By The Prowler on 4.28.04 @ 9:53AM
An important Catholic gathering in Washington. Plus: Kerry’s sunny wrinkle-free Sunday. Also: Veep for hire.
SPURNING BREAKFAST
The White House spurned one of the largest gatherings of Roman
Catholics in Washington this morning, out of concern that the
gathering would be too Washington-centric, according to someone
familiar with the Bush Administration's Catholic outreach
program.
Instead of having him drop by the first ever National Catholic
Prayer Breakfast on Wednesday morning, the President's advisers
kept him at home. The prayer breakfast, which was to feature a
rosary, Mass, and a speech by Avery Cardinal
Dulles, sold more than 900 tickets in less than a
month.
The event, including the Mass, was held at the Mayflower Hotel
in downtown Washington, a block from St. Matthew's Cathedral.
Washington's Theodore Cardinal McCarrick, who ten
days ago met privately with Sen. John Kerry, would
not allow organizers to use the cathedral out of concern that the
event would be too "conservative," according to a source inside the
Washington Diocese.
Sen. Kerry's presidential campaign had attempted to get Kerry
invited, but organizers did not extend an invitation.
The breakfast was organized by a nonprofit group, set up, in
part, by Domino's Pizza founder Tom Monaghan.
"This is the first year the event was held, and there was some
concern about committing the President to an event that didn't have
a track record of success," says a White House insider. "The
decision to decline the invitation had nothing to do with politics.
We understand that Catholics are a critical part of the Republican
base. Maybe we got bad advice."
That's not the way many Catholics see it. Instead, there
continue to be rumblings that the White House and its Catholic
surrogates fail to reach out in even small ways to Roman Catholic
groups.
"You look at states like Ohio and Pennsylvania," says a longtime
Catholic activist in Washington, "and you wonder, who is speaking
to the Irish Catholic, the Italian Catholic, the ethnic Catholic?
It sure isn't this White House and it sure isn't the people they
have trying to do Catholic outreach."
Word in some Catholic circles is that in-fighting among those
who direct Catholic outreach for Republicans may have doomed what
could have been a high profile appearance for the President among
Catholics just blocks away from the White House. Instead, the
President is slated to speak at the national convention for the
Knights of Columbus.
"Why can't the President do two Catholic events in the same
year?" wonders the Catholic activist.
WRINKLE PROOF
Sen. John Kerry spent more than $1,000 to get his
hair trimmed for his recent Meet the Press appearance. And
he had a lot more done, as well. According to several plastic
surgeons who looked at pictures of Kerry's appearance on the news
show, all agreed that Kerry had again had a round of botox
injections, as well as some tanning treatment to give his skin
color.
"First of all, the tan was gone within 36 hours of his
appearance, so that's an easy one," says the Chevy Chase, Md.,
physician. "The botox thing is harder, but the way the wrinkles
play out on his forehead is very different from the way they were
moving and developing just several days before. His skin definitely
looked tauter around the eyes and forehead."
Kerry has insisted that he had never had a botox treatment,
going so far as to say that he didn't even know what botox was.
"We got him out in the sun the day before he did the Russert
show. There was no phony tan, no botox," says a Kerry adviser in
Washington. "Even if he did, there is nothing wrong with currying
favor with the metrosexual vote."
RENDELLED SPEECHLESS
Word in Pennsylvania is that Gov. Ed Rendell is
angling for the vice-presidential job with Sen. John
Kerry. Pennsylvania is considered a critical state for
Kerry and for Republicans. Rendell was elected governor in 2002.
"He's extremely ambitious and wants a shot," says a Pennsylvania
insider. "He sees some of the other governors being considered and
wonders why he isn't being considered."