By The Prowler on 2.14.02 @ 12:05AM
Plus: Pulling the rug out from under the Clintons. Also: Another CNN cancellation.
ONCE THERE WAS GREENFIELD
Forget the maybes, CNN has canceled Jeff
Greenfield's show. In fact, according to one CNN ad sales
staffer in Atlanta, word of the show's cancellation came in early
February. "It was getting hammered by Fox News. Focus groups hated
it," says the ad salesman. "But Greenfield isn't going anywhere.
[CNN Chairman Walter] Isaacson loves him."
Greenfield's loss is Connie Chung's gain. With
less promo time required for her former ABC News colleague, it
means CNN's promotional efforts can center on Chung.
A RIDGE TOO FAR
Homeland Security chief Tom Ridge is lobbying hard
for a new job in the Bush administration in the wake of a plan by
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to have a
senior military official, perhaps as high ranking as a four-star
general, oversee facets of security across the United States. "If
the Pentagon wants the job, fine," says a Homeland Security
staffer. "But don't cut out the legs from under Ridge five months
into his job. If he's bascially going to be a figurehead, he'd
prefer to have a more substantive job."
Ridge finds himself in a tight spot. Despite very public and
vocal support from President Bush, Ridge has received little
cooperation from other administration leaders, such as Treasury
Secretary Paul O'Neill, Attorney General
John Ashcroft and Transportation Secretary
Norman Mineta. "They blow him off," says the
Homeland aide. "Ridge feels like he's just spinning his
wheels."
In fact, one rumor floating about the 7th Street offices of the
Department of Transportation has Ridge lobbying Bush for Mineta's
job. "That's a slot Ridge had lobbied for right after the
election," says an assistant undersecretary at transportation. "I
wouldn't be surprised to see him land here. Mineta hasn't wowed the
White House with his performance."
GIFTS THAT KEEP ON GIVING
The House Government Reform subcommittee on energy policy, natural
resources and regulatory affairs released a report Tuesday that
further detailed the gifts the Clintons walked away with on leaving
the White House in January 2001. Perhaps not surprisingly, the
Clintons had nothing to say to the subcommittee. In fact, their
designated representative on the matter, Bruce
Lindsey, didn't even bother to submit written testimony
during hearings. The year-long investigation by the subcommittee,
which is chaired by California Republican Doug
Ose, revealed for instance that President Clinton walked
off with more than $25,000 worth of golfing equipment, much of
which his staff failed to detail in ethics filings.
As well, despite the Clintons' insistence that the gift registry
set up by Hillary for silver and place settings was done by
"friends," the investigation determined that because the Omaha,
Nebraska registry required a secure password and personal e-mail
address for the registry recipients, the Clintons, or a Clinton
aide, would have had to provide the eleven donors of the gifts with
the password and e-mail.
"This wasn't some kind of nice surprise for the Clintons moving
into a new home," says one of the committee investigators. "This
was the Clintons or one of their agents setting up the account,
making the 'wish list' and then forwarding the list, the password
and the e-mail address to those eleven people. It was solicitation
plain and simple and that is breaking the ethics rules."
Aside from the solicitation, the committee also determined that
a number of valuable gifts have gone missing. "Perhaps the Clintons
gave these things to staffers as gifts of gratitude for service,"
says the investigator. "But we also believe that many of the
missing items could be found in the Clinton residences in
Washington and New York."
There are anecdotal reports, for example, that a Pakistani rug
valued by the Clintons at $1,200, but more likely worth more than
$5,000, is sitting on the floor of a room in the Clintons' home in
Northwest Washington. "At this point, it doesn't matter. This
report was meant to buttress reform legislation," says a
congressman on the subcommittee. "It wasn't a hunt for dirt, just
to make a point that gift-giving and gift-taking is a problem in
the executive branch that has to be fixed."
topics:
Transportation, Military, Pakistan, Energy