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To: JohnM who wrote (2263)6/17/2003 4:45:23 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793964
 
Group Nudging Democratic Party to Center
Political moderates will offer an agenda that includes balancing the budget and bolstering the military, causes many on the left resist.
By Ronald Brownstein
LA Times Staff Writer

I have noticed that Ron is consistently good as a Political Reporter. The LA Times is putting out some good coverage.

WASHINGTON -- Worried that Democrats have failed to adequately define an alternative to President Bush, the political arm of the centrist "New Democratic" movement today will release a broad agenda aimed at steering the party toward the political middle.

The New Democrat Network ? a group that funds centrist Democratic candidates ? also will release a poll showing that many of former President Clinton's gains in moderating the party's image have eroded.

The release of the poll and the agenda at a Washington conference hosted by the network could mark an escalation in the growing ideological conflict among Democrats. The early stages of the race for the party's 2004 presidential nomination have reopened divisions between liberal and centrist Democrats that Clinton largely suppressed after his first term.

The Campaign for America's Future, a liberal group, drew nearly 2,000 activists to Washington this month for a conference that urged Democrats to return to liberal priorities. These include universal health-care coverage, more investment in cities and opposition to Bush's foreign and defense policies.

The New Democrat Network's agenda urges the party to stress balancing the federal budget, strengthening the military and expanding free trade ? all causes resisted by many on the left.

"We have clearly not come up with a set of agenda points and a governing agenda that is better than what Bush is offering right now, and we are kidding ourselves if we think we have," said Simon Rosenberg, the network's president.

Founded in 1996, the group has put much of its effort into raising money through its political action committee for Democrats sympathetic to Clinton's efforts to move the party toward the center. The group raised about $6.8 million in the 2002 election. Most of those it has helped are active in the Democratic Leadership Council, a centrist group Clinton once headed.

With today's conference, the network will launch an effort to expand its role into shaping the Democratic message and campaign strategy.

"Republicans have invested in building a much more serious infrastructure than we have on our side," Rosenberg said. "Democrats need to have a strategic plan that creates a long-term answer to the conservative challenge."

As part of its new approach, Rosenberg said the group will establish an "advocacy fund" to reach the public directly through media advertising.

Initially, the advertising is likely to focus on the agenda the group hopes will become a rallying point for centrist Democrats. It is modeled on the "Contract with America" that House Republicans used as an organizing tool in the 1994 midterm campaign that culminated in the GOP's takeover of the House and Senate.

The network's document focuses more on broad goals than specific policies. On national security, it endorses aggressive policies ? such as a commitment to "ensure that America's military is the strongest, most agile, and best-equipped in the world" ? that many on the left will likely see as too belligerent.

On domestic issues, the group's call for a balanced budget, "a market-based" plan for providing prescription drug coverage for seniors and overall reform of Medicare also are likely to raise red flags on the left.

Still, the agenda postpones many potential conflicts by avoiding specific policies and defining the party goals in terms broad enough that most Democrats could support. And on some social issues, the agenda underscores the breadth of the Democratic consensus on party priorities ? such as preserving abortion rights and emphasizing renewable energy and environmental protection.

The national poll the group will release was conducted by Mark Penn, who polled for the White House in Clinton's 1996 reelection campaign and now is working for the presidential campaign of Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut.

The poll found that Bush was favored, 45% to 36%, over an unnamed Democrat when voters were asked who they would prefer in next year's election.

It also showed the electorate reverting to many of the patterns that defined U.S. politics in the 25 years before Clinton won the presidency in 1992 ? a period when Republicans dominated the White House. For instance, the survey found Bush reestablishing overwhelming leads among white men and married voters.

Those polled gave Democrats the edge on such attributes as compassion and fairness, and associated the party with such domestic causes as "fighting for the regular guy" and improving public schools. But Republicans had the advantage on such matters as promoting stronger families and displaying leadership.

"There's no question the images of the parties have slipped back to those pre-Clinton images, and the Democratic Party hasn't been showing the kind of strength that it needs to, particularly in times when international affairs and terrorism became more important," Penn said.

A separate survey to be released at today's conference gauged attitudes among Latino voters. The survey, conducted by Sergio Bendixen, found signs that Latino voters were growing disillusioned with Bush, in part because of a belief the president has not kept his promises on immigration reform. Bendixen is the president of Bendixen and Associates, a Florida-based survey and consulting group that focuses on the Latino population.
latimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (2263)6/18/2003 1:16:24 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793964
 
10 Decisions Remain for Supreme Court
By LINDA GREENHOUSE - NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON, June 17 - This is tea-leaf reading time at the Supreme Court, and, no, the only subject is not whether any justices are planning to retire.

Inside the building, where the frenzy of retirement speculation is largely though not completely discounted, the current topic is when, and under what circumstances, the court plans to announce the remaining 10 decisions and conclude its current term.

If the recent past is any guide, the justices are planning no more than two more decision days: Monday and Thursday next week. That presents the distinct possibility that landmark rulings on affirmative action, gay rights and commercial speech could all be handed down on a single morning.

It has happened before: people still remember the nine decisions, totaling 446 pages, that the court issued on the last day of its 1987-88 term. Such an outpouring of important but often elusive and contested legal language washes over the nation like a tidal wave, leaving confusion in its wake and agenda-driven spin control to fill in the gaps in public understanding.

Many outside the court assume there is a fixed date for the end of the term that mirrors the statutory starting date of the first Monday in October. But that is not the case. The target for the end of the term has been set by a series of internal markers, officially unacknowledged but verified through long observation.

In the 1980's it was Justice William J. Brennan Jr.'s ferry reservation for his summer visits to Martha's Vineyard. Now it is the annual conference of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, for which Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist serves as the circuit justice. He never misses it, and is to go to the Homestead Resort in Hot Springs, Va., on June 26.

But the fact is that the end of the term is not really under the court's collective control, despite the best efforts of the chief justice, an exacting manager who has imposed a series of deadlines aimed at avoiding the end-of-term debacles that regularly occurred under his predecessor, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. In those days, there was often a case or two that the court simply could not manage to decide, meaning that the case had to be restored, embarrassingly, to the calendar for reargument during the next term.

Chief Justice Rehnquist requires all majority opinions to be in internal circulation by June 1. The deadline for circulating dissenting and concurring opinions was Monday of this week. Nonetheless, any justice can request a delay in issuing an opinion ? to respond to someone else's recently added footnote, for example.

Justices accord such a courtesy to one another in the knowledge that in some future term, they might be the ones requesting more time. Justice Harry A. Blackmun's extended labor on a 1989 abortion case kept the court in session over an extra weekend, until Monday, July 3.

Such a scenario, which would extend the term into the week of June 30, may be the only prospect for avoiding an end-of-term pileup of legendary proportions next week. The superheated atmosphere was captured today by an announcement from the media relations office at the University of Michigan that if the decisions in the Michigan affirmative action cases come down on Monday, the university's president, Mary Sue Coleman, will be on the court's plaza beginning at 10:30 in the morning to discuss them.

The only problem is that with opinions being announced from the bench at 10 o'clock, in a process that often takes 15 minutes or more, there is almost no chance that either President Coleman or any of her questioners would have had the opportunity to read and absorb them. But she will undoubtedly have an eager audience of television news reporters grateful for a live picture.

Meanwhile, a favorite court-watchers' guessing game is under way ? who is writing which opinions? This is a form of card-counting that starts from the premise that the two-week periods in which the court sits for arguments throughout the term result in a fairly even distribution of opinions within each sitting.

Of the 11 cases argued in February, only one is undecided and only Chief Justice Rehnquist has not written a majority opinion. The case, United States v. American Library Association, raises the First Amendment question of whether the government can require public libraries to install antipornography filters restricting Internet access.

If Chief Justice Rehnquist is in fact writing the majority opinion, there is little doubt that the court will uphold the law, the Children's Internet Protection Act. On the other hand, he is one of the court's fastest writers, raising the question of why the decision in what is now the term's oldest undecided case is taking so long. One possibility is that there are many separate opinions, both concurring and dissenting. Perhaps he started out writing a majority opinion but lost the majority along the way.

The justices turned briefly from their labors today to break ground for a major modernization project for the court that will move the police department to a two-story underground annex and upgrade all the building's internal systems. Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Sandra Day O'Connor turned ceremonial shovels on the lawn where the excavation will soon begin.

Both justices are the subjects of retirement rumors, and many in the small crowd of dignitaries, sheltered under a tent in the light rain, surely wondered: would either stay around to enjoy the fruits of the five-year $122 million project?

At 73, Justice O'Connor is five years older than the Supreme Court building. Her tone was light, but her words conveyed a certain poignancy when she remarked that when a building turns 70, "we can take the infrastructure and change it and make it like new again," adding, "I wish that were possible for individuals, but it isn't."
nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (2263)6/18/2003 4:21:55 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793964
 
"Do unto the Democrats what they did unto you." The Republicans Golden Rule.

Media Notes: Dissing the Democrats

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, June 16, 2003; 9:00 AM

Is the press blowing off the beleaguered House Democrats?

They certainly think so.

Journalists gravitate toward power in Washington -- and that power, at the moment, is held by the GOP.

The Senate Democrats get some coverage because they're always a vote or two away from forcing the majority to change its legislation or reduce a tax cut (Although have you noticed how much less attention Tom Daschle is getting since he took himself out of the '04 sweepstakes?).

But the House is largely covered as a DeLay operation that rolls over the minority party without so much as a backward glance. The House almost always gives the president what he wants (unless Tom DeLay disagrees, on subjects like tax credits for lower-income kids), shifting the real fight to the Senate, where the Dems at least play a moderating role.

How many articles have you read about Nancy Pelosi lately? Exactly.

The House Dems let off steam about this in a New Republic piece by Michael Crowley. Lots of complaints about a near-total inability to offer amendments or otherwise shape legislation, along with all manner of petty slights.

Of course, the Democrats acted in a similarly high-handed fashion during the decades when they ruled the House, as people like DeLay used to complain. This point sort of gets short shrift.

But of particular fascination to us, deep in the piece, is the charge that the press just looks the other way because it isn't interested in the behind-the-scenes maneuvering through which the Republicans repeatedly stick it to the Dems:

"Nothing agonizes House Democrats more than the perception that they don't even put up a fight. And, for this, they have a culprit almost as loathsome as Tom DeLay: the media. This dilemma was never more clear than on May 14, when a group of more than a dozen House Democrats, led by Bernie Sanders of Vermont (an independent in name but a loyal Democrat in practice), organized a press conference on a subject of urgent concern to them: an upcoming Federal Communications Commission ruling on media consolidation. The Democrats assembled and waited for the reporters. And waited. None showed up. None, that is, until a scribe from Roll Call hurried over to cover the humiliating spectacle of a press conference with no press.

" 'The press has been disgracefully acquiescent,' says [Rep. Barney] Frank. 'Democrats these days are told by other Democrats, who are not full-time in politics, "Well, we're disappointed. We don't hear much from you." '

"One reason for this, Democrats say, is that the press doesn't write about the procedural tactics the GOP employs to quash opposition. The public often assumes Democrats rolled over in cases when they were, in fact, steamrolled. "The press won't cover Rules or Rules Committee votes,' says House Democratic spokesman David Sirota. 'It's process--but it's tantamount to substance.'

"Shrewdly, Republicans make process stories especially unappealing to reporters. The Rules Committee, for instance, often considers controversial bills late at night, long after the evening news and even newspaper deadlines."

Diabolically clever!

" 'They intentionally do things late at night so they can sneak things through,' says Rep. Martin Frost, who has dubbed this the Vampire Congress. Another aide offers a blunter assessment, one borne of obvious bitterness: 'The press is pretty goddamn lazy. In order to write about the Rules Committee would mean that you actually have to learn something about rules and procedures. And the press just doesn't do that.'

"What truly drives Democrats berserk, however, are media reports declaring that 'the Congress' has passed a bill, without any mention of even the most furious Democratic opposition. 'We're out there organizing press conferences, fighting them on the floor, debating them nonstop,' says a leadership aide, 'and what you read in the press is, "The Congress passed this," "The Congress passed that," and you don't even hear about the opposition.' "

"During last month's tax-cut fight, a Democratic leadership aide said: 'I'm just out here to badger any reporters into including a paragraph--a paragraph--on our alternative. But I don't see anyone.' The next day, The New York Times did include such a paragraph (after 14 others on the Republican plan), but The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and two of the three major network news shows made little or no mention of the Democrats' protests."

Maybe journalists are catching on: Here's a Washington Post piece on what goes on in the all-powerful Rules Committee:

"In 1994, Rep. David Dreier (R-Calif.) lamented how Democrats were routinely preventing Republicans from getting votes on their more conservative ideas. 'All we are asking for is fair treatment on both sides of the aisle here,' he said.

"A decade later, Dreier now rules the House Rules Committee with an iron fist and routinely prevents Democrats from getting votes on their more liberal ideas."

In a shrewd campaign move, Bush has tapped a media-savvy veteran to run the RNC. The New York Times plays up the revolving-door angle:

"Over the past decade, Ed Gillespie, who was chosen today by President Bush to be chairman of the Republican National Committee through next year's election, has worn many hats, some of them simultaneously.

"Mr. Gillespie has been the party's spokesman, the manager of the 2000 Republican convention, a Congressional aide, a campaign strategist and consultant, an official on Mr. Bush's transition team, an outside adviser to the president, a political fund-raiser, a television pundit and, most recently, a lobbyist for big corporations and trade associations.

"But for the next 18 months, he said in an interview, he will wear only one hat. "I will be a full-time party chairman," he said. 'There will be no lobbying, no discussion of government policy with clients, no meetings about lobbying strategy.'

"Mr. Gillespie, 41, said he would retain his stake in his lobbying firm, Quinn Gillespie & Associates, where he is a partner of Jack Quinn, who was President Bill Clinton's White House counsel and Vice President Al Gore's chief of staff, but would do no work for the firm and collect no salary as long as he was a party official.

"In the long term, Mr. Gillespie's lobbying business will hardly suffer from his term as party chairman, but he says he did not take the job to make more money."

Which is probably true, since he was already making boatloads of money.

Howard Dean has won the race to the airwaves, as USA Today reports:

"The contest for the Democratic presidential nomination intensifies today with the first candidate advertising. The Iowa TV campaign by Howard Dean is the latest example of the aggressive tactics the former Vermont governor is using to boost his profile and put pressure on rivals.

"Analysts say Dean's two-week, $300,000 ad buy is a gamble that could pay off Jan. 19, when the Iowa caucuses launch the nomination season. Or the ads could give him just a temporary boost while taking a big bite of the estimated $2.5 million that federal rules permit candidates to spend this primary season in Iowa. . . .

"The ad is called 'Straight Talk,' evoking the maverick theme of Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain's presidential campaign in 2000. Dean is in shirtsleeves, with a barn and a tractor behind him. He says President Bush's foreign policy 'isn't making us safer' and his tax cuts 'are ruining our economy and costing us jobs.' He says 'too many Democrats in Washington are afraid to stand up for what we believe in.' "

Will anyone remember this ad in six months? That's the gamble.

Vermont's Times Argus says Dean is moving slightly toward the center, at least on one issue:

"Former Gov. Howard Dean appears to be shedding some of the liberal tendencies that have won him national attention as he now expands his support for the death penalty.

"In his 11 years as Vermont's governor, his position on capital punishment 'evolved' from staunch opposition to limited support, Dean acknowledges.

"Now, on the stump for the Democratic nomination for president, Dean has extended his endorsement of a death sentence for those who kill children or police officers to include those who commit terrorist acts.

" 'As governor, I came to believe that the death penalty would be a just punishment for certain, especially heinous crimes, such as the murder of a child or the murder of a police officer. The events of September 11 convinced me that terrorists also deserve the ultimate punishment,' Dean said in a statement released by his campaign last week.

"Dean, who was unavailable for an interview, did not define a terrorist act in his statement. He elaborated only to say the punishment would be sought in 'very serious cases' and he would do his best to avoid any 'unjust imposition of the death penalty.' "

Our print column yesterday examined how much tougher the British press has been on the WMD issue. Which leads us to these Joe Conason observations in Salon:

"The White House can't fool all the people all of the time, but with the help of the mainstream media the administration has deceived a lot of people about issues of global importance. A national survey reported in Knight-Ridder newspapers says that one-third of the American public 'believes U.S. forces found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq' -- which means they also believed the false (and universally quoted) statement to that effect the president made two weeks ago on Polish television. The political science professors who analyzed that survey for the University of Maryland are wondering why a substantial minority would think they have seen proof that doesn't yet exist.

"Theories aside, the most suggestive fact found by the mid-May poll is that respondents who supported the war are more likely than others to believe that weapons of mass destruction have already been discovered. They won't let the facts disturb their opinions. Weak, credulous media coverage of administration claims also serves to confuse the citizenry.

"That explains why pollsters find strikingly different results in Britain, where the press treats the Blair government with the skepticism it has earned on this issue. Nearly 60 percent of the British public suspects that their own government and ours 'exaggerated the threat of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction,' while a third said the Iraq war has diminished their trust in the prime minister."

Of course, the Brits were more skeptical of the war from the beginning.

American Prospect's Robert Kuttner is worried that the '04 candidates may rip each other apart:

"The next year of Democratic candidates' debates can either be a demolition derby for the amusement of Karl Rove or a year of free television time to hone the Democrats' case against the Bush presidency.

"Game theorists famously describe a 'prisoners' dilemma' in which everyone would be better off if all involved cooperated, but each prisoner in isolation maximizes his personal advantage by betraying the others. The Democratic debates amount to a partisan prisoners' dilemma: The whole field would be better off if everyone turned their fire only on President Bush, but they can't resist attacking one another.

"Ronald Reagan, back in 1966, called for a Republican Eleventh Commandment: 'Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican.' If even one candidate began speaking in the spirit of the dialogue above, maybe the others would be shamed into reciprocating.

"Amid their frenzy to raise candidate money, the Democrats might also find some funds for generic advertising -- now -- on what the Republicans are doing to the country and about Bush's penchant for chronic deception, whether the issue is education, taxes, health care or war. That would also improve the prospects of the eventual nominee."

Days after financial disclosure forms revealed he made about $9 million on the speech circuit last year, Bill Clinton manages to change the subject:

"This is what the other Clinton is up to," says the Philadelphia Inquirer.

"While his wife, Hillary, the U.S. senator and best-selling author, has been in the spotlight, former President Bill Clinton has been spending much of his energy and global influence fighting AIDS overseas.

"Speaking with a small group of reporters yesterday at his office in Harlem, Clinton waxed enthusiastic about his yearlong effort to coordinate drug companies, local governments and public-health experts. And he admitted he did not do enough as president to battle the global epidemic."

Speaking of 42, Roger Simon explains how incredibly strange it was for Clinton to express sympathy for Howell Raines in a call to Times Publisher Arthur Sulzberger (as we reported yesterday):

"Raines was the editor of the Times editorial page when Clinton was president and wrote editorials so stinging that Mike McCurry, then the White House spokesman, once told me - - on the record and I printed it - - that Raines was 'psychotic.' . . .

"There are scores of examples that demonstrate how tough Raines was on Clinton, but a single editorial, perhaps the most extraordinary the New York Times has ever published about a president, sums it up.

"It appeared on Dec. 16, 1998, a few days before the House voted to impeach Clinton. It was a difficult editorial to write because even though the editorial board had been scathing in its view of Clinton, it did not think he should be impeached.

"The editorial begins by saying Clinton was a 'man blessed with great talent and afflicted with a mysterious passion for lying.' Then it begins talking about 'Mr. Clinton's ugly little lies, his abject failure to lead by example and to speak truthfully to the American people, his equally dismal failure to honor the historic residence entrusted to him, and his abandonment of his constitutional duty to defend and uphold the law. He is, in sum, a man you cannot trust whether you have his handshake, his signature or his word on a Bible.'

"This is about a sitting president, keep in mind, the Leader of the Free World and all that. The editorial goes on to talk about Clinton's 'mendacity,' but also warns that the House vote 'will be setting precedents by which the nation will be governed when this Presidency is a memory as distant and distasteful as that of Warren G. Harding.'

It also calls Clinton's term in office the 'most disappointing White House tenure since that of Richard Nixon' and describes Clinton as 'wrapped in dishonor, his face a mask of depression.'

But my favorite line . . . 'That transfer of power without gunfire or legislative chicanery is the jewel in the crown of American democracy,' the editorial said. 'It should not be sacrificed over Bill Clinton's inability to resist looking at thong underwear.'

"Pow! Right between the eyes!

"Even people who had wanted Clinton to resign, such as Timothy Noah of Slate, wrote that this editorial showed Raines' 'pathological hatred' of Bill Clinton.

"So what happens? Less than five years later, Clinton is the most beloved figure in the Democratic Party (admittedly the competition is not fierce) and Howell Raines is out of work.

"But who comes to Raines' defense? Bill Clinton! Why? Because Bill Clinton is still trying to win Raines over, still trying to get some love."

The man does not give up.
washingtonpost.com