-
- CLONING
NEWS
- "Cloning
ban to face debate: Congress could take up
dilemma over experiments." ... "Real or hoax, the claim that the world's
first human clone has been born puts the next step squarely into Congress's
court: Will it ban baby-making via cloning?" ... "The nation has no specific
law against human cloning. But the Food and Drug Administration, which
regulates human experiments, contends that its regulations forbid human
cloning without prior agency permission - permission it has no intention
of giving." -By Lauran Neergaard
-AP via -Boston/Globe
20021226
"Democratic
contenders challenge Bush's record on terrorism."
... "Democratic contenders for president are beginning to challenge President
Bush's record on terrorism, arguing that Bush has failed to do enough to
prevent another fatal attack on U.S. soil and that the nation is barely
safer than it was before Sept. 11, 2001." ... "While so far the criticisms
lack many specifics beyond asking for more money for police agencies or
the creation of a new intelligence force, campaign aides said these early
challenges on terrorism signaled what they expected to be a central theme
in 2004. They argued that Bush was potentially vulnerable on the issue
that Republicans view as a pillar of the president's political strength."
... ""It's time for us, without regard to party, to say what every American
knows: Washington is not doing enough to make America safe," Sen. John
Edwards of North Carolina said in a speech on domestic security in Washington
last week. "If the administration continues to do too little, it will be
too late again."" -By Adam Nagourney
-NYTimes via -SeattlePI.NWsource
20021221
"Frist
steps up to lead GOP as Lott leaves Senate." ...
"Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., abandoned his job as Senate majority leader
Friday, and Republicans said they intend to elect Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn.,
on Monday to succeed him in the 108th Congress." ... "Lott's decision drew
a huge sigh of relief from many Republican officials and strategists. They
feared that his continued presence as a GOP leader would damage the party,
especially with minority members and suburban women. His departure, and
the fast-developing support for Frist, reduces the threat of a bloody intra-party
battle when Congress convenes Jan. 7. The GOP will control both houses
and hopes to give swift approval to key elements of Bush's agenda."
-WashingtonPost via -StarTribune.com
"'Fristy'
is wealthy, personable and a friend of the president."
... "As he prepares to become the next Senate majority leader, Sen. Bill
Frist is on the cusp of another milestone in his second career that some
believe may include a run for the White House in 2008." ... ""Fristy" to
his friend President Bush, the heart-and-lung transplant surgeon from Tennessee
already had been mentioned as a possible secretary of the new Department
of Homeland Security, a future party leader in the Senate, even Bush's
running mate in 2004. Not bad for a man who didn't bother to vote until
age 34."-LAtimes
via -StarTribune.com
Trent
Lott - "Politicos
stunned by Bush's 'skilled' removal of Trent Lott:
President 'extracted' the senator without leaving fingerprints." ... "As
President Bush was cheerily shaking the hands of thousands of guests at
glittering White House Christmas parties this week, his advisers and influential
Republicans were working overtime to jettison Trent Lott as the Senate
Republican leader." ... "By the end of the week, as the White House watched
its favorite, Sen. Bill Frist of Tennessee, step up to replace Lott, R-Miss.,
Washington's political professionals were left stunned and awed. They said
that Bush and his powerful political adviser, Karl Rove, had stumbled at
times, but still had managed to depose in eight days the unanimously elected
Senate leader of their own party." -By Elisabeth Bumiller
-NYTimes via -SeattlePI.NWsource
20021220
- "South
Korea picks liberal Roh for president." ... "Ruling
party candidate Roh Moo-hyun won South Korea's presidential election on
Thursday, a result that could complicate ties with the United States as
the allies grapple with North Korea's nuclear programme." ... "The triumph
of Roh, 56, a populist human rights and labour lawyer, marks a stunning
turnaround after the 11th-hour desertion of his election alliance partner,
Chung Mong-joon." ... "The United States has 37,000 troops helping protect
the South from its reclusive neighbour. North and South Korea are technically
still at war as the 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty."
-By Paul Eckert-Reuters
via /Asia
20021218
- Trent
Lott - "[Minnesota
Republican Governor elect Tim] Pawlenty calls on Lott to leave leadership
post." ... "Minnesota Gov.-elect Tim Pawlenty became
one of the first prominent Republicans in the nation to call on Trent Lott
to step down as Senate Republican leader." ... ""I don't think you can
be an effective spokesperson and leader for the party if you are perceived
as embracing segregationist politics," Pawlenty said Tuesday, on the eve
of a White House conference for freshman governors." ... ""He's not just
a rank-and-file member of Congress," Pawlenty said of the Mississippi senator.
"He's a leader of the Republican majority in the Senate and one of the
leading national spokespeople for the party. I don't believe he can continue
to be an effective spokesperson."" -By Kevin Diaz
-StarTribune.com
"Lott
Vows Fight to Retain His Post as Senate Leader."
... "Mr. Lott, at a 100th-birthday party for Senator Strom Thurmond, referred
with praise to Mr. Thurmond's presidential bid in 1948. The campaign was
based on maintaining racial segregation. Mr. Lott had made similar comments
two decades ago, and tonight MSNBC reported a third instance — at a bill
signing ceremony in October 2000 — in which Mr. Lott said Mr. Thurmond
"should have been president."" ... "As White House officials sought to
gauge support for Mr. Lott or for possible rivals, Mr. Lott also spent
his day making phone calls, trying to assess whether he could survive a
Senate vote on his leadership called for Jan. 6." -By
Elisabeth Bumiller and Carl Hulse -NYTimes
via -Google-News
20021217
"Majority
Say Lott Should Not Lead: GOP Strategists Worry
Over Backlash Among Voters." ... "Slightly more than half of all Americans
believe incoming Senate majority leader Trent Lott should step down from
his leadership post for making racially insensitive remarks two weeks ago
at a birthday party for retiring Sen. Strom Thurmond, according to a new
Washington Post-ABC News poll." ... "Fifty-one percent of those interviewed--including
two out of three minorities--said Lott should not lead Senate Republicans
when the new Congress convenes next month. Forty-one percent said he should
continue to lead Senate Republicans." -By Richard
Morin-WashingtonPost
20021216
ELECTION
2004 - "Democrats
expect wide-open fight: More candidates likely
to join 2004 fray." ... "Had Gore run, said veteran California Democratic
consultant Bill Carrick, “everything would have pivoted off him as the
front-runner, and people would have chosen sides for or against him. Now,
all the candidates will be trying to find out exactly who their constituencies
are, and the primary voters will be much more in a shopping-around mode.”"
... "Gore’s decision was not good news for the White House, where political
aides had been openly hoping for a rematch. Despite the fact that Gore
won the popular vote in 2000, he was viewed as a perfect foil for the president.
One official commented that Gore “was very defined in his views, and one
of those definitions was the fact that he kept changing those views.”"
-Analysis By David S. Broder-WashingtonPost
via -MSNBC
ELECTION
2004 - "Gore
takes self out of '04 race." ... "''I've decided
not to run,'' the former vice president said during a last-minute interview
with the CBS News program ''60 Minutes.'' ''I've decided that I will not
be a candidate for president in 2004.''" ... "Gore, who also ran unsuccessfully
for president in 1988, would not rule out another campaign in 2008 or beyond,
but he said, ''I make this decision in the full knowledge and in awareness
that if I don't run this time -which I'm not going to run in 2004 - that's
probably the last opportunity I'll ever have to run for president.'' He
added that he believes he can continue to affect policy outside the political
arena." -By Glen Johnson
-Boston/Globe
20021215
ELECTION
2004 - "Gore
passes on 2004 presidential run." ... ""I personally
have the energy and the drive and the ambition to make another campaign,
but I don't think it's the right thing for me to do," Gore, 54, said on
CBS' 60 Minutes. A rematch "would inevitably involve a focus on the past
that would in some measure distract from the focus on the future that I
think all campaigns have to be about."" -By Susan
Page -USATODAY
- TIA:
Total Information Awareness
- "Keeping
Track of John Poindexter." ... "The head of the government's
Total Information Awareness project, which aims to root out potential terrorists
by aggregating credit-card, travel, medical, school and other records of
everyone in the United States, has himself become a target of personal
data profiling." ... "Online pranksters, taking their lead from a San Francisco
journalist, are publishing John Poindexter's home phone number, photos
of his house and other personal information to protest the TIA program."
-By Paul Boutin -Wired
"Henry
Kissinger quits 9/11 panel amid controversy." ...
"Kissinger's appointment last month revived memories over his contentious
service as national security adviser and secretary of state in the Nixon
administration and his role in the Vietnam War. But more immediately, it
set off an argument between congressional Democrats, who said he must disclose
his financial ties, and the White House, which said there was no need to
do so. Kissinger did not respond to a message left at his New York office
last night, but his letter to Bush said he feared such arguments would
soon engulf his firm, Kissinger Associates." ... "Kissinger's resignation
was apparently triggered by a legal opinion from Republicans and Democrats
on the Senate Ethics Committee, who said Thursday that all members of the
commission would have to comply with congressional financial disclosure
requirements." -By David Firestone
-NYTimes via -SeattlePI.NWsource
20021213
"Kissinger
steps down as chairman of 9/11 panel, citing conflicts."
... "Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger stepped down Friday as chairman
of a panel investigating the Sept. 11 attacks, citing controversy over
potential conflicts of interest with his business clients." ... "''It is
clear that, although specific potential conflicts can be resolved in this
manner, the controversy would quickly move to the consulting firm I have
built and own,'' Kissinger wrote in a letter to President Bush, who appointed
him. ''I have, therefore, concluded that I cannot accept the responsibility
you proposed.''" -By Ron Fournier
-AP via -Boston/Globe
"Trent
Lott's Segregationist College Days: At Ole
Miss, the Senator helped lead a fight to keep blacks out of his national
fraternity." ... "Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott helped lead a successful
battle to prevent his college fraternity from admitting blacks to any of
its chapters, in a little-known incident now four decades old." ... "When
the issue came to a head at Sigma Nu's national convention —known as a
"Grand Chapter" — in the early 1960s, "Trent was one of the strongest leaders
in resisting the integration of the national fraternity in any of the chapters,"
recalls former CNN President Tom Johnson, then a Sigma Nu member at the
University of Georgia." -By Karen Tumulty
-TIME.com
20021211
- "Mitchell
withdraws from terrorism panel." ... "Citing a reluctance
to quit his law firm, former Sen. George Mitchell on Wednesday withdrew
from the new commission that will investigate the Sept. 11 attacks." ...
"Mitchell was to be vice chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist
Attacks, which former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is heading. Replacing
Mitchell will be former Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind." ... "The commission
will follow up the work of the congressional inquiry that issued its final
report Wednesday on intelligence failures leading up the terrorist attacks.
The commission will conduct a broader investigation, looking at issues
beyond intelligence, including aviation security and immigration." -By
Ken Guggenheim -AP
via -SFGate.com
"Lott
expresses regret for remarks; court filing from 1981
surfaces." ... "Senate Republican leader Trent Lott tried to help Bob Jones
University keep its federal tax-exempt status despite the school's policy
prohibiting interracial dating two decades before his recent comments stirred
a race controversy." ... ""Racial discrimination does not always violate
public policy," Lott, then a congressman from Mississippi, wrote in a 1981
friend of the court brief that cited prior court rulings upholding affirmative
action programs at colleges." ... "Lott's filing unsuccessfully urged the
U.S. Supreme Court to stop the Internal Revenue Service from stripping
the university's tax exemption." -By John Solomon
-AP via -SFGate.com
"Lott
Remarks on Thurmond Echoed 1980 Words: Criticism
Unabated Despite Apology for Comment on Former Dixiecrat's Presidential
Bid." ... "Twenty-two years ago, Trent Lott, then a House member from Mississippi,
told a home state political gathering that if the country had elected segregationist
candidate Strom Thurmond to the presidency "30 years ago, we wouldn't be
in the mess we are today." The phrasing is very similar to incoming Senate
Majority Leader Lott's controversial remarks at a 100th birthday party
for Thurmond last week." ... "Last week, Lott provoked controversy when
he declared at the Thurmond birthday celebration: "I want to say this about
my state: When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We're
proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't
have had all these problems over all these years."" -By
Thomas B. Edsall and Brian Faler-WashingtonPost
20021210
"Black
Caucus denounces Lott: GOP Senate leader assailed
for remarks praising Thurmond’s presidential bid." ... "Members of the
Congressional Black Caucus rejected Senate Republican leader Trent Lott’s
apology for saying that America would have been better off if Strom Thurmond
had won the presidency in 1948, when he ran as a segregationist and won
four states." ... "The three dozen members of the caucus, all black Democrats
in the House of Representatives, may push for a Senate censure of Lott
and ask for his resignation as Senate Republican leader."
-MSNBC
- "Bush
taps an economic salesman: Bush names John
Snow as new Treasury chief with task of selling tax cuts and buoying confidence."
... "By appointing John Snow, a railroad executive, as Treasury secretary
Sunday, and probably Stephen Friedman, a Wall Street executive, as White
House economic counselor Monday, Mr. Bush will be getting two people who
are, by all accounts, consensus builders and "listeners."" ... "That will
help the administration speak more with one voice on the economy, but not
necessarily result in new initiatives. "I think the president is looking
for a new messenger, not a new message," says Sung Won Sohn, chief economist
at Wells Fargo Banks, of Mr. Snow's appointment. "So he would be a good
messenger."" -By David R. Francis and Ron Scherer
-CSMonitor
20021209
-
- "Judge
Rebuffs Effort to Obtain Records on Cheney [energy] Task Force."
... "In a case involving bedrock constitutional issues, a federal judge
today threw out a lawsuit brought by an agency of Congress against Vice
President Dick Cheney over the formulation of the administration's energy
policy." ... "Judge John D. Bates of Federal District Court found that
Comptroller General David M. Walker, the head of the General Accounting
Office, did not have sufficient standing to sue the vice president." ...
"Mr. Walker had asked the judge to order the White House to reveal the
identities of industry executives who helped the administration develop
its energy policy last year." -By David Stout
-NYTimes via
-AltaVista-News
20021208
ELECTION
2002 News
- "Democrat
retains Louisiana seat." ... "Mary Landrieu held
off Suzanne Haik Terrell, who conceded the election late on Saturday evening."
... "In the new Senate, the Republicans will hold 51 seats to the Democrats
49." -BBC/News
ELECTION
2002 News
- "Landrieu
Beats GOP Challenge In Louisiana: Democrat
Takes 52% of Vote In Runoff for Senate Seat." ... "Democratic Sen. Mary
Landrieu of Louisiana, staving off a concerted challenge by the ascendant
Republican Party and by President Bush, won reelection to a second term
tonight [20021207]
against state Elections Commissioner Suzanne Haik Terrell in a runoff."
... "Landrieu beat her Republican challenger by about 40,000 votes out
of more than 1.2 million tallied. With all precincts reporting, Landrieu
had 642,974, or 52 percent, to 603,160, or 48 percent, for Terrell." ...
"Landrieu's victory limits the Republicans to a 51 to 49 majority in the
Senate and stems the tide of GOP victories at the polls last month, which
staggered and disoriented the Democrats." -By
Lee Hockstader-WashingtonPost
20021207
ELECTION
2002 News
- "Democrat
clings to lead in Louisiana in last Senate race of 2002."
... "The GOP failed to hold on to a U.S. House seat: With all precincts
reporting, Democrat Rodney Alexander had 85,720 votes and Republican Lee
Fletcher had 85,202 votes -- a difference of just 518 votes in the heavily
conservative district." ... "The two men spent weeks swapping bitter accusations
and attack ads as they sought the seat Republican Rep. John Cooksey gave
up to run for Senate. There was no immediate word from Fletcher on whether
he would seek a recount." -By Guy Coates
-AP via -SFGate.com
ELECTION
2002 News
- "New
Orleans: a recount." ... "Republicans took control
of the Senate last month and Bush had campaigned here last week in hopes
of pushing Terrell to victory. Landrieu scrambled to cast herself as a
centrist who backed Bush three-fourths of the time but wouldn't be a "rubber
stamp" for the president." ... "Secretary of State Fox McKeithen said he
expected turnout to be 45 percent -- low by Louisiana standards. Voters
seemed dismayed by the sharp salvos between the two New Orleans women who
share the same views on most political issues."
-AP via -SFGate.com
ELECTION
2002 News
- "Democrats
in La. to face critical test in Senate runoff." ...
"Louisiana hasn't sent a Republican to the US Senate since 1877, when it
was forced under Reconstruction to embrace the party of Abraham Lincoln.
It has sent only Democrats to the Senate ever since." ... "Yet time and
political tide may finally be reaching the Bayou State, as they already
have its neighbors, including Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina. Voters
last month turned Democrats out of a Senate seat in Georgia and out of
governors' offices in all three states." ... "Now it might be Senator Mary
Landrieu's turn. Relentlessly labeled a liberal in a conservative state,
Landrieu, Democrat of Louisiana, is locked in a tight race for reelection
and could lose to Republican challenger Suzanne Haik Terrell, the state
elections commissioner." -By Steven Thomma -Knight
Ridder via -Boston/Globe
ELECTION
2002 News
- "Louisiana
race down to wire: A statistical dead heat
makes voter turnout critical." ... "Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu is fighting
for political survival against GOP state Elections Commissioner Suzanne
Haik Terrell. Pre-election polls showed the race -- which drew President
Bush and other Republican luminaries to the state on Terrell's behalf --
was too close to call." ... "Voters in northeast Louisiana's 5th Congressional
District will also decide a runoff between Republican Lee Fletcher and
Democrat Rodney Alexander for the seat vacated by GOP Rep. John Cooksey,
who made an unsuccessful Senate bid." -By John Mercurio
-CNN /AllPolitics.com
20021206
ELECTION
2002 News
- "One
last Senate campaign - gumbo style: Louisiana
vote Saturday tests strength of GOP momentum." ... "As Republican donors
stream through the lobby of the swank Fairmont hotel - where Christmas
decorations have transformed the ceiling into a canopy of cotton "snow"
- the sense of significance is palpable." ... "It was here that legendary
populist Huey Long headquartered his campaign back in 1928, mapping out
a winning coalition of small farmers and workers that would propel him
into the governor's seat and shape Louisiana politics for decades to come."
... "Now, as the site of a high-profile campaign stop by President Bush,
the Fairmont may play a key role in another transforming election: one
that could send a Republican to the Senate from Louisiana for the first
time since the days of Reconstruction." -By Liz Marlantes
-CSMonitor
- "Bush
Shakes Up Economic Team With Ouster of 2 Advisers."
... "Wrestling with a shaky economy and criticism that his administration
projects a muddled message on how to respond, President Bush today dismissed
his Treasury secretary, Paul H. O'Neill, and the director of his National
Economic Council, Lawrence B. Lindsey." ... "The president's move also
demonstrates that the White House has grown increasingly concerned that
Mr. Bush, like his father, could pay a political price if the country's
economic woes are not addressed more forcefully." ... "The dismissals also
come when business confidence is stubbornly low, investment is weak and
joblessness is rising. Less than two hours before Mr. O'Neill surprised
Washington with his resignation, the Commerce Department reported that
unemployment last month surged at an unexpectedly fast rate last month,
to 6 percent from 5.7." (1, 2)
-By Edmund L. Anderews
-NYTimes via -Google-News
20021205
- "Appointee
bonus got quiet OK from White House in March:
2,100 are eligible for up to $15,000." ... "The Bush administration has
quietly approved a plan giving large cash bonuses to its political appointees,
a practice abandoned during the Clinton administration to prevent officials
from using taxpayer funds to reward loyal partisans." -By
Anne E. Kornblut -Boston/Globe
- "Appointees'
Bonuses Stir Anger: Critics Say Bush Plan Slights
Career Employees; Agencies Move Cautiously." ... "The Bush administration's
decision to revive cash bonuses for political appointees touched off a
fury of criticism yesterday from Democrats, unions and some policy experts
who said the move slighted ordinary federal employees and raised the specter
of cronyism." ... "The Clinton administration ended the practice of doling
out bonuses to most political appointees in 1994 after questionable payments
to some outgoing aides in the final days of the administration of President
George H.W. Bush, the president's father." ... "Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
(D-N.Y.), the former first lady, called it "a decision that beggars the
imagination." She noted that Bush cited a "national emergency" and the
need to conserve money for the fight against terrorism last week when he
froze one part of a federal pay raise for 1.8 million civilian employees."
-By Christopher Lee and Mike Allen-WashingtonPost
20021204
- "Bush Reinstates Appointee Cash Bonuses -N.Y. Times." ... "The policy
shift means appointees could receive annual cash bonuses of up to $10,000
with the approval of Cabinet-level officials and agency chiefs, or more
than $25,000 with the approval of the White House, the newspaper said."
-Reuters via -ABCNEWS.com
20021203
- "Ex-Bush
Aide Apologizes for Criticism." ... "A former senior
aide to President Bush apologized yesterday after being quoted as saying
a band of "Mayberry Machiavellis" is running a White House in which politics
trumps policy." -Reuters
via -WashingtonPost
20021202
- "Why
Are These Men Laughing? Excerpts from our newsmaking
story on Karl Rove, politics, and policy in the Bush administration." ...
"" -By Ron Suskind -Esquire
- "Ex-Official
Blasts White House." ... "The former head of President
Bush's faith-based office charged in a magazine article released yesterday
that the administration's domestic policies are determined entirely by
political considerations, with "everything" being run by the office of
senior adviser Karl C. Rove." ... "John J. DiIulio Jr., a Democrat who
resigned last year as the first director of the White House Office of Faith-Based
and Community Initiatives, is one of only a few officials who have left
Bush's senior staff since his inauguration, and the only one who has publicly
attacked his colleagues." -By Mike Allen-WashingtonPost
20021130
- "Bush
Trims Federal Pay Hikes." ... "Federal workers will
get a smaller raise next month because President Bush is freezing part
of the increase, citing a national emergency because of the fight against
terrorism." ... "In a letter sent Friday to congressional leaders, Mr.
Bush announced he was using his authority to change workers' pay structure
in times of "national emergency or serious economic conditions" to limit
raises to 3.1 percent." ... "Most federal employees also were to receive
a second pay hike based on private-sector wages earned in metropolitan
areas. But Mr. Bush said that increase would be too expensive and "inappropriate"
at this time."
-CBSNews
20021127
"Big
business funding shift aids GOP: Tradition
of bankrolling both major parties falls by wayside." ... "Major industries
such as accounting, aerospace, commercial banking, defense, HMOs and pharmaceuticals
have abandoned their tradition of bipartisan campaign contributions in
favor of a commitment to the GOP, a trend that could deepen the problems
of a Democratic Party rocked by this month’s elections." -By
Thomas B. Edsall-WashingtonPost
via -MSNBC
20021120
- "Security
overhaul OK'd: Reorganization to be the largest
in 50 years." ... "The Senate overwhelming approved the creation of a new
Department of Homeland Security yesterday, paving the way for the biggest
federal government reorganization in a half century and putting to rest
a contentious political issue." ... "By a 90-to-9 vote during the final
hours of an unusual lame-duck session, senators agreed to move 170,000
employees from 22 existing government agencies into a single department
dedicated to domestic security." ... "It will be the largest governmental
reorganization since 1947, when the United States realigned its military
under the Department of Defense and created the National Security Council
and the CIA." -By Susan Milligan
-Boston/Globe
20021115
- "U.S.
Homeland Security Bill Faces New Hurdle." ... "Senate
Democrats on Friday moved to strip what they called "egregious special
interest provisions" from a bill to create a U.S. Department of Homeland
Security, complicating efforts to complete one of President Bush's top
legislative priorities." ... "Democrats said the vaccine provisions in
the bill appeared to be aimed at shielding major U.S. pharmaceutical companies
-- which were among the biggest donors to Republican campaign coffers --
from a wave of lawsuits seeking to link a mercury-based vaccine preservative
to childhood autism." -By Andrew Clark
-Reuters /Politics
/World
- "Shields
for vaccine makers weighed: Bush administration
already offers it in war on terrorism." ... "While senators debate shielding
childhood vaccine makers from lawsuits, the Bush administration already
has provided such protection for at least two vaccines key to the war on
terrorism —smallpox and anthrax." -AP
via -MSNBC
-
- "Penn.
bill to require pledge in schools: Students
in private and public schools would be required to recite the Pledge of
Allegiance or sing the national anthem each morning under a bill unanimously
passed this week by the state Senate." -AP
via -CNN
- "White
House Denies Assertions on Preoccupation With Iraq."
... "The White House disagreed sharply today with assertions by senior
Democratic senators that the campaign against terrorism is lagging and
that a preoccupation with Iraq is one of the reasons." ... ""We have locked
up or detained or eliminated important Al Qaeda leaders," Condoleezza Rice,
President Bush's national security adviser, said at a news briefing." ...
""We have eliminated their base in Afghanistan, so they cannot operate
in the way that they have in the past. We have strengthened the resolve
and the capacity of countries like Yemen and the Philippines and countries
in Africa to deal with this threat. A lot has been done."" ... "Dr. Rice
noted that Mr. Bush has said repeatedly that the campaign will be a long
one. "It took a while for them to lodge themselves in 60 countries around
the world, including the United States," she said. "It's going to take
a while to break them up."" (1, 2)
-NYTimes via -Google-News
20021114
- "Bush
to Allow Private Sector Bids." ... "Up to half of
the nation's 1.8 million federal civilian workers eventually could find
they have a new boss or, worse, no job." ... "The Bush administration is
taking steps to privatize federal jobs at an unprecedented level, and officials
proposed rules Thursday to make it easier for companies to compete with
the government for maintenance, construction, secretarial and other work."
... "Employee unions raised strong objections, contending the administration
was trying to help its business allies at the expense of workers' rights.
Bush officials said it was just a question of saving money."-AP
via -Guardian.co.uk
20021113
"Deal
set on homeland department." ... "Officials said
the Republican-controlled House was likely to pass the homeland security
measure sometime Wednesday. The Senate, currently controlled by Democrats,
is expected to begin debate, although final passage could be delayed into
next week." ... "Passage had been held up because of a fight between Bush
and Senate Democrats over provisions of the legislation dealing with worker
rights. Bush insisted that broad powers were needed to manage the 170,000-employee
agency and that he needed relief from some civil service rules covering
labor issues." -AP
via -USATODAY
20021108
ELECTION
2002 - "High-tech
smells success in Republican Congress." ... "With
Republicans in the driver's seat after Tuesday's elections, tech firms
can expect a sympathetic ear on a wide range of issues from free trade
to taxes to stock options, lobbyists said, while Bush administration officials
will likely face less scrutiny over efforts to relax media and telecommunications
regulations." -Reuters
via -Forbes
20021107
-
-
- "US,
France agree on new Iraq resolution. " ... "The U.N.
Security Council set the vote for 10 a.m. EST after the United States and
its cosponsor Britain, at French urging, changed the wording in a key provision
that would declare Iraq in "material breach" of its U.N. obligations."
... "The change addresses concerns by France, Russia, Syria and others
that the original text would have let the United States determine on its
own whether Iraq had committed an infraction." -By
Edith M. Lederer -AP
via -Boston/Globe
20021106
- "Harvey
Pitt resigns as SEC chief." ... "Securities and Exchange
Commission chairman Harvey Pitt stepped down late Tuesday, bringing a stunning
end to his tumultuous 15-month reign as the nation's top securities regulator
amid still-unfolding financial scandals." ... "Although Pitt got caught
in numerous public-relations flaps during his tenure, his resignation stems
directly from his handling of the appointment of former FBI director William
Webster to head a new five-member panel charged with overseeing the accounting
industry." ... "Webster's selection was controversial because he was chosen
over a candidate opposed by the accounting industry. At a contentious Oct.
25 hearing, Pitt and the two other Republican commissioners voted for Webster
and the two Democrats voted against him." -By Greg
Farrell -USATODAY
- ELECTION
2002 - "Two-term
Democrat is a first in 30 years." ... "Iowa voters
gave Gov. Tom Vilsack a second four-year term Tuesday night, choosing the
Democratic incumbent over Republican candidate Doug Gross." ... "Vilsack,
who became Iowa's first Democratic governor in more than three decades
with his election four years ago, gained a new distinction with his victory
Tuesday night. Eight years at the helm of state government will make him
Iowa's longest-serving Democratic governor. Harold Hughes, the last Democrat
to occupy the governor's office, served six years in the 1960s. Branstad
held office longer than any other Iowa governor: 16 years." ... "Among
the 39 people who have held the governorship since Iowa became a state
in 1846, only nine have been Democrats." -By Jonathan
Roos -DesMoinesRegister/News
ELECTION
2002 - "GOP
in Control: Energy, Taxes and Judges Top List
of Priorities for Republicans." ... "Now, with the GOP making gains in
the House and taking a slight edge in the Senate, Bush is likely to be
able to move ahead with an agenda that includes making deeper cuts in taxes,
an energy bill that could see more national parks opened up to oil exploration
and logging, and a slate of conservative judges whose appointments have
been blocked." ... "The only area where Bush might face a challenge from
the party he carried to victory is his proposal to privatize Social Security,
a plan that lost a lot of its popularity in the collapse of the stock market
that saw many Americans take a hard hit to their retirement hopes."
-ABCNEWS.com
- ELECTION
2002 - "Media
rely on 'real votes' to project winners." ... "Voter
News Service, the media consortium whose flawed data led to erroneous projections
on Election Night 2000, withheld results from national and state exit polls
Tuesday because it could not guarantee their accuracy." ... "Exit polls
survey voters after they leave polling places. Without them, television
networks had to rely on vote counts to project winners in congressional
and gubernatorial elections." ... "Voter News Service (VNS) said the problems
with the exit polls lay in the software that crunches information from
questionnaires filled out by voters." ... ""If you see a number that looks
suspicious to you, you check it out. If the process is not calculating
every element properly, you have to adjust or you have to fix the program,"
VNS executive director Ted Savaglio said. "We saw things that we didn't
like, and we just didn't feel we could publish the poll."" -By
Martha T. Moore with contributions from Charisse Jones -USATODAY
ELECTION
2002 - "GOP
reclaims control of Congress." ... "GOP control of
the Senate was assured with former U.S. Rep. James Talent's early morning
victory over incumbent Missouri Senator Jean Carnahan. Carnahan conceded
defeat shortly after 2 a.m." ... "A handful Senate races remained in play
early Wednesday, but none offered Democrats an opportunity to upset the
emerging balance of power in the Senate." ... "With the polls closed across
the country, two races were too close to call. In South Dakota, Democratic
Sen. Tim Johnson battled Rep. John Thune. In Minnesota, former Vice President
Walter F. Mondale ran against Norm Coleman." -USATODAY
ELECTION
2002 - "GOP
candidates ride presidential coattails in midterm triumphs."
... "A president's party must run against history in midterm elections,
but Republicans beat the odds in Tuesday's voting, strengthening their
House majority and bidding to seize control of the Senate. Democrats grudgingly
credited President Bush's aggressive campaigning for results that could
provide him considerable political swagger." ... "He raised more than $140
million for GOP candidates, a record for presidential fund-raising, and
visited more than 30 states this election year. In the last five days alone,
Bush campaigned for two dozen candidates; 19 of those races were final
early Wednesday morning and, of those, Republicans won 17."
-AP via -USATODAY
20021105
ELECTION
2002 - "Voters
face range of ballot measures: Initiatives
include medical marijuana, crating pigs, tax issues." ... "While Washington's
attention focuses on key congressional races and contests for governor,
ballot measures have a direct impact on how U.S. society is run and often
presage future national political debates." ... "The more than 200 state
initiatives on Tuesday’s ballot focus on everything from animal rights
and drug policy to health care and education — with a few oddball measures
thrown in to reflect the wide-ranging passions of the electorate."
-Reuters via -MSNBC
- ELECTION
2002 - "VNS
Abandons National Exit Polls." ... "Voter News Service
was forced to abandon state and national exit polls designed to help analyze
Tuesday's midterm election results and also saw its vote-counting operation
slow to a crawl." ... "The failures were a major setback for VNS - a consortium
consisting of ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, Fox and The Associated Press. VNS had
completely rebuilt its system in response to the 2000 election, when television
networks twice used its information to make wrong calls in the decisive
Florida vote for the presidency." ... "VNS said the exit poll information
was being collected but not being properly analyzed by the organization's
new computer system." ... "VNS had other problems: computer screens briefly
froze when workers phoned in exit poll information, and more people than
expected failed to call with completed questionnaires, Savaglio said."
-By David Bauder
-AP via -FindLaw/LegalNews
ELECTION
2002 - "Evenly
divided Senate offers plot twists: Election
may foster political tug of war." ... "Complicating the puzzle is the Louisiana
Senate race, which may not be decided for another month, potentially setting
up a one-shot campaign for control of the Senate." ... "Any Louisiana candidate
who garners a majority of the vote today wins office, but a candidate who
fails to crack 50 percent faces a Dec. 7 runoff against the second-place
finisher. Unable to recruit a single powerful opponent against Senator
Mary Landrieu, Republicans have fielded three candidates in an effort to
keep the Democrat to a plurality and force her into a runoff." -By
Robert Schlesinger -Boston/Globe
OPINION
- ELECTION
2002 - "Coping
with Election 2002: The only solution: Hold
your nose, vote and then fight for reform." ... "Campaign 2002 saw some
of the most vitriolic TV ads in recent memory. There was the ad in the
Georgia senatorial race that sought to link war hero Max Cleland, who lost
both legs and an arm in Vietnam, with mass murderers Osama bin Laden and
Saddam Hussein because he had voted against some of President Bush's homeland
security measures. And then there was Texas governor Rick Perry's just-this-side-of-slanderous
attempt to smear his opponent, Tony Sanchez, with the blood of a DEA agent
murdered by Mexican drug lords 17 years ago. "The Justice Department,"
the ad slimed, "said Sanchez had a choice: to cooperate with law enforcement
or the drug dealers. Sanchez chose the drug dealers."" -By
Arianna
Huffington -Salon
ELECTION
2002 - "Closely
Watched Polls: Election Day Offers Tough Choices
for Americans, Challenge for Bush." ... "Voters are heading to the polls
today in a crucial midterm election that could swing control of the House
and the Senate." ... "About the only certainty is that this Election Day
will be a long one with votes being counted late into the night and some
races possibly not being settled before Wednesday arrives. In fact, the
Senate race in Louisiana may not be decided until December, because if
none of the four candidates receives at least 50 percent plus one vote,
it would put the decision in the hands of the state legislature."
-ABCNEWS.com
20021104
- ELECTION
2002 - "Last-minute
push for votes: Analysts blame major parties
for electorate's dissatisfaction." ... "Donald Richter, a retired truck
driver from Milpitas, says he's failed to vote for a candidate only once
in 26 years. This year, he's doing it again in protest." ... "When he marks
the ballot for [California] governor on Tuesday, "I'll vote for Mickey
Mouse," he said, "and hope the major parties get the message."" ... "A
new Field Poll predicts that just 39 percent, or 8.4 million of the state's
21.5 million eligible voters, will cast ballots in California. That's the
lowest number recorded in the 42-year history of the poll." -By
Carla Marinucci -SFGate.com
ELECTION
2002 - "Election
2002: Races to Watch: Congressional control
hangs in the balance as voters head to the polls Tuesday. What's at stake?
And where are the closest races?" ... "The President has spent weeks on
the road campaigning for Republican candidates, breaking fundraising records
and helping to net a whopping $190 million for GOP races. Democrats, who've
just begun to take advantage of Bill Clinton as a fundraiser, raised $130
million." -By Jessica Reaves
-TIME.com
ELECTION
2002 - "Election
2002: Both parties press toward finish line:
More women governors a near certainty." ... "In tomorrow's elections voters
will choose 435 voting members of the House, 34 members of the Senate and
36 governors. Before the death of Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., the Democrats
held a one-seat edge in the Senate; Republicans hold a six-seat edge in
the House. There are 21 Democratic governors and 27 Republicans; the other
two are independents." -By Adam Nagourney
-NYTimes via -SeattlePI.NWsource
20021101
"Age
arises, indirectly, as an issue with races' newcomers."
... "Once they were young whippersnappers running against senior citizens.
Now Walter Mondale and Frank Lautenberg, summoned by party leaders to keep
the Senate in Democratic hands, are fending off suggestions that they are
too old." ... "Nobody is actually using the words "too old" about New Jersey's
Lautenberg, 78, and Minnesota's Mondale, 74. They say, "You can either
move into the future or get stuck in the past," as Mondale's Republican
opponent, Norm Coleman, put it this week in Minnesota. Or "Doug Forrester
isn't a man for yesterday, he's a leader for tomorrow," as former New Jersey
governor Tom Kean says in an advertisement for Lautenberg's GOP opponent."
-By Jill Lawrence -USATODAY
20021030
"Board
was told of risks before Bush stock sale: Harken
memo went to SEC after probe." ... "One week before George W. Bush's now-famous
sale of stock in Harken Energy Corp. in 1990, Harken was warned by its
lawyers that Bush and other members of the troubled oil company's board
faced possible insider trading risks if they unloaded their shares." ...
"The warning from Harken's lawyers came in a legal memorandum whose existence
has been little noted until now, despite the many years of scrutiny of
the Bush transaction. The memo was not received by the Securities and Exchange
Commission until the day after the agency decided not to bring insider-trading
charges against Bush, documents show." -By Michael
Kranish and Beth Healy
-Boston/Globe
"Harvard
invested heavily in Harken." ... "Indeed, even as
Bush was dumping the bulk of his Harken holdings -about $848,000 in stock
sold to a buyer whose name has never been disclosed - Harvard Management
plowed millions more into the firm." ... "The Globe review also found no
evidence to support the contention by some critics of Harvard Management
and some adversaries of Bush that its deep involvement in Harken was a
political favor to the Bush family." -By Beth Healy
and Michael Kranish -Boston/Globe
Paul
Wellstone
- "Tone
of Wellstone memorial generates anger: Ventura
blasts 'political rally'." ... "The partisan tone of the memorial service
for the late Sen. Paul Wellstone stirred anger Wednesday in some Republicans,
political consultants and radio talk show hosts who say some of the comments
and behavior were inappropriate." ... "Some Republicans in Minnesota demanded
equal time from the local television stations that carried last night's
memorial, attended by a crowd of more than 20,000. But officials at local
television stations pointed out that they will cover President Bush's expected
trip to Minnesota this weekend, when he will campaign for Republican Norm
Coleman." ... "Democrats, who initially dismissed the criticism, later
apologized for some activity, but said the event was unscripted and reflected
the strong emotions people felt about Wellstone's death."
-CNN /AllPolitics.com
20021027
Paul
Wellstone
- "Race
to replace tragic senator." ... "Democrats are in
a race against time to appoint a new candidate to replace Senator Paul
Wellstone, who died in an air crash on Friday, as crucial mid-term elections
loom." ... "Mr Wellstone was one of eight people who died, including his
wife and daughter when their plane crashed in northern Minnesota." ...
"His death comes just two weeks before mid-term elections in which he was
hoping for re-election to boost the Democrats' chances of retaining their
one-vote majority in the Senate." ... "He is survived by two sons."-BBC/News
20021025
- Paul
Wellstone
- "Sen.
Wellstone's Legacy: Mark Shields, David Brooks,
and the Washington Post's Dan Balz share personal and political reflections
on the late Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-Minn.), who died in a plane crash in
Minnesota Friday." ... "DAVID BROOKS: ... One of the things that really
impressed me, and this as a senator, he wasn't a particularly good senator
when he started; made a lot of unnecessary enemies, didn't really play
the game. But he decided pretty quickly that he didn't want to just be
a noble loser. He wanted to actually get some things done and he made some
allies; he worked with people like Jesse Helms, who he earlier said he
despised; worked with John Ashcroft, won support from veterans groups,
not automatic. So he really improved as a senator and was always a man
of conviction, always very popular with conservatives." -PBS.org
/ newshour / index
Paul
Wellstone
- "Senator
Wellstone [Minnesota Democrat] killed in plane crash."
... "Eight deaths were confirmed at the scene, including the senator s
wife Sheila, and a daughter, Marcia. Three unnamed staff members and two
crew members were also reported dead." ... "The senator's death recalls
the October 2000 plane crash that killed Mel Carnahan, Missouri's Democratic
governor, who was campaigning for Senate. Mr Carnahan remained on the ballot
and won the election, defeating his opponent, then-senator John Ashcroft."
-By Jeff Pruzan -FT.com
20021019
- "Bush
Seeks to Cut Back on Raise for S.E.C.'s Corporate Cleanup."
... "Less than three months ago, President Bush signed with great fanfare
sweeping corporate antifraud legislation that called for a huge increase
in the budget of the Securities and Exchange Commission to police corporate
America and clean up Wall Street." ... "Now the White House is backing
off the budget provision and urging Congress to provide the agency with
27 percent less money than the new law authorized. Administration officials
say their proposed increase is enough and that other budgetary needs, like
the military and security against terrorism, make it impossible to afford
more." ... "Harvey L. Pitt, the commission's chairman, has acknowledged
through a spokesman that the administration's level of financing will not
allow it to undertake important initiatives." (1, 2)
-By Stephen Labaton-NYTimes
via -AltaVista-News
- "JudgeOrders
White House Papers' Release: Cheney Lawyers
to Ask Appeals Court to Keep Energy Task Force Records Secret." ... "The
Sierra Club and Judicial Watch, the plaintiffs in this case, are two of
several groups that have alleged that the administration improperly met
with private officials from the energy industry last year while shaping
its energy policy. Environmental groups say they were largely excluded
from the meetings." ... "The Bush administration has said repeatedly that
the separation of powers doctrine shields those documents from outside
review because they might show the administration's internal, deliberative
process." -By Neely Tucker
-WashingtonPost
"Republicans
using Iraq issue to slam election opponents." ...
"Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein are showing up on the campaign trail."
... "In television ads and campaign speeches, Republican candidates have
become increasingly bold about using war with Iraq and the threat of terrorism
as issues against their Democratic opponents even when there is little
or no difference between the candidates on issues such as the recent congressional
vote to give President Bush the authority to invade Iraq." -By
William M. Welch -USATODAY
20021011
- "Technology
Shapes Get-Out-The-Vote Efforts: Candidates,
Parties Using E-mail and Wireless Devices To Organize Supporters." ...
"Keenly aware that the role of the World Wide Web in the 2000 elections
fell far short of the hype, campaign consultants now are selling the Internet
less for its vote-getting power than as a command-and-control tool to reach
out to the faithful." ... ""The Internet is a medium that's best used to
preach to the choir, not to convert," said Dan Manatt, director of YDemsCan.net,
a Democratic political action committee that supports candidates aged 40
and younger. "The political landscape online is changing subtly in that
it's really starting to tilt toward the medium's strengths."" ... "In Iowa,
a state hosting several pivotal and tight races, both parties are counting
on technology to gain that extra edge." (1, 2)
-By Brian Krebs-WashingtonPost>TechNews
- "Congress
Passes Iraq War Resolution: Congress Approves
Use of U.S. Military Force to Confront Iraq, Send Resolution to White House."
... "Congress approved the use of America's military might against Iraq,
reinforcing President Bush's insistence that Saddam Hussein's government
had no other option but to disarm. "The days of Iraq acting as an outlaw
state are coming to an end," Bush said." ... "After days of solemn debate,
both the House and Senate passed and sent to the White House a resolution
authorizing the president to use military force, if necessary, to compel
Iraq to get rid of its biological and chemical weapons and disband its
nuclear weapons program." -AP
via -ABCNEWS.com
20021009
-West
Coast Port Lockout
- "Bush
Gets The Goods Moving." ... "Judge Alsup will hold
a hearing in a week on whether to grant a full 80-day injunction. Such
an order would push the dispute past the Christmas buying season, past
the November elections--and, perhaps, past the start of the war, if it
comes." ... "The judge issued a temporary restraining order that expires
Oct. 16. On that day, he will hold a hearing to determine whether to impose
the 80-day cooling-off period as mandated by Taft-Hartley at that time.
Both sides expect the judge to do so." -By Dan Ackman
-Forbes
20021007
-West
Coast Port Lockout
- "Bush
to Seek to Lift Port Lockout: Bush to Ask Federal
Court to Reopen West Coast Ports for 80 days, Labor Dept. Official Says."
... "Monday's move came hours after contract negotiations between workers
and management collapsed. Port operators and manufacturers' groups applauded
the move, but the longshoremen accused the administration of trying to
break the union. The workers have been locked out, without pay, by management."
-AP via -ABCNEWS.com
- "Bush
faces crucial week in forging unity on Iraq:
Monday speech, likely vote in Congress, and UN maneuvering will test support
for US action." ... "The Senate's more guarded response on Iraq seems to
mirror the American mood. A poll released last week by the respected Program
on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland shows that
while a strong majority supports an invasion of Iraq if it is carried out
with multilateral support, only a small minority favors an invasion by
America acting alone." -By Howard LaFranchi
-CSMonitor/buy
PIPA.org - "American
attitudes: Program on International Policy Attitudes."
20021003
Quad
Cities -
-
- "Leach
says he will not back Iraq resolution." ... "U.S.
Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa, said Wednesday he will break with the Bush administration
and oppose a resolution authorizing the use of force against Iraq." ...
"The Davenport native said there is too great a danger of such action resulting
in a biological weapons attack against Israel and an Israeli nuclear counterattack.
“This is a circumstance we should step back from,” he added." -By
Ed Tibbetts -QCTimes
"New
Jersey Court Allows Substitute on Senate Ballot."
... "New Jersey's Supreme Court unanimously ruled today that Democrats
could replace Senator Robert G. Torricelli's name on this November's ballot,
effectively clearing the way for former Senator Frank R. Lautenberg to
enter the race." ... "The 7-to-0 ruling came two days after Mr. Torricelli
ended a re-election bid that had been dominated by questions about his
ethics. Republicans said they would appeal the ruling immediately to the
United States Supreme Court." -By David Kocieniewski
-NYTimes via
-AltaVista-News
20020929
- STEM
CELL NEWS
- "Nancy
Reagan Fights Bush Over Stem Cells." ... "Mr. Bush
sharply limited such research. At 81, the former first lady is obliquely
but persistently campaigning — through friends, advisers, lawmakers and
her own well-placed calls and letters — to reverse the president's decision."
... "Mrs. Reagan believes that embryonic stem cell research could uncover
a cure for Alzheimer's, the disease that has wiped out her husband's memory.
She was dismayed, friends say, when the White House took issue on Monday
with a new California law that encourages embryonic stem cell research."
... ""A lot of time is being wasted," she told a friend last week who was
given permission to pass her words on to The New York Times. "A lot of
people who could be helped are not being helped."" -By
Alessandra Stanley -NYTimes
via -Google-News
- "Firing
Back From Iraq." ... "Iraq's rejection of any new
United Nations resolution that toughens the terms of disarmament appeared
calculated to widen the gap dividing the United States and Britain from
the other big powers at the United Nations as they were struggling to find
a common approach to confront Saddam Hussein." ... "But if it stands as
Iraq's last word, this refusal could also mark the beginning of the transition
from diplomacy to war in the Persian Gulf, as President Bush and Prime
Minister Tony Blair were already wheeling their military forces to higher
states of readiness." -By Patrick E. Tyler
-NYTimes via
-AltaVista-News
20020927
- "Elections
weigh on Iraq debate: Partisan battling between
Democrats and Bush may slow war-resolution vote in Congress – and consensus
at UN." -By Peter Grier and Linda Feldmann
-CSMonitor/buy
20020926
- "Iowa
Republicans allege man with ties to Sen. Harkin leaked transcript."
... "On Wednesday, Des Moines lawyer Brent Rosenberg issued a statement
he said was from the man who provided the transcript. In it, the man said
he was a Ganske donor who decided to give the Harkin campaign a tape of
the strategy session because he had been angered by comments the Republican
made. The statement didn't identify the man." -By
Mike Glover -AP
via -SFGate.com
20020925
"Text:
Daschle Delivers Remarks From the Senate Floor."
... ""The president is quoted in The Washington Post this morning as saying
that Democratic--the Democratic-controlled Senate is not interested in
the security of the American people."" ... ""The president ought to apologize
to Senator Inoue and every veteran who fought in every war who is a Democrat
in the United States Senate. He ought to apologize to the American people.
That is wrong. We ought not politicize t