By The Prowler on 8.1.05 @ 12:10AM
Otherwise he had a great week. Where was the White House? Plus: The Senate's useful idiot.
WHITE HOUSE AWARENESS
Its comments Friday to the contrary, was the White House
blind-sided by Senate Republican leader Bill
Frist's back flip on federal funding for expanded use of
stem cells in medical research?
"There was no consultation, the President and his staff had no
idea this was coming," says a White House source. "We were
shocked."
The White House was indeed angered by Frist's decision, but at
least politically it's almost unimaginable that senior White House
officials wouldn't have known that Frist was re-examining his
position on stem-cell research.
"Everyone knew he was mulling this issue over," says a Senate
staffer to a conservative Republican. "He was talking to a lot of
people, consulting with friends and experts. Now, maybe the White
House believed he would remain firm with them, but if it got caught
flat-footed, that's their problem. Bill Frist wasn't doing anything
out of the ordinary."
The surprise at Frist's speech on the floor of the Senate is yet
another example of a White House operation that often either
misreads or doesn't even bother to try to read the tea leaves on
Capitol Hill. From the bloated Highway Bill to judicial nominations
and high-profile political appointments, the Bush team rarely seems
to anticipate an outcome beyond the one or two options that crossed
the mind of chief of staff Andrew Card.
"For a President who is pretty astute politically this White
House staff doesn't pick up on much," says another Senate staffer.
"Sometimes the writing is on the wall, like the Highway bill. We
all knew we were going to bust the cap the White House tried to put
on the overall cost of the bill. The White House saw it coming, yet
they still talked about a veto, when it was obvious that they
weren't going to be able to put the President in that position.
He's going to have to sign the bill."
Likewise, Frist's decision on stem cells puts the President in a
politically awkward position. Frist has given a decent amount of
cover to other Republicans and Democrats who might have backed a
more Bush-like policy on stem cell research, but who now will most
likely step out with Frist, placing the President in an
increasingly isolated position.
"That the White House can claim they never saw Frist coming on
this is just shocking," says an outside lobbyist with ties to the
White House. "Their short-sightedness has put the President in an
awkward position, and something could have been done over the past
few weeks to avoid this."
Frist's stem-cell speech obscured a week in which his leadership
team pulled off a remarkable run. In a comparatively short amount
of time, Frist was able to clear the decks of just about every
major piece of legislation that lingered in the Senate, moving the
long-awaited highway and energy bills through, as well as the
Central America Free Trade Agreement.
"I don't know that any other leader in the past 15 years has
done what Frist did in the past few weeks," says a longtime Senate
lobbyist. "The amount of legislation they moved was remarkable. It
was like watching a top-flight air traffic controller, just lining
things up and landing them on the tarmac one after the other. For
folks that are political junkies, this was a great few weeks.
Mitchell never did this. Lott never did this. Frist deserves some
credit."
With some of the major bills moved off the floor, the Senate is
expected to return in late August to prepare for the Supreme Court
confirmation hearings of Judge John Roberts, as
well as to take up again major asbestos litigation that has been
lingering in committee for some time. There is also talk of a large
immigration bill taking shape, and a major telecommunications
deregulation bill.
GUANTANAMO JOE
Maybe Sen. Joe Biden has some political sense, but
his staff sure doesn't. Last week, Cuban dictator Fidel
Castro gave a speech commemorating the 52nd anniversary of
the assault on the "Moncada" and "Carlos Manuel de Cespedes"
garrisons during the Marxist revolution. In the speech, which was
largely a typical anti-American screed, Castro pounded away on the
U.S. detention of terrorists in Guantanamo Bay:
"One of Bush's most cynical measures was to use the Guantanamo
naval base, which the United States occupies illegally against our
people's will, to set up a concentration camp where he locks up,
without trial or any kind of legal process, those whom he kidnaps
anywhere in the world. And to top it all, that prison was turned
into an experimental center of torture, the same as those later
applied in the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq."
Later, Castro cited Biden to buttress his argument: "Democratic
senator Joseph Biden, of the Foreign Relations Committee, said that
the Guantanamo naval base had become the 'greatest propaganda tool
that exists for recruiting of terrorists around the world.'"
No sooner was Castro's speech available online than Democratic
Foreign Relations committee staffers were emailing it around,
seemingly proud that Biden was being taken seriously as a world
leader.
"These are the same people who think John
Bolton is a problem, and they think a Biden mention by
Castro is a good thing," says a Republican staffer on the
committee. "That's all you need to know."
topics:
Trade, Joe Biden, Supreme Court, Iraq, NATO, Immigration, Energy