By The Prowler on 6.27.02 @ 12:04AM
Rep. Cynthia McKinney received some very bad news this week. Also, Sen. John McCain fights Tom Daschle's latest battle against Republicans.
SOUNDING THE ALARM
If they had them, alarm bells would be going off right now in the
offices of the Congressional Black Caucus. This, after the stunning
defeat on Tuesday of five-term Rep. Earl Hilliard,
who after his 7th District in Alabama was redrawn found himself
challenged in the Democratic primary by moderate Artur
Davis.
The Alabama 7th was a heated race. Both men are African-American
and had bases in the black community. But Davis was able to raise
money in the white community, as well, particularly among Jewish
voters. It was this Jewish support for Davis that made some of the
ugly headlines for Hilliard, who criticized his opponent's source
of financial backing. In the end, Davis beat Hilliard soundly, 56%
to 44%.
And that has the Black Caucus nervous, because another of its
members, Cynthia McKinney, she of the "George W.
Bush knew of September 11th attacks beforehand, but didn't do
anything so his friends could make money off the tragedy"
conspiracy theory, is facing a tough August 20 primary vote against
an opponent who is virtually identical to Davis.
"I think if the election is held today, Cynthia wins because
she's the incumbent," says a member of the Caucus, who asked not be
named. "Two months from now? I don't know. Cynthia's got herself a
bit of a fight."
This is the first time in six years that McKinney has faced a
primary challenge, and it's the first time a black female Democrat
has run against her in the DeKalb County, Georgia district. The
challenger is Denise Majette, a former DeKalb
County State Court judge, who is considered a moderate.
What has the Black Caucus upset is that the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee refused to step into the Georgia
race to dissuade Majette from running. "The campaign committee
didn't do it for Rep. Hilliard, we weren't going to do it for Rep.
McKinney," says a House campaign committee staffer. "We try not to
get into the middle of these kinds of things."
"If this was Dick Gephardt facing a primary
challenge, you damn well know the party would be doing something,"
said the Black Caucus member. "If this was Nancy
Pelosi, they'd be doing something."
And, in fact, the Democrats have been taking sides in the
McKinney-Majette race, but not in the way the Black Caucus would
like. Very quietly, Democratic House leader Dick Gephardt has
steered some Democratic donor money toward Majette's campaign,
while cutting McKinney a check from his own leadership PAC. Similar
back door assistance for Majette has also come from Rep.
Martin Frost of Texas.
Majette has been officially in the race for less than a week,
but already she's gaining attention from the same kinds of voters
who flocked to support Davis in Alabama: white, Jewish, moderate to
liberal Democrats.
Meanwhile, McKinney has made a career of coddling Yassir
Arafat, the Palestinians, and Islamic extremist groups in
the U.S. and abroad, and it has paid off. The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution recently
reported that "a full third" of McKinney's campaign donations
come from Arab-Americans and Islamic or Muslim groups.
McKinney has labeled Majette a "Republican," her code word for
someone with white support. But that's a similar line Hilliard used
against Artur Davis in Alabama. McKinney will have to do a lot
better in coming weeks if she wants to hold on to her current
job.
ANOTHER POISON LETTER
Karl Rove just about went through the West Wing
roof after seeing a copy of the letter Sen. John
McCain sent to Senate leaders Trent Lott and Tom
Daschle earlier this week. McCain's letter promised to
block confirmation of all Bush administration nominations unless
Ellen Weintraub gets confirmed for a seat on the
Federal Election Commission by early August.
"In light of recent actions by the FEC to undermine the
bipartisan campaign finance reform act, it is critical that Ellen
Weintraub, who has been recommended for a seat on the commission,
be appointed as soon as possible," McCain wrote. The Bush
administration has stated that Weintraub is in line to fill a
Democrat seat on the election commission (split between three GOP
and three Democratic members). She was expected to replace Democrat
Karl Sandstrom. Weintraub is liberal campaign
warrior. She's worked as a lawyer for the Democratic National
Committee, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. McCain has backed her
nomination because of her support for his McCain-Feingold campaign
finance reform legislation.
According to a White House source who operates on Capitol Hill,
McCain has been pestering the White House about the Weintraub
nomination for weeks. The pestering turned to outright petulance
last week when Sandstrom voted with the Republican members of the
FEC to allow soft money to flow more readily to state party
coffers.
"He's watching his hallmark piece of legislation get butchered
by the FEC and now he's pissed," says the White House source.
But what really angered Rove was that McCain had once again gone
off the reservation and leaked the letter to the media before
talking to anyone in the White House about it.
McCain's letter comes just as Rove is finishing a deal with
Daschle on a series of nominations the White House has seen held up
by Democrats for months.
"It's just like McCain to do this at the 11th hour, when we're
so close to getting something done," says a Senate leadership
staffer, who added the McCain had never raised his concerns with
Republican leaders. "He hadn't mentioned anything about bottling
things up, no threat, no discussion, no nothing. Just a
letter."
topics:
Islam, Constitution, Law, NATO, Africa