GENERAL POLITICS
The views expressed by retired military leaders Maj. Gen.
John Batiste, Maj. Gen. John
Riggs, Gen. Anthony Zinni, Maj. Gen.
Charles Swannack, Maj. Gen. Paul
Eaton, and Lt. Gen. Gregory Newbold that
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld should resign
may not have been coordinated, per se. But the generals in question
in fact speak often to each other, and some are even coordinating
political activities with colleagues here in the United States,
according to Pentagon sources.
Some, in fact, are involved in a very quiet group of retired military officers who are behind a "Draft Colin Powell" effort, to see him run for the presidency in 2008. The operation is well funded, say sources familiar with the group, to the point that they are regularly polling the public on issues and even ticket makeup for a Powell run.
"They more often than not have him [Powell] running as a Republican, so the polling is almost exclusively with other Republicans on the ticket, and almost always with Powell on the top of the ticket," says a source who has seen sampling from the polling.
The retired, senior military leadership are much more politically astute than people give them credit for, says another retired military officer, who has dealt with both Newbold and Eaton, who both directed Marines. "Given their experiences with the war, these are men who understand both the political and the military dynamic at play here. It shouldn't be surprising that these fellows are inserting themselves into the political process, whether it's Rumsfeld and Bush or looking ahead to 2008." This source was unaware if either Newbold or Eaton was involved in the Powell operation.
One general who would appear to be less politically astute is Anthony Zinni, who has been caught out making politically damaging comments about the United States' relationship to Israel. In 2004, Zinni said in an interview on 60 Minutes that "the neo-conservatives" had conned the Bush administration on the idea of democratizing the Middle East. Not coincidentally, Zinni's latest comments have come a week after his latest book, The Battle for Peace, was released.
GRAVEL PITS
If former senator and current Democratic presidential candidate
Mike Gravel is any indication of where
Howard Dean is taking the Democratic Party, then
they are in for a humdinger of a primary season. Gravel, who
represented Alaska as senator from 1969 to 1981, was a staunch
anti-war protester who now at the age of 75 is entering the race,
in part, to protest Operation Iraqi Freedom.
He announced his candidacy stressing three issues: opposing the Iraq war, supporting a Constitutional amendment for federal votes on publicly sponsored initiatives, and a 23 percent national sales tax on all new goods and services in place of the current income tax system.
According to DNC sources, Gravel's announcement was welcomed by chairperson Dean, but the DNC clearly didn't do due diligence on its latest presidential poster boy.
Gravel -- in spreading his gospel of peace, huge sales taxes, and national votes on all major federal initiatives -- has shown poor judgment in the types of groups he speaks before. In 2003, according to Gravel's Wikipedia entry, the man who would be President gave a speech at a conference sponsored by the Barnes Review, a publication that denies the Holocaust. Other groups involved in the conference were the Institute for Historical Review and the Theses & Dissertations Press.
DEMOCRAT FIZZLE
Perhaps the worm is turning ever so slowly for Democrats. The party
that was going to run on ethics, ethics, ethics, may just be
running away after a bad couple of weeks of news for some of their
star candidates.
First, let's look at the election that everyone from Howard Dean to House Democrat campaign committee chairman Rahm Emanuel was touting: the special election for former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham's seat. Last week college professor Francine Busby failed to gain 50.1 percent of the vote in the San Diego-area election and now must run off against former Rep. Brian Bilbray. Bilbray is now favored in that race.
Busby ran on a DNC-developed message of "a vote for Democrats is a vote for clean government." But without Cunningham in the field, and with a large pool of campaigners and low voter turnout, Busby was fighting an uphill battle. "Cunningham wasn't in the race, Tom DeLay was a nonfactor in this race once he announced his retirement," says an RNC source. "San Diego voters weren't voting against anyone. They were voting for their candidates."
The RNC intends to pump a bit more money and noise into the Bilbray campaign, in hopes that the special election vote in June will help turn public perception about just how overrated an issue so-called "public corruption" really is going into the upcoming election cycle.
Further complicating matters for Democrats is the federal investigation of Rep. Alan Mollohan (WV), the House Ethics Committee's top Democrat and a senior member of the Appropriations Committee, who faces charges similar to those that did in Cunningham.
Mollohan, whose father held the 1st District congressional seat before Alan won it in 1982, has won re-election consistently, but not without difficulty. He faced a tough re-election race in 1984 and again in 2004. This time, he is facing stiff competition from state Del. Chris Wakim. The White House has taken an active interest in Wakim's campaign, offering up Vice President Dick Cheney for a fundraiser, laying down plans to have the President pass through his district on several occasions in the coming months, and sending senior RNC and White House political advisers out for strategy sessions.