DROP-BY DEMOCRATS
Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson allowed
his staff to let Sen. Chuck Schumer, among others,
into the negotiating room over objections from the Republican
negotiators also sitting there, Sen. Judd Gregg
and House Minority Whip Roy Blunt.
As part of the agreement in setting up the negotiations taking
place in the Capitol office Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi, there would be four negotiators present in the
room. But by late Saturday afternoon, Democrats had broken that
agreement, sending Schumer, Senate Budget Committee Chairman
Kent Conrad, Sen. Max Baucus, and
Sen. Jack Reed in and out of the negotiations.
Reed, especially, was, according to a Treasury aide, a vocal
participant in the negotiations, at one point shouting down
Blunt.
Overshadowing the negotiations was Sen. John
McCain, who had convened an emergency meeting of economic
advisers and surrogates at his Arlington, Virginia national
headquarters, and from there was making calls to mostly
conservative members of the House caucus, measuring their
willingness to back a compromise Wall Street bailout proposal.
Oddly — at least from the Bush Administration perspective —
Democrats were insistent that Treasury Secretary Paulson remain at
the helm of whatever funding/bailout entity was formed by the
negotiations and legislation. Meanwhile, Republicans, led by
McCain, were said to be proposing an independent chief of the
bailout entity.
“It would have to be someone the American people could trust to
do the right thing, protect their interests, not mismanage the
fund, and reaffirm trust in the market,” says a Senate leadership
aide.
The idea of an “honest broker,” as it were, was floated
initially by the McCain campaign late Saturday, according to a
knowledgeable Treasury aide, and was quickly opposed by Paulson and
the Democrats.
MINDLESS GAME
Sen. Barack Obama and his debate prep team were
surprised that Sen. John McCain remained calm and
collected during the debate. Obama’s continual references to
“John,” while McCain referred to Obama as “Senator,” was intended
to needle McCain’s patience in hopes for a flash of McCain’s
infamous temper. But McCain was, according to campaign advisers,
ready for the needle and didn’t take the bait.