By The Prowler on 3.7.05 @ 12:09AM
Hafer hoofed by Rendell. Specter's new ingenue. Plus: Kerry's thin Reid.
HAFER HOOVED
Democrats in Washington and Pennsylvania apparently are putting
winning above pleasing leading financial supporters and ideologues.
Late Thursday, less than a day after announcing she would challenge
Pennsylvania Treasurer Bob Casey, Jr. for the
Democratic Senate nomination, former state treasurer and Allegheny
county commissioner Barbara Hafer pulled out of
the primary race.
Hafer had received political backing from Democratic financial
backers EMILY'S List and the National Organization for Women, and
she was expected to press ahead, at least for a time, despite
warnings from Democratic Senate leaders Harry Reid
and Chuck Schumer. EMILY's List, in fact, had sent
two Washington-based staffers up to Pennsylvania to open a campaign
office for Hafer.
Schumer, according to a source on the Democratic Senatorial
Campaign Committee, placed a call to Pennsylvania Gov. Ed
Rendell early Thursday, and Rendell and Hafer spoke later
in the day. Rendell owes Hafer politically, after she endorsed him
for governor while she was still a Republican. (Hafer switched
parties two years ago.)
According to the DSCC source, Rendell offered Hafer little
beyond a promise that if senior Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen
Specter were to leave office, he would back her as the
replacement. Hafer was angered by the Rendell power play, telling
supporters that he refused to explain why he was backing a
candidate who differed with him on issues critical to the
Democratic Party.
"We have a pro-choice governor backing a pro-life candidate,"
says an EMILY'S List staffer in Washington. "Beyond wanting to win
something for a change, it doesn't make sense, and it certainly
isn't good for the party."
Hafer, according to the DSCC source, had sought to speak to DNC
chairman Howie Dean, but her call went unreturned.
"This was a Senate matter, handled by the Senate leadership," says
a DNC staffer. "This wasn't the kind of thing to get into the
middle of."
Rendell also did the dirty deed for Schumer and Reid with former
Rep. Joe Hoeffel, who lost to Arlen Specter in
2004, and was mulling another Senate run. In the case of Hoeffel
nothing had to be promised, by all accounts, since he had little
support from the state party, and no support from the DSCC.
State polls showed Hafer and Hoeffel losing badly to incumbent
Rick Santorum head to head. Casey has a slight
edge over Santorum, but that lead is thought to be due more to the
heavy polling done around Philadelphia, with lighter response in
the Pittsburgh area where Santorum has his base.
Santorum is already gearing up. Last week he held a high profile
Senate conference on faith-based initiatives that put a spotlight
on an issue in which he has taken a leadership role. That meeting
got wide play in Pennsylvania.
For the Democrats' part, both NOW and EMILY'S list have let
Schumer and Reid know how unhappy they were with Hafer's treatment.
Both men claimed to know nothing about the strong-arm tactics, and
said it was Rendell's decision and a state party matter.
SPECTER'S FRESH DIMPLE
Republicans and conservatives around Washington cheered the hiring
by Sen. Arlen Specter for hiring to the Judiciary
Committee former Justice Department lawyer, Dimple
Gupta. Gupta, a 26-year old graduate of Harvard Law
School, was a leading member of its Federalist Society chapter, and
earned a reputation in conservative legal circles for co-authoring
an article in the Harvard Journal on Law and Public Policy
(not Harvard Law Review, as has been reported elsewhere)
on how Republicans could use Senate parliamentary rules to impose
the so-called "nuclear option" on filibusters.
Gupta, according to Specter and committee spokespeople, is going
to lead the committee's judicial nomination process. But Judiciary
staffers dispute Specter's portrayal. "She was hired to get the
conservatives off our backs," says a Judiciary staffer. "She's
bright, but she's young. She isn't going to be leading
anything."
Specter has been under heavy heat from just about everyone
lately. White House Counsel Harriet Miers has been
pressing Specter to move quickly on the President's renominations
of previously filibustered judicial nominees. Meanwhile, Specter
has been meeting privately with Democratic leaders. Specter
attempted to explain those meetings as negotiations to break the
Democratic threats of future filibusters over judicial nominations.
But Democrats say the meetings were less about negotiating, than
about the liberal Republican chairman briefing Senate leader Harry
Reid on the perceived strategies of conservative Republican
Judiciary Committee members.
"Specter wants this to go away," says a Republican Senate
leadership staffer. "On one side he has the White House and
conservatives making his life miserable. On the other, he has
Democrats putting pressure on him to give them a greater voice in
the process on the committee. He's just up against it."
GOING TO THE MATTRESSES
Much was made of a seeming face-off between Sens. Harry
Reid and John Kerry last week during a
Democratic Senate caucus meeting. Kerry, according to sources at
the luncheon, called out Reid for failing -- in his view -- to move
aggressively against President Bush and Senate Republicans. Kerry
called on a Reid to set up what amounted to a campaign and
opposition research strike force to counter the GOP. Reid shot back
that he had already done that -- three months ago.
Press reports portrayed the exchange as the first noticeable
conflict between the two men who believe they should be running the
Democratic Party. But according to Reid staffers, Kerry has been a
pest to the minority leader ever since the man from Massachusetts
lost the presidential race.
"He has been sending the boss memos and calling him it seems
like all the time. He loves that cell phone," says a Reid staffer
of Kerry. "At some point you have to stop showing this guy
deference and just get back to work. Kerry wasn't interested in any
of this before he started running for president. Now after six
months and losing Senator Reid is just going to roll over and let
this guy get involved in stuff he has no right to be involved in?
No way."
Reid is said to have told advisers that he rues the day he
agreed to sit down with Kerry and House Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi soon after Kerry's election loss.
That photo-op, in which Reid was essentially pushed aside by Kerry,
created a public impression that Kerry was somehow now moving into
legislative and political leadership roles. In fact, the meeting
was nothing but a courtesy to a man whom Reid and Pelosi were
attempting to buck up.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Law, NATO