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Tag: Politics
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VP vetters for McCain and Obama have had similar career paths (Muckety)
Another sign that the Democratic presidential nomination process is over even though it’s not over: Sen. Barack Obama has chosen someone to head his vice-presidential search committee.
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On the other side, Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr., an equally powerful inside-the-Beltway kind of guy, will coordinate the V.P. search for Sen. John McCain, the putative Republican nominee.
Writing in Sunday’s Week in Review section of The New York Times, Jill Abramson says it’s not surprising that Obama and McCain have asked old Washington hands to take on this task even though they’re running as Washington outsiders.
“Vetting is an extremely tricky and specialized Washington art form,” Abramson writes.
She points out the head of the search has to organize a group whose members grill the possible candidates.
They’ve got to “ferret out skeletons in closets, comb through finances and voting records, and try to anticipate problems that could ignite controversy in the news media.”
Dick Cheney did this for then-Gov. George W. Bush in 2000 and settled upon himself as the vice presidential nominee.
It would seem unlikely that either Johnson or Culvahouse would follow his example, as neither has run for elective office and each seems more comfortable behind the scenes.
Johnson directed the vice-presidential search in 1984 for Walter Mondale, who chose Rep. Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate, and again in 2004 for John Kerry, who selected Sen. Joseph Lieberman.
Culvahouse hasn’t headed up a vice-presidential screening, but he’s been an adviser to presidents since he was White House counsel to Ronald Reagan.
Though they are from different political parties, Johnson, 64, and Culvahouse, 59, have quite similar career paths.
As a younger man, each worked for a powerful Washington insider. That connection led to bigger and better things inside and outside of government.
Johnson’s mentor and patron was Mondale, the Democratic senator from Minnesota who went on to be vice president under Jimmy Carter.
After working for Mondale, Johnson went on to head Fannie Mae, the Federal National Mortgage Company. He was making $6 million to $7 million a year when he left the company in 1998.
Johnson’s now on the board of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and is vice chairman of Perseus LLC, the merchant bank and private equity fund.
Culvahouse, a native of Tennesee, was a protege of Sen. Howard Baker of Tennesee, the former Senate majority leader.
He served as Baker’s chief legislative assistant and counsel in the senate. And soon after Baker became Reagan’s chief of staff in 1987, Culvahouse became White House counsel.
Culvahouse is now chair of O’Melveny & Meyers LLP, a Los Angeles law firm with offices in cities throughout the world, including Washington.
Its partners have been involved in Democratic, as well as Republican, politics.
Warren Christopher, the former secretary of state, is a senior partner in the firm. He headed the 2000 Florida recount effort for Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore. Ron Klain, then a partner at O’Melveny & Meyers, was general counsel to the Democratic recount effort.
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Ted Kennedy surgery followed broad research into medical options
Once again, Dr. Lawrence C. Horowitz is providing counsel to the Kennedy family as it confronts a medical crisis.
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Edward M. KennedyThe decision followed a massive research effort led by Horowitz, a former Kennedy aide who has advised the family for more than 20 years.
As the Boston Globe reports today, Horowitz helped the family find innovative treatments for Edward M. Kennedy Jr. when he was diagnosed with a dangerous bone cancer in his right leg. He treated Patrick Kennedy when the 12-year-old suffered an asthma attack on a airline flight. And he devised diets for Ted Kennedy when he considered a presidential run in 1984.
Kennedy’s decision to have surgery followed an analysis by Horowitz and other former staffers, which included discussions with experts at the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration, hospitals and pharmaceutical companies.
“My role is to reach out to everybody everywhere – Mass. General, Brigham, anywhere across the country,” Horowitz told the Globe.
Horowitz, a graduate of Yale Medical School, was staff director of the Senate Subcommittee on Health, chaired by Kennedy, from 1977 to 1981. He later served as Kennedy’s chief of staff.
He is the author of Taking Charge of Your Medical Fate, about researching and assessing health care options.
In issuing his statement this morning, Kennedy didn’t miss the opportunity to campaign for his favorite presidential candidate: “After completing treatment, I look forward to returning to the United States Senate and to doing everything I can to help elect Barack Obama as our next president,” he said.
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Democratic Politics Laid Bare at Rules Committee Meeting
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Millionaire Real Estate Developer is Top Recipient of Farm Subsidies
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Two Republican dynasties are married in Crawford, Texas
The private wedding yesterday of First Daughter Jenna Bush and Henry Hager in Crawford, Texas, brought together two Republican families.
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The Hager name does not constitute a national brand, but in Virginia the family is well-connected and well-known.
Henry Hager’s father, John H. Hager, 71, was an executive with the American Tobacco Company, as was his father, Virgil Hager.
John Hager is also a former lieutenant governor of Virginia and a former director of homeland security in Virginia. He’s now the chair of the Virginia Republican Party.
Beyond that, he has been an advocate and spokesman for people with disabilities since he contracted a near fatal case of polio in 1973 when he was 34.
Hager, who uses a wheelchair and competes in wheelchair races, lost a promotion with American Tobacco when he went through months of treatment for his illness.
“I had gone to the top and got knocked down to the bottom,” Hager told a Purdue University alumni publication.
But after his rehabilitation, Hager returned to the company and worked his way back up the corporate ladder
In 2004, he was appointed the assistant secretary, office of special education and rehabilitative services in the U.S. Department of Education. He served in that position until August 2007.
Jenna Bush, 26, and Henry Hager, 30, met in 2004 when both were working to get her father re-elected. Hager proposed in August 2007 on Cadillac Mountain in Maine’s Acadia National Park.
She recalled being awakened at 4 a.m. by Hager so they could catch the sunrise at the spot where the morning light first hits the United States.
“I did not want to go hiking at 4 in the morning,” she told ABC News. “It was freezing. But we got up, and we hiked in the dark for an hour and a half, and then when we got towards the top, with the sunrise, he asked me.”
A graduate of Wake Forest University, Hager will receive his MBA from the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business later this month.
He’s a former aide to presidential advisor Karl Rove. He also was an economic policy aide to Carlos Guiterrez, the U.S. Secretary of Commerce.
After the honeymoon – the destination hasn’t been disclosed – Hager will begin a job with Constellation Energy, a power supplier.
The couple will live in Baltimore, where Jenna Bush plans on returning to teaching.
A graduate of the University of Texas, she has taught in a charter school in Washington. She also served an internship in Latin America for the United Nations Children’s Fund.
She’s the author of Ana’s Story: A Journey of Hope. It chronicles the life of a teen single mother with AIDS in Panama. Jenna Bush and her mother, Laura, are the authors of the recently published children’s book, Read All About It!
Jenna Bush selected her twin sister, Barbara Bush, to be maid of honor at her wedding.
