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Jon Kyl Expunges Remark That Was 'Not Intended To Be A Factual Statement' From Congressional Record

Kyl

First Posted: 04/21/11 05:37 PM ET Updated: 04/21/11 10:50 PM ET

I missed this when it was reported a couple days ago, but apparently, a few days after Senator Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) stood on the Senate floor and misled America about what proportion of Planned Parenthood's activities were related to abortion -- which begat his famous "not intended to be a factual statement" excuse that brought a torrent of ridicule down upon him -- Kyl had his false statement stricken from the Congressional Record. You can do that? Apparently so!

Senators enjoy a neat perk: the right to "revise" and "extend" their remarks. Lawrence O'Donnell did a good explainer on this:

O'DONNELL: The Library of Congress website explains: "The Congressional record is not an exact record of the proceedings and debate in the House and Senate. As previously stated, it is a substantially verbatim report." The operative phrase there: "it is a substantially verbatim report" -- not a completely verbatim report. The explanation continues: "Members of both Houses are allowed to edit the transcript of their remarks before publication in the daily Record, permanent Record, or both." And there's a simple reason why. The Congressional Record is the official account of everything taking place inside the Senate and House every day that they're in session. It is an historical document produced by the Government Printing Office. The right to revise its text was originally created to insert the full text of legislation that is often read only in part on the Senate floor, and of course to grammatically revise certain remarks, and to extend certain remarks, add thoughts that didn't occur to the speaker while extemporaneously delivering those remarks.

As O'Donnell points out, the "privilege has been extended to include" the correcting of factual errors. So while the Congressional Record used to read, "If you want an abortion you go to Planned Parenthood and that's well over 90 percent of what Planned Parenthood does," it now reads like this:

So! On the one hand, who cares? Obviously, Kyl's remarks will not be going down the memory hole anytime soon. I'm pretty sure that MoveOn will find some way of beaming a YouTube video of Kyl's "not intended to be factual" remarks into space, if they haven't already. On the other hand, you have to laugh at our legislators' need to create an "official history" of the government, lest future generations think our lawmakers were anything other than morally upright individuals who spoke in perfect English grammar.

At any rate, never forget these things: Jon Kyl's original statement, and the tendency of lawmakers to turn any "privilege" they are granted into something they can abuse for their personal gain.

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I missed this when it was reported a couple days ago, but apparently, a few days after Senator Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) stood on the Senate floor and misled America about what proportion of Planned Parenthoo...
I missed this when it was reported a couple days ago, but apparently, a few days after Senator Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) stood on the Senate floor and misled America about what proportion of Planned Parenthoo...
 
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11:43 AM on 4/25/2011
Thank g*d for the Internet. Makes it harder than ever before for Republican­s to rewrite history.

Nothing ever gets truly erased from Cyberspace­.

The Congressio­nal Record may be expunged, but articles like this will live forever.
08:46 AM on 4/24/2011
Does anyone know if expunging,­or kylalizing­, has a statute of limitation­s? If not,would it not be possible for some 10 term Senator on his death bed,to kylalize everything he ever said?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waiting for Something
08:53 AM on 4/24/2011
Kylalize. Great term. Mind if I quote you?

I'd like to kylalize an email I accidental­ly sent to my former boss one time, but I'm not a member of congress so probably can't manage it.

fanned.
08:17 AM on 4/24/2011
Our, so-called - leaders have set themselves up a neat system. If you or I make a stupid statement we must live with it. They just re-write history to suit themselves­. The "Congressi­onal Record" is no more factual and not to be taken serious than any politician­. It's all BS (Bureaucra­tic Statements­)
08:03 AM on 4/24/2011
He might have expunged the official record, but his actual words will live on forever and ever and ever. And that is a factual statement.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aaron Haynes
04:17 AM on 4/24/2011
We have a duty to keep the record of this alive and make sure it never goes away. Our representa­tives shouldn't be able to misinform the public or lie about the facts on the congressio­nal record and then clean up that record later. Keep the meme alive!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ibreathe4u
you call me a heretic like it's a bad thing
02:08 AM on 4/24/2011
That is complete B.S.! Oh well, despite having it striken from the record, it's out there thanks to the internet. JK, next time think before you speak, and try to keep it "factual" please.
12:22 AM on 4/24/2011
Don't stop there, Sen. Kyl. You might as well expunge the rest of the B*!!sh!* you've been entering into the record over the last.... too many years!
11:56 PM on 4/23/2011
Doesn't one need special dispensati­on from the Pope to do this? Did Kyl commit a venial or mortal sin.

Oh how i like messing with the GOPers heads.
11:02 PM on 4/23/2011
Hey Jon Kyl, your original statement has already made it into Texas schools textbooks. Congratula­tions! The book selection board approved it yesterday. Ehh...not intended to be a factual statement.
10:20 PM on 4/23/2011
Too bad Sen Kyl there will always be the internet's to show what you said. Geez.....
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DaveyDavey
Micro-biohazard
09:08 PM on 4/23/2011
Expunging is good. How do we expunge Jon Kyl from Congress. Kyl didn't have to wait til his term was over. How do we do it as quickly as he did?
08:57 PM on 4/23/2011
I am good at math so let me tackle this one:

gop = john kyl = culture of failure
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waiting for Something
08:55 AM on 4/24/2011
A+
07:33 PM on 4/23/2011
So where can a person go to find out what remarks have been stricken from the record? What other fact-less oratory has been nicely tucked away? I can understand if the person was speaking without notes or a prepared document. However if a phrase was meant to be misleading or to provoke some form of anguish from the gathered audience. Then there should by all means be a copy of the actual statements as well as the one contrived by hindsight.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
worldsam
06:28 PM on 4/23/2011
Unfortunat­ely, congressme­n are proving to be worse than car salesmen.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Justdontgetit
08:17 PM on 4/23/2011
Car salesmen all over the world just frowned at you! ;-)
06:18 PM on 4/23/2011
Do we have a C-SPAN recording of when he said it or does he get to "expunge" that too? It would be very useful in the 2012 election ads!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Justdontgetit
08:18 PM on 4/23/2011
Try YouTube. It's there.
08:24 PM on 4/23/2011
Good! I'm sure the DNC can keep a copy for when it's needed.