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


To: Doug R who wrote (432518)7/24/2003 9:08:00 AM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769670
 
you were posting at 2:05am eastern and you are back at 9:05 am....DNC putting an extra quarter in your bag this week?



To: Doug R who wrote (432518)7/24/2003 9:11:25 AM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
Bush wouldn't DARE to go against over 400! members of the Congress on this one!
Bush's Four Horsemen

July 24, 2003
By WILLIAM SAFIRE



WASHINGTON
On the domestic front, President Bush is backing into a
buzz saw.

The sleeper issue is media giantism. People are beginning
to grasp and resent the attempt by the Federal
Communications Commission to allow the Four Horsemen of Big
Media - Viacom (CBS, UPN), Disney (ABC), Murdoch's News
Corporation (Fox) and G.E. (NBC) - to gobble up every
independent station in sight.

Couch potatoes throughout the land see plenty wrong in
concentrating the power to produce the content we see and
hear in the same hands that transmit those broadcasts. This
is especially true when the same Four Horsemen own many
satellite and cable providers and already influence key
sites on the Internet.

Reflecting that widespread worry, the Senate Commerce
Committee voted last month to send to the floor Ted
Stevens's bill rolling back the F.C.C.'s anything-goes
ruling. It would reinstate current limits and also deny
newspaper chains the domination of local TV and radio.

The Four Horsemen were confident they could get Bush to
suppress a similar revolt in the House, where G.O.P.
discipline is stricter. When liberals and conservatives of
both parties in the House surprised them by passing a
rollback amendment to an Appropriations Committee bill, the
Bush administration issued what bureaucrats call a SAP - a
written Statement of Administration Policy.

It was the sappiest SAP of the Bush era. "If this amendment
were contained in the final legislation presented to the
President," warned the administration letter, "his senior
advisers would recommend that he veto the bill."

The SAP was signed by the brand-new director of the Office
of Management and Budget, Joshua Bolten, but the hand was
the hand of Stephen Friedman, the former investment banker
now heading the president's National Economic Council.

Reached late yesterday, Friedman forthrightly made his case
that the F.C.C. was an independent agency that had followed
the rules laid down by the courts. He told me that Bush's
senior advisers had focused on the question "Can you
eliminate excessive regulation and have diversity and
competition?" and found the answer to be yes. He added with
candor: "The politics I'm still getting an education on."

The Bush veto threat would deny funding to the Commerce,
State and Justice Departments, not to mention the federal
judiciary. It would discombobulate Congress and disserve
the public for months.

And to what end? To turn what we used to call "public
airwaves" into private fiefs, to undermine diversity of
opinion and - in its anti-federalist homogenization of our
varied culture - to sweep aside local interests and
community standards of taste.

This would be Bush's first veto. Is this the misbegotten
principle on which he wants to take a stand? At one of the
White House meetings that decided on the SAP approach,
someone delicately suggested that such a veto of the
giants' power grab might pose "a communications issue" for
the president (no play on words intended). Friedman blew
that objection away. The SAP threat was delivered.

In the House this week, allies of the Four Horsemen
distributed a point sheet drawn from Viacom and Murdoch
arguments and asked colleagues to sign a cover letter
reading, "The undersigned members . . . will vote to
sustain a Presidential veto of legislation overturning or
delaying . . . the decision of the FCC . . . regarding
media ownership."

But they couldn't obtain the signatures of anywhere near
one-third of the House members - the portion needed to stop
an override. Yesterday afternoon, the comprehensive bill -
including an F.C.C. rollback - passed by a vote of 400 to
21.

If Bush wishes to carry out the veto threat, he'll pick up
a bunch of diehards (now called "dead-enders"), but he will
risk suffering an unnecessary humiliation.

What next? Much depends on who is chosen to go into the
Senate-House conference. If the White House can't stop the
rollback there, will Bush carry out the ill-considered
threat?

Sometimes you put the veto gun back in the holster. The way
out: a president can always decide to turn down the
recommendation of his senior advisers.

nytimes.com

CC



To: Doug R who wrote (432518)7/24/2003 9:16:14 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
DR, It's an opinion of the person that wrote the article. Maybe you should stop posting until the early hours, you seem a little defensive this morning...