By The Prowler on 3.8.02 @ 12:04AM
Al's Close Call; Democrats poop out on the stimulus. Plus: What's gotten into Peter Fitzgerald? Also: Katherine remains great.
THAT WAS A CLOSE ONE
Al Gore was "surprised," says one aide, when the
former vice president was contacted by media outlets for a comment
on the final report filed by the Office of the Independent
Counsel's Robert Ray in the Monica Lewinsky
investigation.
"When he first heard the questions he thought there was another
investigation opening up and he just rolled his eyes. Like maybe
Clinton had done something else," says the adviser. "Then he seemed
to realize it was the same old stuff and just brushed it off."
Always good to see Al prepared to expect the worst -- he is
crisis ready.
TOM vs. DICK
In a morning conference call yesterday Senate Democrats debated
whether to support the revised economic stimulus package the Joint
House/Senate Tax Committee had approved, and which House Democrats
said they would now support. "The package is basically to renew
unemployment benefits that are due to expire," says a Democratic
staffer for a western senator. "Senator Daschle seemed to believe
it might be a good thing to let the benefits expire, and then blame
the Bush administration for cutting off the funds to people who
lost their jobs after 9/11. It was all in the context of what could
we do politically to hurt Bush."
It wasn't just majority leader Tom Daschle.
Other senators taking part in the meeting openly discussed the
long-term political advantages of killing the tax legislation in
the Senate, with the hope that any short-term damage could be spun
onto the Republicans.
In its original form, the Bush stimulus package included
corporate alternative minimum tax cuts, a new timeline that would
have sped up tax cuts from last year's $1.3 trillion tax cut. Those
measures are no longer part of the negotiated package. Instead, the
administration and House Republicans put together a $42 billion
deal that extends unemployment benefits, lets businesses write off
purchases of computers and other equipment faster, and provides
economic aid for New York.
In the end, though, Daschle was forced to go public and support
the legislation, in part, because House Democrats had already
announced their general support for the measure. "[Minority
Leader]Dick Gephardt took the initiative before
talking to the Senate," says a House Democratic leadership staffer.
"I think you'll be seeing Gephardt do a lot of that. "
That's because both Gephardt and Daschle are both looking to
seek the Democratic presidential nomination. "What might be good
for the party or might be good for Daschle might not be good for
Gephardt," says the Senate Democratic staffer. "They are going to
be jockeying each other for the next 18 months."
ANTI-ENRON RUNNER AND GUNNER
Concerned that Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. is
positioning himself for a Senate run against him in 2004,
Republican Illinois Sen. Peter Fitzgerald has
decided to move left in order to discourage any such move.
Fitzgerald, it will be recalled, spent $7 million of his own money
to upset Carol Moseley-Braun in 1998. Labeled a
conservative, Fitzgerald hasn't been as dependable for
conservatives as one might think and, according to a staff member,
Fitzgerald is concerned the conservative label will hurt his coming
re-election bid. "That's why you see him laying into the Enron
people the way he does," says the staffer, who didn't add that
Fitzgerald is one of the few Republicans openly opposed to new oil
drilling in Alaska. "He's looking to break from the conservative
label and make his own way. He's really concerned about Jesse,
Jr."
Fitzgerald's seat would be a natural target for Jackson, who's
been talking up a run for the Senate and perhaps the White House
further down the road. Illinois's other senator, Democrat
Dick Durbin, is running for a second term this
year. "Senator Fitzgerald has two years to re-create himself and
ensure re-election," says the staffer. "That means running to the
left on just about everything but budget stuff. He'll tick off Lott
and other Republicans, but it's just something he has to do."
KATHERINE THE GREATEST
Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris is
fundraising all over the country for her upcoming House run, and,
no surprise, she'll be in Washington later this month for a
fundraiser that the Harris campaign hopes will net more than
$100,000. Those funds most likely will never have spent on Harris's
own well-funded election bid. Instead, they will be spread around
Florida and the country to other candidates in greater need.
Already, there is talk in California of Harris and gubernatorial
candidate Bill Simon, Jr. holding a joint
fundraiser in the conservative-rich San Diego area.
topics:
Business, NATO, Alaska, Oil