Who's Who.From their relentless pursuit of tax cuts for the wealthy--cuts that could bring back deficits--it's clear that the people running the Bush White House can be lured into reckless behavior by the promise of smaller bills from the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. . This psychological weakness may also explain how Bush's top political adviser Karl Rove prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. , he was advised by White House transition counsel Fred Fielding that if he waited and got something called a "government certificate of divestiture" he could "defer paying capital gains taxes on the stock sales." Speaking of stocks, Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill continues to hold part of his $100 million stake in Alcoa, the company he used to run, three months after announcing he would sell his shares. His decision to delay selling the stock, according to Salon's Jake Tapper, could result in a $62 million windfall in large part because Department of Energy officials asked aluminum producers in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho to suspend production of aluminum for up to two years in order to save energy. This momentarily stopped production of almost 40 percent of the country's aluminum-making potential, but not Alcoa's. The fact that so many top administration officials have big money no doubt explains some of the psychological gap that exists between them and other key Washington players. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle's biggest financial asset is a half-share of a house in Aberdeen, S.D., given to him by his mother and worth $50,000 to $100,000, according to recently-released congressional disclosure forms. Sen. Jim Jeffords--the man who forced the White House to reduce its tax cut and then bolted the GOP, handing Democrats control of the Senate--listed his main asset as a home in Rutland, VT, valued at $100,001 to $250,000. Anger over Jeffords' defection has yet to die down. The Vermont senator has received so many death threats that he has been flanked for weeks by two plainclothes plain·clothes or plain-clothes adj. Wearing civilian clothes while on duty to avoid being identified as police or security: a plainclothes detective. Capitol Hill police officers. In the men's room of the Capitol Hill Club The Capitol Hill Club was established in 1951 by former New Jersey Congressman James C. Auchincloss. Auchincloss and 100 other Congressional members formed the Republican Social Club, which has served the interest of every Republican from President Dwight D. , a GOP hangout next to the Republican National Committee headquarters, someone put a photograph of Jeffords in a urinal urinal /uri·nal/ (u?ri-n'l) a receptacle for urine. u·ri·nal n. A vessel into which urine is passed. . "Although several folks apparently got a kick out of taking aim at the photo of a man they now detest de·test tr.v. de·test·ed, de·test·ing, de·tests To dislike intensely; abhor. [French détester, from Latin d ," reports Roll Call newspaper's Ed Henry, "a peeved peeve tr.v. peeved, peev·ing, peeves To cause to be annoyed or resentful. See Synonyms at annoy. n. 1. A vexation; a grievance. 2. member of the club ripped the photo out of the urinal, fearing it would be seen as yet another symbol of the party's alleged intolerance." Under President Bill Clinton, the Federal Trade Commission took an activist role, for instance, investigating Hollywood for advertising R-rated fare to teenagers. By contrast, Bush's new FTC FTC See Federal Trade Commission (FTC). chairman, Timothy J. Muris, has promised to keep the agency strictly low-impact. This can be seen in his appointment of J. Howard Beales to the FTC's Consumer Protection Bureau. The former consultant to R.J. Reynolds and long-time advocate of laissez-faire advertising regulation has argued that Joe Camel ads were not targeted at youth. In the spirit of bipartisanship that has swept Washington since the Senate flip, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers recently joined conservative pundette Laura Ingraham for lunch at the Palm. "What shorthand phrase will future historians use to describe the Clinton administration?" Ingraham reportedly asked Summers. When he shrugged, she offered, "Sex between the Bushes." Whether Summers laughed at the joke could not be discerned. A couple of months ago, "Who's Who" was wondering whether Joseph Allbaugh had been exiled from the White House to the Federal Emergency Management Agency The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is the federal agency responsible for coordinating emergency planning, preparedness, risk reduction, response, and recovery. The agency works closely with state and local governments by funding emergency programs and providing technical (FEMA FEMA, n.pr See Federal Emergency Management Agency. ) by his former pals Karl Rove and Karen Hughes. Here is another explanation: Much of what George W. Bush does--e.g. cutting taxes--is designed to avoid repeating apparent mistakes made by his father. In FEMA's case, miserable performance in the wake of hurricane Andrew was thought to have cost Bush Sr. at the polls. So it may be that it wasn't Machiavellian machinations by Rove and Hughes, but simply W.'s desire to guard against another Andrew that landed this trusted aide at FEMA. On June 7, a dinner was held at the National Press Club to honor N. Sanders Saul. This, you may recall, is the judge who managed to delay the Florida recount for 11 days, making it possible for the Supreme Court to rule that the recount had run out of time. He also ruled against Al Gore in practically every issue and even ignored testimony by a Bush expert witness that a hand recount was the way to go. The MC at the event was Court TV's Catherine Crier, which should remove any doubt about where she stands. In theory, the execution of Timothy McVeigh should have helped shore up flagging popular support for the death penalty. If anyone ever deserved the penalty, it's the Oklahoma City bomber. Yet even proponents of the death penalty felt strangely let down by the execution. The reason, which nobody wants to admit, is that McVeigh, for all his twisted evil, died like a soldier, bravely. We wanted him to have fear his eyes. Instead, witnesses say that he looked each of them in the eye, then stared at the ceiling and calmly awaited his fate. |
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