By The Prowler on 9.9.02 @ 12:42AM
Did the White House think the November elections could save Priscilla Owen? Also: Cheapo Al Gore.
NO WAY OUT ON OWEN
Given that the White House seemingly did everything it could to
clear a confirmation path for Texas Supreme Court justice
Priscilla Owen, there was still some consideration
last week of asking the Senate Judiciary Committee to withdraw her
name in hopes that she could be renominated after the November
elections, according to a Republican Judiciary Committee staffer.
"I don't know how seriously they really thought about it," he says,
"but given that it was obvious Democrats weren't going to let her
pass, it had to be something to ponder."
Just as the Senate was coming back last week from summer break,
Republican Judiciary staffers told the White House they saw no way
that Owen would be approved in committee. This, despite the
"well-qualified" rating she received from the American Bar
Association, something Democrats claim is needed for confirmation
nowadays. "With [Charles]
Pickering, there's a perception here that the
White House didn't do its homework in bringing him up here, but you
can't say that about Owen," says the Republican staffer. "There's
no way she should have been turned away."
The Owen defeat is embarrassing for Bush and his judicial
appointments team. They had received initial indications that
California Democrat Dianne Feinstein was open to
and supportive of the Owen nomination. But Feinstein stood up front
and center last Thursday and shot Owen down.
Any thoughts the White House might have had of temporarily
pulling Owen from consideration would involve a November election
in which Republicans won Senate seats in Missouri, Minnesota, and
New Jersey and held seats in South Carolina and North Carolina.
With those in hand, the White House feels Senate leadership would
return to Republicans, allowing a somewhat easier time for Bush
judicial nominations.
The electoral map is becoming increasingly important on judicial
issues because rumors continue to swirl around Washington that
there will be at least one retirement in the Supreme Court this
fall. "The vote against Owen is bad news for [White House counsel]
Alberto Gonzales," says the Republican staffer
about the man thought to head Bush's list of nominees to the high
court. "His record on the court in Texas is similar in many ways to
hers. How do they lay down a defense of him when the two are so
similar?"
If that's the case, then the Owen nomination debacle is doubly
bad for Gonzales, since it was his dissenting position on a Texas
abortion case that was repeatedly used by Democrats against Owen to
kill her nomination. In that case, Gonzales was said to have called
the Owen ruling "unconscionable."
For their part, Democratic staffers say there is a sense of the
imperative on important Senate committees such as Judiciary and
Foreign Relations to scuttle as much of the Bush agenda as possible
this fall. "If we're going to go to war later this year, there's no
way the Bushies are going to be coming back to us with legislation
and nominations that they want to revisit," one of these staffers
says. "They'll be too busy waging war overseas and they will have
spent almost all their political capital to do that."
PALTRY AL
There was a lot of head scratching in Washington and Tennessee over
news early last week that Al Gore's political
action committee had to withhold salaries from five or six
full-time staffers due to fundraising shortfalls. Gore's
spokespeople went out spinning to the press that in fact Gore had
the money to pay those staffers but that they chose instead to put
off being paid so that their boss could make the necessary
donations to his political allies in important Senate races. But
somehow that story doesn't seem to wash, given the amount of money
being raised and distributed this election cycle.
In all, according to Federal Election Commission filings, Gore
paid out no more than $70,000 in donations, which included the
maximum $5,000 to Senate candidates in Texas, Maine, New Hampshire,
and Washington state and to other candidates in Iowa and South
Carolina.
Given the talk of Gore's supposed prodigious fundraising ability
and access to highpowered donors, $70,000 seems a paltry figure
when compared to the money senators like Hillary
Clinton and Tom Daschle have been
throwing around the country.
Just as surprising as the small amount Gore has distributed was
the seeming high overhead his PAC appears to carry. This quarter's
FEC filings included a number of rental car, limo and hotel
payments as well as underwriting for his political retreat in
Memphis earlier this year.
topics:
Abortion, Supreme Court, NATO