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Going After McCain

So why is the White House upset? PLUS: Bill Clinton involves himself in Bill Richardson's North Korea meetings.

(Page 2 of 2)

Currently, McCain is threatening to lead a revolt of GOP Senators against the Bush team's economic stimulus package, and has also told associates that he will again move to block new Bush nominations.

The Bush team has failed at almost every turn to deal with McCain in a manner that would ensure at least his receptivity to the Bush agenda. Most onlookers say the FEC shenanigans came on the recommendation of Lott. "He said he could handle McCain," says the White House staffer. "Looking back, we shouldn't have put so much faith in that."

Gee, ya think?

While it's easy to blame Lott for some of the problems with McCain, not to mention McCain himself, that doesn't absolve the Bushies for their central role in the McCain mess. The two camps have been acting like Hatfields and McCoys ever since McCain became a thorn in Bush and Karl Rove's side during the 2000 presidential primary season. Perhaps out of sheer spite, the two sides have failed to get together on just about everything.

Lost in this feuding is that Moore and the Club for Growth are absolutely right to look for a better alternative to McCain, whose voting record is hardly as reliably Reagnanesque as once it was. "He's a hero, but heroes don't always make the best politicians, or the most reliable," says a conservative political consultant. "McCain's been talking off and on of late about retiring, so it's not a bad thing that Moore is at least looking to position a strong candidate. I'd take some of his picks over some of Rove's any day."

Moore isn't stopping at McCain. He's also looking to find someone to mount a primary challenge to Pennsylvania's Sen. Arlen Specter, who is already facing unrest among conservatives in the state GOP. Now if Moore could find a reliable candidate to run for the Senate in California, supply-siders would really be in business.

p> THE TWO BILLS COME DUE br> Former President Bill Clinton has been in almost nonstop contact with New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson since envoys from North Korea began sitting down with Richardson late last week to discuss the crisis between the U.S. and the rogue nation. /p>

Richardson has said that the North Koreans came to him because they could not get meetings with Bush Administration officials. Richardson, to his credit, while keeping Clinton up to date on his meetings, has also been passing along information to the State Department and the National Security Council.

Richardson was not asked by the Bush Administration to cancel his meetings with the North Korean contingent, most of whom are attached to the country's U.N. delegation. But Richardson also did not seek White House approval for the meetings, either. By the time Richardson spoke with State Department and White House officials, the meetings were already on track.

"You know that Clinton is going to step into this, if for no other reason than to try to salvage his administration's reputation on how they handled North Korea in 1994," says a Republican staffer on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "He's going to muck this up, he can't help himself."

Page:   12

topics:
John McCain, Bill Clinton, Business, NATO, North Korea

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