By The Prowler on 3.12.02 @ 12:06AM
Paul O'Neill's run-in with the Speaker. Also: Clinton evades the Gladiator.
NOW WHAT?
Treasury secretary Paul O'Neill didn't have to
resign over the Bush administration's decision on steel tariffs: he
won as many points as he lost in that fight. But insiders are
wondering if keeping O'Neill around will be worth the trouble.
White House staffers complain that O'Neill is a wildcard and not a
team player.
Take, for example, his remarks last week in Kuwait, where he
told reporters that "It seems quite clear now that our economy
maybe never suffered a recession." This while his boss, President
Bush, was on the stump in the Midwest touting the administration's
seeming victory over the recession.
What's more, O'Neill is said to have gotten into an ugly
shouting match with House Speaker Dennis Hastert
and his advisers during a Capitol Hill meeting in which O'Neill was
lobbying Hastert on raising the federal debt limit.
According to one knowledgeable House leadership source, who
spoke with Hastert after the meeting, O'Neill grew increasingly
agitated when the Hastert seemed hesitant about raising the limit.
Hastert's concerns are the result of infighting inside the House
leadership. He would be willing to raise the debt limit as long as
the legislation for that increase stood alone, with no add-ons. But
House whip Tom DeLay wants to attach several
conservative-friendly amendments to any debt limit increase. "The
only way the House can pass it is if there are some tax cut
measures included to make the debt extension more palatable to
conservatives," says the House leadership source.
O'Neill seemed not to care about Hastert's situation, and the
conversation between the two men grew angry, to the point where
Hastert is said to have asked O'Neill and his advisers to leave.
Cooler heads prevailed, and the meeting ended peacefully. But the
White House received a call from Hastert about the meeting
immediately following its conclusion.
"Hastert was [angry]. Really mad. He wanted O'Neill's head. I
think everyone was taken aback at how angry he was," says the Hill
source. "Meetings like this happen, not a lot, but enough that it's
usually not a huge deal. This one was. O'Neill just rubbed him the
wrong way."
"O'Neill is going to come back to haunt us," the Hill sources
adds. "We know it, and there is nothing we can do about it now.
It's his behavior that has us worried, though. If he's going to act
this erratic, it only adds to the concerns the White House has
about his ability to work with us down the road. The president may
have to be proactive about this."
A BEAUTIFUL MIND IS A TERRIBLE THING TO DIS
Given that the last guy (a TV producer) who snubbed Russell
Crowe ended up getting pushed up against a wall,
Bill Clinton is asking for trouble. When the
ex-prez was Down Under recently, he set up a dinner with Crowe and
even invited Crowe's parents to come along. But then Clinton pulled
a no-show, an Australian magazine editor based in Sydney tells the
Prowler.
"The cancellation came with no explanation," the editor says.
"That's the kind of behavior that can make Russell Crowe mad."
PARADING THE GREEN
President Bush doesn't party anymore, but that hardly means he
doesn't know how to celebrate. According to a White House
scheduler, the president wants to attend St. Patrick's parades in
New York City and Chicago in the coming days and perhaps an event
closer to home.
topics:
Bill Clinton