By The Prowler on 2.13.02 @ 1:17AM
TOM PLAYS DUMB
Concerned that Democrats were being badly left in the dust as poll
numbers indicated that President Bush, if possible, is becoming
even more popular, Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle went on the offensive Monday with media
appearances and interviews criticizing Bush for his "axis of evil"
comments, his plans to extend the war on terror, as well as his
judicial appointments.
"After the Olympic opening, when Daschle and the DNC saw Bush's numbers spike again, Daschle just threw a fit," says a Democratic leadership aide. "They are going negative big time for the next few weeks. They are looking to pick a fight."
Daschle, appearing on PBS's "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer," was asked if the White House had consulted with him about its plans to extend the war on terror. "There have not been any preliminary conversations about this?" Lehrer asked. "There have not, no," Daschle replied.
But in fact, Daschle has received at least three briefings on the matter in the White House, according to several White House aides, including one who was present for one of the briefings. "He was there. Maybe he wasn't paying attention. Given what happened in the wake of the initial attacks in Afghanistan, this White House isn't going to tell a roomful of politicians everything, or anything specific. But Daschle knows damn well where this is going. And he never raised an objection or asked a question."
FUZZY PLANS
While Democrats may be itching to pick a fight, Bush's team is
looking to stay above the fray. Republican staffers in both the
House and Senate were recently briefed by White House political
operatives on plans for the 2002 campaign. "There will be no
politics from the White House, at least not the kind that will
really help us, and that may be a good thing," says one longtime
Senate leadership staffer.
What the White House envisions is a President Bush criss-crossing America, presenting what are termed "innovative" plans to re-organize and energize "a government for the people."
"He's going to run against broader Democratic ideals and leave the candidates to hit harder on local issues," says an RNC advance man. "By staying above the fray, but being really active on the campaign trail, he will make it harder for Democrats to attack him. And because of the kinds of proposals he's going to make, it will be hard for Democratic candidates to criticize Republican candidates."
It all sounds fuzzy, in more ways than one. "That's the way we like it. Keep 'em guessing," says one political consultant involved in the planning. Yes, but it's only supposed to be the opposition that's confused.
ONE LAST TIME
Coming off of another round of treatments for cancer, Sen.
John McCain is said to be mulling retirement and
has discussed the matter, if only in very general terms, with
Senate minority leader Trent Lott, according to
several leadership aides.
McCain, who would be up for re-election in 2004, has pinned hopes on the latest talk of some form of campaign finance reform passing in the Congress. The White House has indicated that such a bill most likely would be signed by the president. "If it was anything close to what he [McCain] wanted, it would be the capper of his political career in the Senate. That might give him the opening he's looking for to move on to something else," says a longtime adviser to the Arizona Republican. "I think he's discussing it with friends and associates."
There, we've done it. Our merger is complete. Now you can read The American Prowler and The American Spectator at the same address, Spectator.org (though TheAmericanProwler.org's previous addresses will remain in force and take you directly to our new location). Some might think we've done this under cover of war, or the Oscars, or even the NCAA playoffs. Not really, since somehow we found time to watch coverage of all three, about which you'll hearing plenty in this space in the coming hours and days. This won't be a "blog," since that's a word that sounds like slop. But at all times of the day there may be occasion to pass along some important tidbit, or truism, or even truth. So good-bye weekly editor's note. Hello to more daily appearances than the time Monica Lewinsky's lawyer hit every Sunday news show on network and cable. Watch this space for more.
******
Meet the Veep (posted 3/17/03)
Last time anything so one-sided filled our screens the loser was
the future Sen. Joe Loserman. This time Tim Russert was the
vanquished one, so stunned in fact he never found a way to make
small talk about St. Patrick's Day. From Baghdad to Paris to
Berkeley, the message was chilling: No one messes with Dick Cheney. Kept in the
deep freeze for months, he was suddenly on center stage, a weapon
of last resort signifying the U.S. means businesses. After what he
said about them the French might as well retreat back to Moscow. A
concerned Russert asked about "a perception" in Europe and around
the world that the U.S. president is a "cowboy." So now America is
supposed to be ashamed of its major contribution to world popular
culture? As a Westerner himself, Cheney could only stifle a smirk.
But you knew he had to be thinking: When did Russert join those
Europeans in being such a yellow-belly?
******
What It's All About (posted 3/10/03)
Funny how those least enthusiastic about what they call "Bush's
war" were also the ones most scathing about the president's failure
to sound "Churchillian" at his practically funereal press
conference last week. The Washington Post's couch potato
in residence, Tom Shales, went to far as to suggest Bush had been
"medicated." He probably would have made the same charge if Bush
had been rhetorically hyper. That's really what it's come down to.
Eighty to ninety percent of the hostility to "war" is nothing more
than unabashed hostility to Republican/conservative Bush. Leading
the way is the media-entertainment culture, almost to the point
that it's ready to cheer for Saddam against Bush. Elected Democrats
are itching to join in, but most feel it's not safe to go as far as
that. Much as they're eager to commit political suicide, they're
still not ready to do so from the tallest building. Somewhere in
the back of their minds they remember Bush's policies were set in
motion by 9/11. But give them time.
******
Yaozers (posted 3/3/03)
It was Yao Ming week in Washington, in honor of the gentlemanly and
charismatic rookie NBA star from Shanghai who played his first game
in the nation's capital last Thursday. The local Post
treated his arrival the way it once might have a visit from Prince
Di, and so the coverage was both silly and sloppy -- all of it
obsessing over barriers Yao was supposedly knocking down for
Asian-American athletes and fans alike. Even the normally sane
Michael Wilbon couldn't keep from joining others in comparing Yao's
impact to Jackie Robinson's. What an insult to all concerned. Black
baseball was formidable well before Robinson joined the majors. He
didn't need to turn black Americans on to the game itself. But he
did have to overcome numerous barriers, at great risk. Yao,
meanwhile, isn't even the first Chinese pro to play in the NBA. Nor
did he have to overcome any NBA or American-imposed limits on Asian
participation. What barriers he's faced are entirely Communist
Chinese, which include a gargantuan lien on his earnings.
Naturally, the Post totally ignored this ugly side of the
story.
******
Meltdown (posted 2/24/03)
Last week the Great Blizzard hit, just as the peace marchers were
breaking all their Vietnam era attendance records. But then the
great meltdown began, hastened this past weekend by heavy rains and
flooding. In the process, the peace marchers were left exposed as
the drips they've been all along, posturing and preening against
king and country for no reason other than that they don't don't
like men surnamed Bush and Ashcroft. Insults have done them no
good, nor more importantly will their efforts to save Saddam amount
to anything. Lucky for them, too! Saddam's days are numbered, but
they'll emerge unscathed. That's what comes of living free and easy
in the West. Until the next time, when again they try to see how
much freedom they can squander.
*****
Wintry Discontent (posted 2/17/03)
Peace marchers are no match for Old Person Winter. The former can
never shut down what the latter managed to this weekend in the
space of several hours, no questions asked. Blizzard conditions in
the Greater Capital Area have required relocation of our quarters
to a custom built igloo (exact location withheld, for security
purposes), out of which, fueled by whale oil, we've produced the
Prowler<//I>'s latest edition. Meanwhile, we continue our
preps for a merger of The American Prowler's and The
American Spectator's websites. Watch this space for further
instructions. And watch out for those peace marchers. You never
know where they may strike next.
We're Number One (posted 2/4/03)
Don't say you forgot our birthday! On February 4 The American
Prowler turned one year old. Not to brag, but we have no
police record. We've not been investigated by the Justice
Department, nor have we been hauled before a grand jury. Now and
then someone from a Democratic campaign committee will complain,
but permanent minority status means no subpoena power. Just to be
in the safe side, though, we intend to rearm. Fairly soon, once the
design is set, The American Prowler will set up shop at an
expanded site that will also provide direct access to our
progenitor, The American Spectator. Nothing like doubling
your pleasure and ours. Thank you for joining us.
To Honor Columbia (posted, 2/3/03)
With every tragedy it gets more difficult. To our nation's credit,
it's wonderful that the basic reaction, despite the great sadness,
is to insist space exploration will continue and that's that.
Everyone knows the risk going in, and those who do go in wouldn't
have it any other way. For our times that's an exceptional
attitude, but will it hold? Or more specifically, will it be
allowed to hold? A disaster every fifty flights or so suddenly
seems unsustainable. If we do go back it will have to be under
entirely different conditions, in which NASA has finally responded
to long-seething dissatisfaction by agreeing to genuine structural
and technological overhauls. For that to happen will above all
require political imagination and leadership from the President and
Congress, so that public support for and loyalty to the space
program can amount to more than a sentimental exercise.
When Words Fail (posted, 1/27/03)
So now that it's out of the way, Saddam won't have the Super Bowl
to hide behind. Given certain attitudes in the West he must be
counting on Valentine's to provide him with his next protective
shield. But then what? Sooner or later he'll be on his own.
Totally. True, the powers that be may not notice. They'll be
renewing their own attacks on a president who they keep accusing of
"rushing" to war. But rushing implies speed, being in a hurry, not
running in place for year. Alas, a mind set on appeasement doesn't
think clearly so it's incapable of presenting an intelligent
critique. It's an old habit. Just the other day the N.Y.
Times ran a wire service obituary of Alan Nunn May, a Brit who
gave away atomic secrets to the USSR. In its headline, the
Times called him a "Pioneer In Atomic Spying for Soviets."
Pioneer? How quaint. Why, if not for Nunn we might have never heard
the Rosenbergs. We owe him big.
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