For Dick Morris, behind every health care vote lurks a conspiracy theory

If you were to believe Dick Morris (and his track record clearly indicates you'd be better off if you didn't) every time someone voted for the health care bill in Congress, they did so as a result of some sort of bribe from the Obama administration. Here's Morris on tonight's edition of Hannity:

Morris claims that the White House favored incumbent Colorado Senator Michael Bennet over his challenger within the Democratic Party, former Colorado House Speaker Andrew Romanoff, because Bennet had Obama “buy his vote” on health care reform. Morris (as usual) doesn't cite any sort of evidence to support his very serious accusation. The only case he makes is that, for some unspecified reason, Romanoff “would be a stronger candidate,” and thus there must have been some reason for the Obama administration to act against their own purported best interest by supporting Bennet.

This isn't the first time Morris has made this type of accusation. In March, Morris claimed that the brother of Rep. Scott Matheson had been appointed a judge in exchange for his health care vote, which might have made sense except that Matheson ended up voting against the bill, while a Bush-appointed judge debunked the appointment side of the story.

Morris went to the well again, when he claimed that the ethics investigation into Rep. Eric Massa was some form of retaliation against Massa since he didn't vote for the health care bill. The Washington Post later reported that Massa was being investigated for allegedly groping staffers.

Based on that track record, there's clearly no reason to believe that Morris is any closer to the truth with his most recent allegation. In fact, you would be far better off not trusting a thing Dick Morris says.