By The Prowler on 2.27.02 @ 1:43AM
Mitt Romney wants to serve. George Pataki has even bigger plans. Then there's Bill Clinton ...
BIG MITT
While President Bush was in Salt Lake City opening the winter
Olympics, the lead organizer of the event, Mitt
Romney, who ran a failed Senate bid in Massachusetts
against Ted Kennedy, spoke to the president about
his continued hope to serve in Washington. Bush is said to have
expressed a desire to help him make that move.
Romney would especially like to mount a challenge for a Senate
seat in Utah, something the Republican National Committee has
indicated it would support.
The problem: both Utah senators are Republicans and neither has
shown an interest in retiring or moving on. Robert
Bennett is up for re-election in 2004. Orrin
Hatch is up in 2006. "We'd like Bennett to take a powder,"
says an RNC policy staffer. "He's almost 70 and there is probably
something in the administration for him if he left. I know the
White House has spoken to [Utah Gov.] Mike Leavitt
about the situation. Leavitt has indicated he'd be open to
nominating Romney should an opening occur."
Hatch has long aspired to serve on the Supreme Court, but that
likelihood has diminished over the years. Even if Republicans won
back the Senate, it's doubtful Hatch would be Bush's first choice.
"Bennett is the more likely of the two to ease out," says a Senate
staffer on the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee. "We
wouldn't stand in the way of that forced retirement."
The White House would like Romney to get one of those seats.
He's younger, telegenic, and considered a rising star in Republican
circles for his fund-raising ability.
Getting Bennett to retire might also be predicated on getting a
new Senate GOP leader. Current leader Trent Lott
has thus far been loath to pressure colleagues into early
retirement, even it might help the party's fortunes.
THE ALBANY SYNDROME
Remember how we wrote some weeks
ago about New York Gov. George Pataki's not
wanting to be governor anymore? About his not wanting to run for
re-election, but being forced to because former New York Mayor
Rudy Giuliani wouldn't run in his place? About how
Pataki badly wanted a job in the Bush administration?
Well, he's really setting his sights high now: "He expects that
Vice President Cheney won't be running again in 2004 and he's ready
to run in his place," says a Pataki political adviser.
Some of Pataki's confidantes were stunned by the admission,
which came after a reporter inquired about whether Pataki would
commit to serve a full four-year term again. "He said, if the right
offer came along -- and that could only be vice president -- he'd
have to take it," says the consultant. "We were all surprised by
the certainty in his voice. He really thinks this is coming down
the pike."
BILL HAS ISSUES
Feeling burned by constant reminders that he has little to show for
his eight years of foreign policy efforts (not to mention an
economy that didn't tank until the end of his administration),
former President Bill Clinton is pushing his New
York-based staff to begin putting together "Issue Papers." The
reports, which eventually may be published either out of his
presidential offices in Harlem or out of his library, are intended,
says a former presidential staffer, to reflect reality as Clinton
saw it and sees it. "He isn't going to have a book out for some
time, and he feels the media and especially Republicans have erased
or painted over all of the hard work we did on behalf of the
country," says the former aide. "It may not look like we did much
now, but he really believes he made a huge difference in the world,
for America and our friends everywhere."
Clinton apparently hopes the papers, which initially will be
distributed to friends, former aides, and senior Democratic
officials and pols, will also serve as not-so-gentle nudges to
Democrats to defend Clinton and the record he and his party
compiled between 1993 and 2001.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Bill Clinton, Supreme Court, NATO