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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gordon A. Langston who wrote (217297)1/11/2002 3:21:20 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 769667
 
washingtonpost.com

Lanny J. Davis, who counseled the Clinton White House on scandal management, warned Democrats against overreaching. "I don't think there's any shred of evidence that the White House has any connection to what went wrong with Enron," Davis said. "Democrats should not go down the road of focusing on innuendo."

Yesterday marked the White House's first overt effort to dampen the controversy. Officials portrayed the Enron fiasco as a financial tragedy in which they had no involvement. Instead of focusing on Enron, Karen Hughes, Bush's counselor, held two meetings with him on his Jan. 29 State of the Union speech.

A senior administration official said the White House is not conducting an internal inquiry to determine all of the Enron contacts with the administration. "There's no indication that there needs to be one," the official said.

For all the professions of nonchalance from the West Wing, Clinton administration officials pointed out, from bitter experience, the debilitating effects that a series of congressional inquiries can have on an administration's morale and agenda.

"Every staff meeting starts with who's going to testify today, and how you're going to spin what's coming out of this or that committee," the official said. "God bless the Bush people, because no one's ever been through a hell like September 11th. But they've never faced anything like this, either."

White House officials dismissed that as wishful thinking on the part of Democrats. One administration official called it "scandal envy" and said, "They've taken it on the chin for eight years, and now they think they've found their Whitewater." White House officials said there is no comparison because there is no indication that Bush took any action on Enron's behalf.

"We're happy to air this because there's nothing to hide," a senior administration official said.

Other Republican officials said Democratic inquiries will be hampered by the lack of any illegal or surprising actions by the White House. Rich Galen, a Republican strategist who writes a political newsletter on the Web called Mullings, compared Enron's input into Bush's energy policy with "a Democratic White House consulting the AFL-CIO for a revision of labor policy."



To: Gordon A. Langston who wrote (217297)1/11/2002 3:29:21 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 769667
 
January 11, 2002

BUSINESS
Greenspan Says Economy Getting Better, but Still Faces Risks
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

nytimes.com
Filed at 2:21 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said Friday that there are scattered hopeful signs that the recession could be ending, but he warned that the American economy still faces ``significant risks.''

Greenspan, making his first public comments on the economy since the Fed last cut interest rates on Dec. 11, said there are ``tentative indications'' that the economic slump could be drawing to a close, but he said those signals at present are far from conclusive.

``I would emphasize that we continue to face significant risks in the near term,'' Greenspan said in a speech prepared for delivery to a business audience in San Francisco. Copies were released in Washington.

Greenspan identified some of those threats as weak profits and business investment and restrained household spending caused by rising unemployment.

But Greenspan said there are tentative signs that a recovery could soon begin.

``If the recent, more favorable developments continue and gain momentum, uncertainties will diminish,'' he said.

The Fed last year drove interest rates down to a 40-year low in a series of 11 rate reductions.

Greenspan's comments on Friday appeared to leave the door open to a further rate cut, possibly at the Fed's next meeting on Jan. 29-30.

The current recession, which ended a record 10-year period of U.S. prosperity, has officially been dated as starting last March. But Greenspan noted in his comments that the economy has been struggling with weak growth ever since the summer of 2000.

The Fed began aggressively cutting interest rates in January 2001, reducing its target for the federal funds rate, the interest that banks charge each other, from 6.5 percent at the start of last year down to the current level of 1.75 percent, the lowest in 40 years.

Greenspan said that before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, there were signs that the economy had begun to stabilize, but those gains were wiped out with the severe jolt dealt to consumer and business confidence by the attacks.

He cautioned that economic forecasting is now even more fraught with the ``major uncertainty that we all must deal with these days -- the specter of further terrorist incidents on American soil. It simply is not possible to predict whether there will be any such incidents or to forecast their possible consequences for the economy.''

Greenspan, as he has done in other remarks since Sept. 11, did contend that the significant rebound in the growth of American workers' productivity in recent years should continue. It has been this big improvement in productivity that has allowed the Fed to be less worried about inflation dangers.

Greenspan noted that in recent weeks there have been signs that the economy is now stabilizing after huge job losses in the two months immediately after the terrorist attacks.

He noted that consumer spending, which has stayed strong through much of last year, is continuing to rise, although at a more subdued rate. Spending, he said, will be helped by substantial declines in energy prices.

But Greenspan said that the unemployment rate, which hit a six-year high of 5.8 percent in December, is likely to continue rising even after the recovery begins. He noted, however, that new claims for unemployment benefits have tapered off recently.

``If the tentative indications that the contraction phase of this business cycle is drawing to a close are ultimately confirmed, we will have experienced a relatively mild downturn,'' Greenspan said.

``To be sure, a great deal of real economic pain has been felt over the past year and a half,'' he added.

Many economists are forecasting that unemployment, which just over a year ago had dipped to a four-decade low of 3.9 percent, will rise to a peak of around 7 percent this summer. That would compare to a jobless rate peak of 7.8 percent in the last recession in 1990-91.



To: Gordon A. Langston who wrote (217297)1/11/2002 3:37:20 PM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
stpetersburgtimes.com
The president could not bring himself to admit that his $1.35-trillion, decade-long tax cut will virtually guarantee deficits for years to come.