By The Prowler on 6.6.03 @ 12:04AM
Democrats hold Bush friend for ransom. Also: Democrat beggars at the Omni Shoreham. Plus: Comeback McKinney.
RANSOM DEMOCRATS
Democrats in the Senate aren't just filibustering President Bush's
judicial nominees. They're also blocking a number of his political
nominations.
Perhaps the biggest head-scratcher is the hold up on Office of
Management and Budget deputy director-designate Clay
Johnson.
Johnson, who has been friends with President Bush since college,
was put up for nomination several months ago. At that time, Sen.
Robert Byrd placed a hold on the nomination,
citing Clay's allegedly testy relationship with organized
labor.
"Byrd is a slave to the unions, and would do just about anything
for them," says a Senate Republican leadership staffer.
Earlier this week Byrd surrendered his hold and for a few hours
it appeared that Johnson might actually receive a fair hearing,
perhaps even a vote in committee. But no sooner did Bobby Byrd
relent than Sen. Patty Murray of Washington
stepped in to place a hold on the nomination. The reason? Demands
that the Department of Homeland Security pony up $58 million to
help pay for port security in Murray's home state.
"It may be that Byrd had real issues with Johnson, because of
the way he tried to outsource government work to private firms,"
says the Senate leadership staffer, referring to Johnson's previous
job as White House presidential personnel director. But the Murray
hold makes little sense beyond the notion, held by some White House
staffers and Republicans on the Hill, that Murray is simply trying
to hold a Bush associate for ransom.
"This appears to be a new Democrat approach to dealing with us,"
said a White House staffer who does some work on the Hill. "If they
think they can hold every Bush nominee hostage and get what they
want, then they're wrong about this president. It's been more than
two years and they still don't know how this guy ticks."
Republicans in the Senate are still discussing ways to move the
nominations that have lain fallow in committees, both judicial and
political. In all, more than 70 nominations are being delayed by
Democratic obstructionists.
HOWIE DOODIES
You'd think, with key Democratic presidential hopefuls showing up
at Omni Shoreham Hotel over the last couple of days, that the
Democratic Leadership Council was meeting there. But Sen.
John Edwards, Sen. John Kerry,
and Rep. Dick Gephardt came by for an entirely
different reason: to pay respects to the far left Campaign for
America's Future. It amounted to what EMILY's List organizers,
founders and worker bees called an "audition" to see which Democrat
could best beg for their progressive support. "This is a group
that's made for Howie Dean," said a Republican
lobbyist.
But given the amount of money progressive groups like EMILY's
List have paid out in the past, and given the dearth of big money
donations thus far in the campaign, so-called moderate or DLC types
like Edwards, Kerry and Gephardt have had to come begging.
One candidate who might be wasting her time at the Campaign for
America's Future is former ambassador Carol Moseley
Braun, who is telling people that she will probably bypass
campaigning in New Hampshire and is already telling some donors
that her campaign will be kaput by September.
COMEBACK McKINNEY
Carol Moseley Braun may be going nowhere, but
another woman, former Rep. Cynthia McKinney, is
mulling a presidential bid. One of her former staffers is a leader
in Georgia for the Green Party, and McKinney's name has been
mentioned prominently as an alternative candidate for that party's
nomination should Ralph Nader choose not run
again.
But McKinney, who last year failed to win her party's
renomination for the House in a Georgia district expressly created
for her, isn't counting her presidential eggs before they hatch.
She has already begun filing papers to run again for the House from
her old district in 2004.
topics:
Unions