Republicans direct fire at Daschle
"Delivering a near-ultimate insult, a conservative group ran newspaper ads in South Dakota featuring Daschle's picture next to that of reviled Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. The ad accused Daschle, who won reelection in 1998 with 62 percent of the vote, of supporting the dictator's regime by blocking efforts to drill for oil in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge. Cheney, when shown the ad on the Sunday news show, did not criticize it. "
Criticism on energy, fiscal bills previews next year's election
By Susan Milligan, Globe Staff, 12/11/2001 The Boston Globe
WASHINGTON - He's so soft-spoken that lawmakers have to strain to hear him on the Senate floor. He gave President Bush a warm and celebrated hug after the president addressed Congress in the days following the Sept. 11 attacks. In his home state of South Dakota, he's known as a man of the people.
But on the eve of a congressional election year, Senator Thomas A. Daschle, the Democratic majority leader, is the Republican Party's new bogeyman.
In partisan clashes over economics, energy, and other domestic policies, Daschle finds himself the target of attackers who range from talk show hosts to the vice president of the United States.
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill blamed him for holding up the fiscal stimulus package. ''Senator Daschle is delaying America's economic recovery and threatening America's job security,'' O'Neill said last week.
Vice President Dick Cheney reiterated the theme on Sunday, saying on a news talk show that ''Tom Daschle, unfortunately, has decided ... to be more of an obstructionist.''
Delivering a near-ultimate insult, a conservative group ran newspaper ads in South Dakota featuring Daschle's picture next to that of reviled Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. The ad accused Daschle, who won reelection in 1998 with 62 percent of the vote, of supporting the dictator's regime by blocking efforts to drill for oil in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge. Cheney, when shown the ad on the Sunday news show, did not criticize it.
House Republican leaders have been taking their own shots at Daschle, laying the blame for the drawn-out congressional session on his shoulders.
Conservatives hope Daschle will feel pressured into giving in on the Republican-approved House stimulus package, which relies heavily on corporate tax breaks. Democrats say the Republicans are looking for a scapegoat, worried that if the recession continues, the GOP will get the blame in the 2002 elections.
''It's a general [GOP] frustration, and a sense that Daschle is good and effective. They feel they need to get him,'' said Senator Jay Rockefeller, Democrat of West Virginia.
Daschle, said Rockefeller and other allies, really doesn't mind the negative attention.
''It's the old jiujitsu thing. When someone comes at you, you bend backwards and let the weight of his or her punch come at you, and it puts them off balance,'' Rockefeller said.
Republicans ''don't want to talk about the substance,'' said Anita Dunn, Daschle's spokeswoman. ''They believe that their only way out is to try to demonize, in a very partisan and personal way, Senator Daschle.''
The majority leader's critics contend that it isn't personal at all. With control over the Senate schedule, Daschle, the Republicans argue, is holding up an energy bill, an economic stimulus package, and - perhaps worst, for a Congress not accustomed to holiday season legislating - lawmakers' vacations.
''He's got the keys to the Senate, and he's not starting the ignition. At some point, the person responsible for scheduling business in the Senate should answer why the business hasn't been done,'' said Trent Duffy, Republican National Committee spokesman.
''This is nothing personal about Senator Daschle,'' said Richard Lessner, executive director of American Renewal, the group that paid for the ads showing Daschle alongside Saddam Hussein. ''It's his responsibility to make the trains run on time.''
As a symbol of menace, Daschle seems an unlikely candidate. Unlike such politicians as former Republican House speaker Newt Gingrich, or liberal Democratic senators Edward M. Kennedy and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Daschle isn't a polarizing figure.
In a chamber full of ranters and ravers and screamers and yellers, the 54-year-old former Air Force pilot takes a low-key approach. If Bush has a charm offensive, Daschle wins over lawmakers with his patience. Staff members and colleagues say the majority leader - who rules, in fact, only a plurality of 50 Democrats with the honorary presence of Independent James M. Jeffords of Vermont - keeps his caucus together by listening to what everyone has to say. The task is particularly complicated, analysts note, because Daschle is often mentioned, along with several other senators in his party, as a potential presidential candidate in 2004.
''Daschle strikes me as one of those people who I think is particularly partisan, and yet you really can't pin that label on him, because his demeanor is so pleasant,'' said Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution.
Daschle is not prone to raising his voice but he is, former aides say, strongly disciplined and exacting. Memos are never to be delivered in draft form, but as polished products. He awakens before dawn, listening to books on tape as he runs.
Daschle insists on the Senate's completing its work, and has horrified senators with the possibility of meeting right up until New Year's Eve. Nor does he tolerate delaying tactics by fellow Democrats, Rockefeller said - something Senator Russ Feingold, Democrat of Wisconsin, learned when Daschle urged members to vote not to debate amendments Feingold wanted added to the antiterrorism package. It was clear they would not pass.
''He has the fist in the velvet glove,'' said Democratic strategist Peter Fenn.
Daschle's name recognition, along with his national approval rating, have risen dramatically in the past few months. Former aide Doug Hattaway and Democratic analysts said both are attributable to the anthrax scare in Daschle's mail and his portrayal as a bipartisan leader in the war on terrorism.
''I think it's misplaced,'' Democratic strategist Mark Mellman said of the Republicans' attacks. ''Tom Daschle is an extraordinarily appealing figure who right now enjoys the sympathy of America, if only for being the focus of the anthrax attack.''
''He is striving to take a page out of George Mitchell's book,'' said Republican strategist Keith Appell, referring to the former, equally reticent majority leader from Maine. ''Given the success that Mitchell had, I don't think you can rule out that [Daschle] will be successful.''
This story ran on page A8 of the Boston Globe on 12/11/2001. © Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company. |