By The Prowler on 6.18.02 @ 12:04AM
Tom Daschle plays nice. J.C. Watts gets huffy. John Edwards is corn prone.
BIG DEAL
It appears that Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle
has reached some sort of agreement with the White House on
political appointments confirmable by his side of Congress. Some
appointees who had been awaiting confirmation hearings have been
told they won't need hearings because their names will be sent
directly to the full Senate for a vote before the July 4th
recess.
"We're not talking judges here," says a White House legislative
affairs staffer. "But we are talking about 40 or so appointments
that have been held up for more than six months."
No word on what broke the stalemate, although the president's
seeming unwillingness to veto the bloated anti-terrorism
legislation that was recently plopped on his desk might be an
indication of what was part of the deal.
WATTS WRONG?
Oklahoma Rep. J.C. Watts, chafing at what appears
to be a dead-end leadership post as head of the House Republican
Conference, is breaking ranks and annoying his leadership
colleagues. Last week, as both House Republicans and Democrats
pledged to meet a September 11 deadline to pass Department of
Homeland Security legislation, Watts weighed in and said that would
be impossible. "It's not going to happen," he declared. Immediately
he was called on the carpet by Republican leaders Dennis
Hastert and Tom DeLay.
"He's spent the last two years doing nothing but faxing off
quotable quotes to the press from the Republican Conference,
pissing away what influence he has, and then he says something
stupid like that," says a House Republican. "He should be in hot
water with the leadership."
Watts is probably feeling frustrated and showing it. He was once
hopeful of moving up the leadership totem pole after the 2002
midterm elections, perhaps to the Whip post. But in the time he's
spent as head of the Republican Conference, Watts has failed to
build any kind of political base, and now finds himself out in the
cold.
When DeLay becomes Republican leader next January, his successor
as Whip will be Missouri Rep. Roy Blunt, a White
House favorite and a rising star in the House. An eager backer of
George W. Bush's candidacy, Blunt was appointed to a deputy whip
position by DeLay. He's won plaudits for his backroom political
skills.
"I know J.C. is frustrated," says a longtime Watts adviser in
the House. "He's been trying to find his way in the leadership. But
if he'd wanted to move up, he should have positioned himself in the
middle of the day-to-day politics of the House. He didn't want
that, and instead focused on the big picture. Now I don't think he
knows what he wants."
By "big picture" the adviser presumably means keeping the House
caucus on message and motivated. But on that score Watts hasn't
earned high marks either. He's been criticized for not holding more
meetings with lobbyists with business before the House, and for not
touting the legislative success of the Republican majority. "Why
should he?" counters the adviser. "There are more than enough press
secretaries up here who can do that."
Watts appears to be so frustrated that there is talk he may walk
away from his House seat after the 2002 election, perhaps returning
to Oklahoma or taking a job in the Bush administration.
"I think it's sad that Watts has reached this point," says
another House Republican member. "[Outgoing Majority Leader]
Dick Armey and DeLay deserve much of the blame if
we lose Watts. Perhaps he was miscast in the leadership, but good
leadership is identifying talent and using it appropriately, and
they haven't used Watts appropriately."
HAWKEYE JOHN
After spending the weekend in Iowa at its state Democratic
convention, North Carolina Sen. John Edwards feels
pretty confident he can run and win Iowa's Democratic caucus. "This
is probably the third or fourth visit for him, and he feels more
and more comfortable there," says an Edwards adviser.
Edwards is certainly learning what matters. During his speech he
stressed continued financial support for ethanol to much applause
from the true believers in the audience. Edwards's presence in
Iowa, and his frequent visits, would indicate that he's focusing on
that state's caucus as his presidential candidacy's ground zero.
Edwards's campaign invested in a complete Iowa Democratic Party
mailing list several months ago and is working hard to set up a
grassroots program instate.
"Kerry and Gore will probably be battling it out hard in New
Hampshire, and Kerry, coming from Massachusetts, probably has a
better hold on that state than we would," says the Edwards adviser.
"We'll make a good showing there, but Iowa is where we can make a
stand."
Edwards, meanwhile, is reconfiguring his Washington staff, with
a Clintonian accent. He recently named former Clinton
administration staffer Miles Lackey as his chief
of staff. He replaces Jeff Lane, who had served in
the post for almost two years and reportedly has taken paternity
leave. Lackey ran the legislative affairs office for Sandy
Berger and the National Security Council, and Edwards
hopes he will help him burnish his foreign policy credentials
leading into the campaign.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Business