tol to the national capitol “is like mov- ing from chess to three-dimensional chess.” Given that first impressions are ev- erything in politics, it was surprising to see the newly minted Congress- man Bentz join the House Republi- cans who tried to keep alive President Donald Trump’s illusion about wide- spread voter fraud in the November election. Bentz has said he cast that vote — to object to the electors from Pennsyl- vania — because many of his constit- uents had those kinds of sentiments about the presidential election. Fair enough. But every member of the House had an appointment with his- tory on Jan. 6. After the violent incursion of the Capitol, many Republicans wised up and realized that abetting the presi- dent’s fiction had become a dangerous choice. Bentz also voted Wednesday against impeaching Trump for incit- ing the insurrection. In this era, the velocity of change in national politics, and especially in Congress, is especially rapid. Sud- denly, the senators who fomented the drive to abet Trump’s lost cause — Josh Hawley, of Missouri, and Ted Cruz, of Texas — are not hot com- modities. They are outcasts. Oregon’s Richard Neuberger had a rocky beginning as a freshman sena- tor in 1954. But he quickly recovered and turned in a consequential term before his death in 1960. That was in a much different era, but it makes a cer- tain point. In politics, it’s all about what you will do tomorrow. It will be interesting to see how Bentz navigates the Class V rapids in front of him. Steve Forrester is the president and CEO of EO Media Group, owner of The Bulletin. He was a Washington, D.C., correspondent for Pacific Northwest newspapers from 1978 to 1987. His chapter on the late U.S. Sen. Richard Neuberger will be in the upcoming book “Eminent Oregonians.” This piece originally appeared in The Daily Astorian.