Recently, I read where the newly elected majority leader of the House of Representatives crashes on a couch in his Washington, D.C. office.
Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., does that — he says — so he can be available to fly home frequently to stay in touch with his constituents.
Just for the record, I’ve commented before on this practice. I long have considered it more of a stunt than anything else.
I still believe that’s the case.
Many members of Congress have professed to do such a thing as a way to be, oh, more “real” to the people they represent back home. My question always is this: Who among a member of Congress’s constituents does that kind of thing?
I keep trying to figure out how living out of a proverbial suitcase in Washington, D.C. makes one more in touch with the home folks than if he or she rents a cheap apartment, hangs his clothes up in a closet, pays some rent and then flies home when it’s convenient.
I wrote a column about that once long ago. I poked a little fun at U.S. Rep. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., for living like that. Of course, that was when he was married and was before he took off on that infamous and trumped-up “hike along the Appalachian Trail” when he in fact was in Argentina canoodling with his girlfriend.
A better example of living like your constituents is to move your family to D.C., enroll the kids in school, rent or buy a home and act like a regular family.
This business of sleeping on an office couch makes for snappy campaign-ad fodder that, I suppose, appeals to someone out there.
Me? I prefer my congressman to live like a normal human being.