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To: JohnM who wrote (4003)7/30/2003 11:00:43 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793742
 
I'll go back to matching this stuff with pieces from The Nation.

Did you read it? That is actually a "pro-Davis" piece, IMO. Don't always go by the source, John. here is a "Nation" piece that reveals a lot more than they realize.

This article can be found on the web at
thenation.com
Getting the Blues

by PETER SCHRAG

[from the August 4, 2003 issue]

In the winter and early spring of 2001, when Dick Cheney was telling Californians that their sky-high electricity bills were their own tree-hugging fault, you might have thought the Administration was just covering for Enron CEO Ken Lay and George W. Bush's other Texas energy friends and, as an added bonus, sticking it to the lotus-eaters on the Left Coast who'd given Al Gore his million-vote California majority.

But that was just the paranoia of the innocent. In the past year, as the nation's deficit-ridden states were pleading for federal help, Washington was telling them all to drop dead--reserving harshest treatment for the "blues," meaning the liberal states that voted for Democrats. While California was not alone, it was certainly the biggest target, as the only large state with a Democratic governor, Democratic legislature and a Congressional delegation dominated (32-to-20) by Democrats. "They view California," said a Washington lobbyist, "as a foreign land."

Some of that you can ascribe to the Administration's efforts to suck every possible dollar of the cost of Bush's tax cuts from the states. But behind the fiscal policies--the unfunded mandates (i.e., new federal requirements without funds to help states comply); the cost of NCLB, Bush's "No Child Left Behind" education law; the childcare expenses made necessary by the Administration's proposed new federal work rules for welfare recipients--there seemed to be an ideological thrust, bordering on vindictiveness, aimed at teaching the liberal states a lesson.

Late in April, as states like Oregon were preparing to close schools weeks before the end of the term, and others were dumping hundreds of thousands off the Medicaid rolls, laying off cops and raising college tuition to close a collective two-year deficit estimated by the nonpartisan National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) at upwards of $100 billion, Grover Norquist said he'd like to see a state or two go bankrupt.

Norquist, who runs the conservative Americans for Tax Reform and heads what Bill Moyers has called a politburo of conservative strategy, is also joined at the hip with Karl Rove, the President's political brain and one of his chief policy advisers. "I hope a state has real trouble getting its act together," Norquist told the New York Times's David Firestone. "We need a state to be a bad example, so that the others will start to make the serious decisions they need to get out of this mess." When Norquist speaks on such issues, you're never sure whether he's the ventriloquist or Rove's talking dog.

Brian Riedl, a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, put it more mildly, but it amounted to the same thing. "Deficits," he said, "provide states with a golden opportunity to examine their budgets and reduce wasteful and ineffective spending, which helps them keep taxes low and aid the economic recovery." Lay off those teachers, kick poor working mothers off the rolls of those who get help with childcare, close a few more parks. Norquist's and Riedl's remarks were generally directed at "states," but it didn't take much parsing to conclude that they weren't referring to Nebraska or Alabama. It was the liberal states--the Democratic states with the relatively generous social welfare programs and the more progressive tax rates--that they were talking about.

Forget that Washington, with Bush's multitrillion-dollar tax cuts, is running deficits that are proportionally larger than those of the states; forget that at least part of the states' problems resulted not just from their unchecked boom-era spending and from a recession compounded by misbegotten federal economic policies but from their own tax cuts, which could have come straight out of Norquist's playbook. Both New York and California would have $13-$14 billion more in annual revenues had they not cut their own taxes during the mid- and late 1990s. Which is to say that the states' problems are also compounded by Norquist's White House friends and his allies in the Republican Congress.

Nor, of course, is it just the blue states that are being hit. Altogether, according to the NCSL, as of mid-April unfunded and underfunded mandates imposed on state and local governments totaled between $23.5 billion and $82.5 billion a year. When Democrats and Republican moderates like Maine's Olympia Snowe pressured Congress in May to add a $20 billion, two-year state fiscal-assistance package to Bush's $800 billion tax cut, therefore, it covered less than half of the lowest estimate of just the unfunded-mandate part of the gap, itself a fraction of a long list of other federal impositions. (And because the new federal tax cuts include cuts in dividend and capital gains tax rates, they also make equities more attractive and thus raise the cost to states and municipalities of the bonds they issue.)

The fiscal assistance package prompted NCSL to issue a handout praising Congress for the help. But privately, state officials said it was far too little: NCSL itself had wanted $40 billion. The Democratic Governors' Association wanted $63 billion in aid and infrastructure investments. Among the most effective stimulus packages are strong state programs in public works, education and social services.

Lobbyists for state organizations in Washington will also tell you privately that the White House has "thoroughly intimidated" Republican governors--and some Democrats as well. "The Republicans are so disciplined," said a frustrated lobbyist for a Democratic governor. "The White House has imposed enormous pressure on the GOP governors, which is why you don't see the National Governors Association making much noise." Snowe, Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter and other Republican moderates, who've been savagely attacked by conservative organizations like the Club for Growth, know the price of even minor departures from the White House line.

You hear the same thing from people in the nonpartisan organizations, though none of them want to be identified either. This, said one, "is the most political administration I've seen in thirty years. If you're part of the team, you get access, but once you leave the reservation, that's it. Anyone who's not on board is done, and anything that shows blue is suspect." Norquist and fellow conservatives are using the long arms of the White House and Congress to discipline the states.

Even before Bush was elected, according to people like Tim Ransdell, who runs the California Institute, a nonpartisan research organization supplying data to that state's Congressional delegation, the structure of federal formulas made California and the Northeastern states the big "donor states"--those that paid more in federal taxes than they got back in federal programs and contracts. For every dollar California pays in taxes, it gets back 82 cents; for every dollar New Jersey pays, it gets back 67 cents; for every dollar Montana pays, it gets back $1.75.

Bush-era unfunded mandates and impositions, like expenses for homeland security, however, have been particularly hard on the so-called blue states. In part that's because they tend to be the states with the poorer people, the larger welfare and Medicaid loads, and, not coincidentally, the tougher environmental regulations, none of them beloved by this Administration.

But of course these are also the states that voted for Gore and thus, with the exception of the states that may be in play in 2004, find no particular hospitality in the Bush Administration. According to Representative Bob Matsui, a Democrat, and others in the California delegation, even staunch California Republicans, like Representative David Dreier, head of California's GOP caucus, have a hard time getting access to the White House. "Dreier's staff," said a staff member for another Californian, "feel like stepchildren. The White House pays attention to swing states like Pennsylvania and Illinois, but California"--where Bush was trounced in 2000 and where Gray Davis won re-election as governor in 2002 despite a major White House effort to beat him--"has been humiliating for Rove. He ended with egg on his face.... They're not going to do a damn thing for us."

In April 2001, after California's misbegotten energy deregulation scheme opened the state to big-time price gouging by Enron and other Texas energy marketers, Cheney met with Congress members from the Northwest, but according to Representative Jay Inslee of Washington, only on condition that Californians be kept out of the meeting. If California hadn't thought it could conserve its way out of its energy needs, Cheney said, it wouldn't have blocked the construction of new power plants. It could expect no regulatory help from Washington--and it got none until Senator James Jeffords quit the GOP and control of the Senate changed hands in May 2001.

Cheney's charge was a bum rap. It was the energy producers' own caution about market prospects that kept them from proposing new California plants; it was a Republican governor who, in 1996, approved California's wrongheaded deregulation scheme; and, as the country later learned, it was market manipulation, abetted by the failure of both the state and federal governments to act, that helped drive energy prices through the roof.

But the list of particulars runs far beyond energy.

§ House approval (still pending in the Senate) of the Administration's tougher work rules under TANF, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. Those requirements--to work forty hours a week rather than the current thirty--would be virtually impossible to meet for workers in the low-wage restaurant and hotel jobs in which many ex-welfare recipients find themselves. That would create a need not only for more state-funded public service jobs at a time when states are laying off thousands of workers but for billions in additional state childcare money. In California alone, according to the state's nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office, those changes would cost $2.8 billion over the next five years. If the rules go into effect, State Senator Raymond Meier of New York, a Republican, told a House committee, "it will force states to reallocate TANF funding away from creative and innovative services [to get people off welfare] and exacerbate the difficulties states face in providing childcare to those on welfare and poor working families."

§ A gap of at least $6 billion annually between what Bush promised and Congress authorized under NCLB to pay for the mandated education programs--"highly qualified" teachers in every classroom by 2005-06, intensive reading programs for at-risk children and the required yearly progress in test scores. One researcher in Vermont calculated that it would take more than $84 billion to comply with NCLB annual progress requirements. Bush has proposed $1 billion. Every state, from New Hampshire to Washington, is feeling that pinch; New Hampshire's school administrators say that for every dollar the state gets from the Feds, it has to kick in $7 to meet the NCLB requirements.

§ Ongoing underfunding of the costs of homeland security. According to federal formulas, the $2 billion that Congress is now providing gives states like Wyoming and South Dakota--those magnets for terrorists--between eight and ten times as much per resident as California or New York. And even that money hardly compensates for cuts in other federal law-enforcement assistance. A new study conducted for the Council on Foreign Relations concluded that tight state and local budgets had sharply reduced police manpower in many places and that federal funding for state and local security over the next five years fell short by some $98 billion--a huge figure but, in the words of study adviser Richard Clarke, "decimal dust" compared with the Defense Department budget.

§ The effects of the first round of Bush tax cuts, which Representative John Spratt of South Carolina, the senior Democrat on the House Budget Committee, says has cost the states about $75 billion. The Bush Administration, he told the Times, is "just indifferent to the problem they're causing."

Those discrepancies are partly the result of formulas--and the clout of senators--that always give small states proportionally more money than populous states. But in this Administration and Congress, there's special relish in whacking the liberal states.

Maybe you can write off the Administration's double standard in agreeing to buy back oil leases off the Florida coast last year, but refusing to do the same in California. Since Governor Jeb Bush, the President's brother, was running for re-election, call that politics as usual. But what are we to make of the Justice Department's unprecedented decision to join auto makers (in this case, General Motors and DaimlerChrysler) in their lawsuit attacking state emission control regulations, as the Feds did last year in California?

What of changed EPA rules on so-called new source review, which, to please energy industry contributors--who kicked in some $44 million to the Bush campaign--allow factories, refineries and power plants to expand and build without installing the most advanced emission controls? Those changes came in the face of vehement protests and lawsuits from the Northeastern states, where ecosystems are being damaged by acid rain created by pollution from Midwestern power plants.

What of the move to allow the Pentagon, in the name of national defense, to get around all federal toxic-dumping rules on its military installations, despite protests from agencies like the California EPA, and regardless of the fact that a lot of the toxics leach into neighboring wells and groundwater? According to a study for the Environmental Working Group conducted by Texas Tech University, perchlorate, a rocket fuel component that can depress thyroid function and impede development in fetuses and newborn babies, has already contaminated water in nineteen states and has been found in lettuce at four times the level the EPA regards as safe in drinking water.

And what of the intense, relentless campaign launched by Attorney General John Ashcroft and drug czar John Walters to gut voter-enacted state medical marijuana laws? At a time when federal law-enforcement authorities are supposedly stretched thin by terrorism threats, what perverse passion would drive them to devote precious investigative and prosecutorial resources to that dubious purpose? Eight states, including Arizona, have approved such laws in the past seven years, all but one by voter initiative, but it's been California and Californians that have been virtually the sole target.

The same Justice Department vehemence has been directed toward eviscerating Oregon's doctor-assisted-suicide law, approved twice by voters in that state. That attempt, still blocked in the courts, has implications far beyond assisted suicide, since it could subject any physician using morphine or other drugs to relieve the pain of cancer or other diseases in terminally ill patients to prosecution or denial of the right to prescribe, which is tantamount to a denial of the right to practice.

Ashcroft says that federal Drug Enforcement Administration operatives can easily discern the "important medical, ethical and legal distinctions between intentionally causing a patient's death and providing sufficient dosages of pain medication necessary to eliminate or alleviate pain." But as any doctor can tell you, that's baloney. The very process of alleviating pain may hasten death.

What's particularly notable about Ashcroft's crusade is its intrusion into an area constitutionally reserved to the states by an Administration professing to honor states' rights headed by a former governor who has promised to be sensitive to the problems of the states.

In February, Ashcroft, a longtime friend of the gun lobby, threatened to criminally prosecute California officials for what he claims is illegal use of a federal data bank to track down illegal gun users. Ashcroft had also threatened to go after Georgia officials for denying gun permits to people that the federal data bank showed had been arrested for felonies but not convicted. Georgia complied, and according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, seventeen or eighteen people facing felony charges are now given Georgia gun permits daily.

You can get endless arguments about the motives. Is the White House's ugly treatment of the states simply the result of political expedience by an Administration that even opponents like Matsui say is highly astute politically, or is there an unbending ideological streak that, in ways never before attempted, seeks to use federal muscle to beat back liberalism in the states with nearly the same vehemence and determination it applies to federal policy?

Through the past two and a half years, the Administration, often flying the flag of the terrorism war, has altered federal policy in ways that couldn't have been imagined before the 2000 election--in its radical aggrandizement of the power to investigate, wiretap and detain suspects; in the concomitant rollback of civil liberties; in its tolerance for polluters and offshore tax dodges; in its multitrillion-dollar tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans; in its rollback of countless social programs.

But the attempt, often successful, to extend those efforts into the states, to use local cops to search out undocumented immigrants for detention, to go after liberal state laws--auto emission controls, medical marijuana, doctor-assisted suicide, welfare and childcare--is unprecedented. Without fanfare or discussion, the Administration appears to be putting the screws to liberal state programs with the same determination it is applying to things like tax cuts (which, of course, are the key to all other domestic policy).

Consistent with that effort, in March the White House decided no longer to publish a key document called Budget Information for States, which reported annually how much states receive under each federal program, and thus made it easy for local officials and advocacy groups to keep track of how their programs were treated. Eliminating the book, said a spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget, will eliminate the cost of the paper and production of the volume. How frugal. Who would have thought that it would be a Republican--and an ex-governor to boot--who'd bring federalism to its knees?
thenation.com



To: JohnM who wrote (4003)7/30/2003 11:14:25 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793742
 
As soon as my work schedule slows down

What are you doing? I thought your politics had died down for a while. I am still nursing my bum foot. Will try to get back on the dance floor this weekend and see if it holds up. Here is a speech DeLay made to a group of College kids that drove Krugman up a tree.

Fear and Loathing in the Mother Ship

Good afternoon, or, as John Kerry might say: "Bonjour!"

I'm sure you've already heard a good many speakers today and will hear a bunch more after I'm done.

So you'll probably judge my speech more on its brevity than its persuasiveness.

But that's okay, because as you may have heard, we Republicans from Texas aren't known for our el-o-qua-city.

But we are known for being clear.

So in the interests of clarity, I have a simple message to pass along: the national Democrat party seems to have lost its marbles.

Though they remain a potent electoral machine, armed with battalions of trial lawyers and entertainers, and their Grand Coalition of the Perpetually Partisan, they are no longer a serious force in the national debate.

Their single organizing philosophy is an irrational, all-encompassing, broiling hatred of George W. Bush.

They hate him for a million reasons.

But most of all, Democrats hate the president because on every political issue of significance since he came into office, he has beaten them like rented mules.

Just look at their presidential candidates: it's like they're lost in a time warp.

They want to tax like Mondale and spend like Carter.

While everyone else got the memo that big-government, blame-America-first liberalism died with disco, the Howard Dean Democrats still want to party like it's 1979!

Maybe we should thank the Democrats for shedding their moderate clothing to reveal their true Swinging-Seventies selves.

But frankly, America doesn't need a president in a hot-pink leisure suit.

Today, the United States is at war.

It's not a war of our choosing, nor of our instigation.

But it is a war.

The September 11th attacks were not isolated incidents, or the actions of disgruntled political dissidents.

They were a premeditated assault on the freedom of every human being on this planet, and the United States is now committed to fight global terrorism with every resource at our disposal.

Containment is not an option, to say nothing of appeasement.

Terrorism will either be confronted, dead on, or it will destroy the free nations of the earth.

But in the last 18 months, it has become clear that the extreme, Bush-hating wing of the Democrat Party has decided to either ignore or reject the fundamental realities of 21st century life.

And rather than distance themselves from the hate, the party's leaders have embraced it.

To try to gauge just how out of touch the Democrat leadership is on the war on terror, just close your eyes and try to imagine Ted Kennedy landing that Navy jet on the deck of that aircraft carrier.

I don't know about you, I certainly don't want to see Teddy Kennedy in a Navy flight suit anytime soon.

After their embarrassing behavior over the last 18 months, the Democrats now have no credibility on national security.

Just look at the record.

John Kerry says what we really need is "regime change in Washington."

After the Iraqi uprising at Firdos Square, House Democrat Leader Nancy Pelosi said she STILL opposed the war, and that "we could have brought down that statue for a lot less."

More recently, Howard Dean said he wasn't sure if the people in Iraq were better off under Saddam Hussein or not.

When criticized for these kinds of comments, the Democrats said we were questioning their patriotism.

Not so!

The Democrats' problem is not a lack of patriotism. It's a lack of seriousness.

They don't hate their country, they just refuse to lead it.

I will never call the Democrat Party unpatriotic, but I will call their current leadership unfit to face the serious challenges of the 21st century.

Just look at their rhetoric about the President's State of the Union speech.

Saddam Hussein, it is universally accepted by the international intelligence community, had weapons of mass destruction.

He was working to get more. He was a sponsor of terror and a threat to his neighbors.

He started two wars, tortured countless dissidents, and was so desperate to develop nuclear weapons that American presidents of both political parties urged his ouster.

His removal from power was an absolute good and Operation Iraqi Freedom was justified by any moral, political, legal, or humanitarian standard you apply to it.

No responsible leader could have permitted him to remain in Baghdad.

Yet the Democrats now spew more rhetoric about President Bush than they ever did about Saddam Hussein.

So unserious are the Democrats that they are now embarrassing themselves and their party over a single, irrelevant sentence in a 10-year old case for war that could run a hundred thousand pages long.

Howard Dean says the president intentionally misled the American people.

John Kerry hinted Operation Iraqi Freedom was about oil.

Dick Gephardt the other day said we were less safe and less secure than we were four years ago? when Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein ran free.

Blame-America-first liberals all over the country are repeating this nonsense.

But make no mistake: this isn't just campaign rhetoric we're talking about.

Let's be real clear:

If you take their comments to their logical conclusion, they're essentially calling our Commander in Chief, Benedict Arnold.

Ridiculous as it sounds, the logical extension of the Democrat leadership's assertion is that President Bush is an international war criminal.

If we are to take this nonsense seriously, THAT is how out of control the Democrats' rhetoric has become.

But, you see, that's the whole point.

The Democrats' accusations AREN'T meant to be taken seriously.

Because they're unserious people.

We're in the middle of a global conflict between good and evil and they're in the middle of a Michael Dukakis look-alike contest.

They either don't understand or don't care that this is a time for serious leadership.

They're just trying to change the subject, because on the issue of Iraq, they have nothing of substance to offer: only fear, and loathing, and a motley crew of presidential contenders.

They've gone off the deep end.

Consider:

Bob Graham, a respected former governor and chairman of the intelligence committee, is calling for the president's impeachment.

John Edwards, a so-called moderate, compares the president to a dangerous socialist.

And Dennis Kucinich, a long-time member of Congress, now calls for legislation, I love this, to ban "mind control" weapons in outer space.

These ideas aren't unpatriotic, they're just weird.

It makes you wonder if at their next presidential debate, the Democrats are all going to show up wearing aluminum-foil helmets to protect their brain waves from the mother ship!

People who believe such things cannot be trusted with national leadership, period.

These are the stakes, ladies and gentlemen.

But as extreme, hateful, and bizarre as their leaders' rhetoric has become, we can never forget that the Democrat Party is still a mammoth institution with a strong and proud heritage.

It's still a formidable political machine, and national balance between the parties is still the norm, even if Republicans have recently pulled ahead in national polls.

Democrat leaders may follow each other off the cliff, but their rank-and-file voters are smart and honest people, and they want to elect their candidates every bit as much as Republicans do.

That's where you come in.

Most everyone who speaks to College Republicans at some point utters the phrase, "You are the future."

But speaking as your Majority Leader, I'm here to say you don't get off that easy.

College Republicans aren't our future, you're part of our present.

The Democrats' leaders can afford to be unserious, but you can't.

You know better.

You know that ideas have consequences, that words have meaning, and that in times of crisis people must act.

So I come to you today to call on you to act.

I strongly encourage you to take a look, make the call, and join in the Republican Party's fight to fulfill America's promise.

We have an agenda, a real agenda, to make America safe, strong, and prosperous.

With the president's leadership and your help, we're going to make history next year.

Thank you for having me.

Keep up the good work. majorityleader.gov



To: JohnM who wrote (4003)7/30/2003 12:44:32 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793742
 
HoustonChronicle.com -- houstonchronicle.com | Section: Local & State

July 30, 2003, 6:07AM
No bags, still traveled
Dems left Austin with no time to pack
By ARMANDO VILLAFRANCA
Copyright 2003 Houston Chronicle

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Democratic Sen. Mario Gallegos of Houston had two shirts and he was wearing one of them. Sen. Rodney Ellis, also of Houston, longed for a pair of cuff links and at least one pair of jeans.

And it seemed like everyone needed more underwear than they had brought.

The 11 Democratic senators from Texas had known for weeks that the moment might come when they would have to flee Austin to try to thwart a congressional redistricting bill.

But as events developed quickly at the state Capitol in Austin on Monday, a decision to leave had to be made immediately and the senators were forced to board a pair of private jets for Albuquerque with literally little more than the clothes on their backs.

So on Tuesday afternoon, a group of six senators dressed in suits and ties waited for a taxi to take them to the nearest mall to stock up for what may be a long stay in the Land of Enchantment.

"A lot of people were not prepared to leave when we left," said Gallegos, who was having a care package of clothing shipped to him from Austin.

As the senators spent their first full day on the lam, Texas House members in Austin hastily passed a congressional redistricting bill on the second day of the second special session.

The measure, identical to a redistricting plan approved by the House during the first special session, likely would unseat six incumbent Democratic congressmen in next year's elections.

The Democratic senators have vowed to kill the bill by preventing a quorum in the Senate.

The 11 senators have agreed to stay in New Mexico for the duration of the second special session -- 30 days in self-imposed exile.

Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, chairwoman of the Senate Democratic Caucus, said Tuesday the senators will not return to Texas unless Gov. Rick Perry ends the session or Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst reinstitutes the rule requiring a two-thirds vote for legislation to be brought up for consideration.

"We will stay here until the governor ends redistricting altogether or until the normal rules of the Senate are reinstated so our votes against redistricting will provide the protection and representation our constituents deserve," the San Antonio senator said.

She said the senators had continued to work with fellow Senate members on the redistricting issue hoping a fair compromise would be reached. But after learning of Perry's plans to call a second special session on the matter, she said the senators had no other recourse.

"If the rules can be changed because they don't get their way in regular session or another special session, what's to say that's not going to happen on school finance or on another important issue?" she said.

Van de Putte planned the revolt, including selecting the destination, hotel accommodations and flight arrangements. And she did so in the utmost secrecy.

Ellis said everyone had expected to leave either Monday night or Tuesday morning. He said the Senate Democratic Caucus met Monday afternoon and members were planning to be in the Senate chamber when it was scheduled to reconvene at 2 p.m.

But about a half hour before the session was to begin, they learned from a group of Democratic and Republican House members that Perry was planning to adjourn the then-current special session at 3 p.m. and proclaim a second special session 30 minutes later.

That's when they decided to leave immediately. Sen. Ken Armbrister of Victoria was the only Democratic senator to stay behind in Austin.

About an hour later, the 11 senators were onboard a pair of private jets whose services were contributed by constituents of state Sen. Juan Hinojosa, D-McAllen. Gallegos said every precaution was taken to keep the details of their flight a secret, even on the drive to the airport.

"At one point, I said, `Where are we going?' " he said. "It was a back road. I didn't know there was a back road to the airport."

Van de Putte said she had selected six potential city destinations in four states, including bordering Mexican states. She said she picked the places based on their proximity to Texas, the political climate of the city and, most importantly, the medical facilities available.

Because state Sen. Eddie Lucio of Brownsville had recently suffered a heart attack, she said a city with a good medical facility was essential.

Since their arrival, the senators have been protected by about a half dozen New Mexico state troopers, all but one in plainclothes.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democrat, said Tuesday that the state, his administration and a majority of the state Legislature stood behind the Texas senators and their mission.

"My message to Texas state senators is that they are most welcome in New Mexico," Richardson said. "These men and women are courageous. They're strong. They acted on principle and they are here protecting their constituents, protecting those that potentially could be disenfranchised."

He said the few officers assigned to the security detail are serving regular shifts without overtime and at no extra cost to the state.

Thus far, the group has met little opposition in New Mexico.

On Tuesday, Tom Childress, who just moved to Albuquerque from Arlington, Texas, was one of three protesters, including a young child, outside the Marriott Pyramid North hotel.

State Sen. John Whitmire of Houston was just coming out of a morning workout at the hotel gym when he noticed the commotion and decided to go outside and shake hands with Childress, who was wearing a University of Texas hat.

Wearing tattered shorts and a T-shirt drenched in sweat, Whitmire asked Childress, "You folks want to arrest us?"

"You're not a bounty hunter are ya? You're not lying?" he asked.

Childress said he was acting independently and was out there because he believed the senators were shirking their duty.

The hardships for the 11 extend beyond financial concerns.

For Ellis, the problem of being away is particularly acute because he has a new daughter at home just over a week old. He left behind his wife to tend to their newborn daughter and two other young children, ages 9 and 4.

"She's a political junkie, that's what she thrives off. That's maybe why we got married, in part," he said.

But to lessen her burden, he asked her to let their two oldest children come to Albuquerque this weekend.



To: JohnM who wrote (4003)7/30/2003 2:08:06 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793742
 
The Times gets an "omsbudman." Well, if they work at it, someday they may approach the same level of accuracy as the "Washington Times."

Times to Name 'Public Editor' to Be Readers' Representative
By JACQUES STEINBERG

Seeking to mend the damage to the credibility and staff morale of The New York Times following a reporter's extensive fabrications, the newspaper's new executive editor today accepted the major recommendations of an internal committee, including the appointment of a "public editor" to serve as a representative for readers.

Acting on his first day as executive editor, Bill Keller wrote in a memorandum to the staff that he would soon hire a public editor, or ombudsman, who would "have license to write about issues of our coverage, and to have those independent, uncensored commentaries published in our pages."

Mr. Keller, after several days of discussions with the newsroom management, also accepted the panel's recommendations that he create senior-level posts for editors to monitor internal compliance with the paper's standards and to insure that assignments and promotions within the newsroom are made on a more transparent basis.

The report of the 28-member panel, which included three outside journalists, was made available today to the newspaper's staff and to the public on The Times Company's Web site.

The new positions are the outgrowth of a contemplative process set off by the resignation of Jayson Blair, a 27-year-old reporter who was found to have effectively committed journalistic fraud, including plagiarism and the invention of quotations, in at least three-dozen articles from last October until late April.

After the full breadth of Mr. Blair's deceptions was brought to light in early May, the newsroom's management charged the committee, led by Allan M. Siegal, an assistant managing editor, with examining the reporter's actions and the newsroom culture in which they were able to take place.

The 58-page report acknowledges problems in the management of the newsroom, calling for "a permanent climate of discussion and collaboration" and the need "to make us conspicuously accountable to readers and the public," among other recommendations. A chapter written by the three outside journalists ? Louis D. Boccardi, former president and chief executive of The Associated Press; Joann Byrd, a former editorial page editor of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer; and Roger Wilkins, professor of history and American culture at George Mason University and a former Times columnist ? criticized sharply the newsroom's culture and management.

"No single person, no single mistake, no single policy is responsible for the embarrassment of plagiarism and fiction that stained the journalism of The New York Times in the spring of 2003," the three outsiders wrote, based on their interviews with many of the people who had overseen Mr. Blair's career.

Mr. Blair declined to be questioned, citing "health reasons," according to the outside journalists.

Instead, the outside journalists concluded, "a series of management and operational breakdowns made it possible for a junior reporter in his mid-20's to get past one of the most able and sophisticated newspaper editing networks in the world."

"Behind the Blair story," they wrote, "lay a misguided pattern of tough supervision and lenient forgiveness that led to retaining him, and in fact promoting him, when at several points he was demonstrating that he was not yet ready to join the staff of The New York Times."

Indeed, less than a year after receiving "a particularly negative evaluation," the outside journalists found that Mr. Blair was given a merit raise while covering the Washington-area sniper case.

In his memorandum to the staff, Mr. Keller also raised the issue of race ? Mr. Blair is black ? and noted that the outside journalists had "answered the charge by some of our more partisan critics that the Blair case was a consequence of our determination to hire and promote a diverse staff."

"That charge, they make clear, is wrong," Mr. Keller wrote.

The outsiders wrote that "diversifying the staff was only one of a collection of factors" that had "propelled Blair upward toward journalistic disaster."

But the outside journalists concluded that Mr. Blair's promotion from an intermediate reporter's job to a full staff position after just 15 months ? the newspaper could have exercised its right, under a union contract, to take three years to decide Mr. Blair's fate ? "has all the earmarks of a social promotion."

Between the creation of the committee and the completion of its report, the Blair affair ? and the discontent in the newsroom that it laid bare ? led to the resignations of Howell Raines, the newspaper's executive editor, and Gerald M. Boyd, the managing editor. They stepped down on June 5, less than two years after they had assumed command of the newsroom.

Joseph Lelyveld, who retired as executive editor in September 2001, agreed to step back into that role temporarily. Mr. Keller, who had served as managing editor for four years under Mr. Lelyveld, was named executive editor by Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the newspaper's publisher, on July 14.

The panel submitted its findings and suggestions to Mr. Keller and other senior managers late last week, along with two related memoranda prepared by other internal committees studying newsroom management.

The position of a public editor, or ombudsman, represents a sharp departure for the 151-year-old Times, which has generally sought to police itself out of the public eye. Though variations of such a position exist at about three dozen newspapers, including The Washington Post , The Times has "traditionally resisted" the suggestion that it follow suit, Mr. Keller wrote in a memorandum to the staff today.

"We worried that it would foster nit-picking and navel-gazing, that it might undermine staff morale, and worst of all, that it would absolve other editors of their responsibility to represent the interests of readers," he wrote. "Indeed, some papers have found their experience with ombudsmen disappointing, and have dropped the system."

But Mr. Keller said that he agreed with the argument by the committee that "a pair of professional eyes, familiar with us but independent of the day-to-day production of the paper, can make us more sensitive on matters of fairness and accuracy, and enhance our credibility."

He said that the public editor, whom he intended to appoint by early fall, would be given a one-year contract and would report directly to him.

Mr. Keller acknowledged that while the committee reports were awash in good intentions, it remained to be seen how much of an effect the changes would have in preventing a similar occurrence.

"There is nothing fail-safe," he wrote to the staff, "in an institution that depends on human beings, and on trust."
nytimes.com