By The Prowler on 6.30.08 @ 12:08AM
House Republican disunity revealed. Also: John Conyers' CREW team.
DIRTY LAUNDRY
Rep. David Dreier (R-CA), successfully fought to
strike the term "Communist China" from a House GOP policy paper
because he felt it was too provocative and an outdated term from
the Cold War era, according a House GOP leadership aide. His push
to go soft on China took place in a private House GOP leadership
meeting, and touched off what is rumored to be a heated argument
between Dreier and fellow GOP leadership member Rep.
Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI).
Word on Capitol Hill began spreading about the confrontation,
which took place during the "Elected Leader Committee" meeting on
June 24.
The Elected Leader Committee is made up of Reps. John
Boehner, Roy Blunt, Adam
Putnam, McCotter, John Carter,
Kay Granger, Tom Cole,
Eric Cantor and Dreier, and, according to a GOP
leadership aide, develops public policy positions and talking
points that are distributed to the Republican caucus, as well as
produces materials for use on Boehner's leadership website,
among other GOP resources. Many are public documents, which can be
accessed at the leadership website. The ELC meetings are closed
door and off the record.
"It must have been like being back in the Reagan era," says a
House Republican member, who was not present at the meeting, but
heard about the McCotter-Dreier argument from a colleague. "I think
it was a microcosm of the challenges we're facing as a party, and
that's why I think we need to air it out a bit."
Present at the meeting on that day were Reps. Boehner, Dreier,
Blunt, McCotter, Putnam and Cole, though Blunt, according to
knowledgeable sources, was not present during the discussion in
question. On the table was a document entitled, "The House GOP
Security Agenda," which included boiler plate language and bulleted
position points on domestic and international security issues, and
the ELC members were asked to provide feedback on the final
draft.
According to knowledgeable sources, during the discussion
Dreier, who is ranking member of the House Rules Committee,
expressed concerns about a reference to "Communist China" in the
report. "He said it was just jabbing at China and that it raised
the specter of the Cold War," says the House leadership aide. "And
he and Boehner tried to laugh it off as a term that [former House
member] Chris Cox used to throw around all the
time."
McCotter, who has been publicly critical of the Bush
Administration's engagement position on Communist China, countered,
according to the leadership aide, that using the term "Communist
China" was wholly appropriate, particularly given China's horrific
human rights record and recent provocative attempts to infiltrate
the U.S. Defense Department's computer networks, as well as the
computers of Members of Congress that had sensitive Chinese human
rights data stored in them.
"Basically, McCotter was saying, 'Cold War behavior deserves a
Cold War term,'" says the leadership aide.
In the end, any reference to China was stricken from
the document, though other totalitarian regimes are mentioned,
including Iran, Cuba and Hugo Chavez's Venezuela.
Another House leadership aide, who was in and out of the meeting
with his boss, said that the discussion between the two men was
"civil and frank." Neither Dreier's nor McCotter's staff would
confirm the discussion took place, though several leadership aides
with knowledge of what took place during the meeting confirmed the
incident. A number of House members have also heard about the
debate. "These kinds of rumors are what make this meeting off the
record and confidential," said another leadership staffer. "You
can't expect an honest discussion if every little disagreement gets
aired in public."
"When the party of Reagan can't agree on whether or not China is
communist, we've got a problem in my view," says the House member.
"We're all about nuance and language. Words have meaning, and we
shouldn't be afraid to stand up for what we believe in. That
argument and the outcome is something I'd expect from a Barack
Obama policy meeting, not the House Republican leadership. I'm
disappointed, but not surprised. This is the kind of wordplay that
has contributed to our current minority status."
CREW MEMBER
Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) and his House Judiciary
Committee majority staff sent a subpoena to Attorney General
Michael Mukasey for materials involving the
Joseph Wilson scandal, using as the basis for the
subpoena a laundry list of materials the left-wing extremist group
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)
provided the committee.
Included in the list of demanded materials are transcripts and
notes from FBI interview notes of Lewis "Scooter"
Libby, former White House chief of staff Andrew
Card, and senior Bush advisers Karl Rove
and Dan Bartlett. The committee is also seeking
confidential legal documents, analysis and memoranda going back to
the fall of 2001 and post 9/11, and any and all documents the
Department of Justice might possess related to other linger cases
-- in the minds of Conyers and CREW. Included in the subpoena were
demands for documents related to a host of unrelated cases,
including the investigation of former Alabama Gov. Donald
Seligman, the firing of a U.S. Attorney, and several other
prosecutions of Democrats.
"CREW has its hands in almost every one of these cases, and
basically, Conyers is doing its discovery work for them," says a
House Republican Judiciary Committee staffer. "This has been an
ongoing problem, and no one is calling them on it."
Conyers is using the appearance and testimony of former White
House press secretary Scott McClellan as the
impetus for the new request.
topics:
Iran, Oil