Tag: Politics

  • Caroline Kennedy’s ties to Bloomberg may hurt her prospects

    Caroline Kennedy has friends in high places, including President-elect Barack Obama, whom she supported in his quest for the presidency.

    But her connections to New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg may be hurting her push to be appointed to the U.S. Senate seat that Hillary Rodham Clinton will vacate when she becomes secretary of State.

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    “Ms. Kennedy’s ties to Mr. Bloomberg’s political team and her waffling over whether she would support a Democrat in next year’s (New York City) mayor race appear to be angering some Democrats,” The New York Times reported Wednesday.

    Among these Democrats is Sheldon Silver, the speaker of New York’s state Assembly.

    He has said he would not advise Gov. David A. Paterson to appoint Kennedy, the daughter of the late President Kennedy, the Times reported.

    “Her first obligation might be to the mayor of the city of New York rather than the governor who appointed her,” Silver told an Albany radio station.

    Observers speculate that having Kennedy in his debt would help Bloomberg, a political independent, in his run next year for a third term, as the obligation might keep Kennedy from endorsing Bloomberg’s Democratic opponent.

    Bloomberg has said that he’s not backing anyone to fill the Senate vacancy. However, he has strongly defended Kennedy against the criticism that she does not have the credentials for the job.

    “Being a senator, you don’t have to know about every issue coming in. That’s what your staffs are for,” he told New York’s Daily News. “They’re one out of 100 people that vote together, and Caroline Kennedy is eminently qualified to be a senator.”

    Neutral or not, Bloomberg is linked to Kennedy’s candidacy in a variety of ways.

    Kevin Sheekey, Bloomberg’s deputy mayor for government affairs, has been advising Kennedy. A former aide to U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Sheekey ran Bloomberg’s 2001 and 2005 mayoral campaigns.

    Kennedy has hired Knickerbocker SKD, a political consulting firm with ties to Bloomberg, to help her secure the appointment.

    Josh Isay, Knickerbocker’s founder, was a key adviser to Bloomberg in his successful effort this year to get around New York City’s two-term limit for mayors.

    Kennedy is also linked to the Bloomberg administration through Joel Klein, the chancellor of New York City’s Department of Education.

    Nicole K. Seligman, Klein’s wife, lived across the hall from Kennedy when they attended Harvard’s Radcliffe College, and Seligman was a bridesmaid at Kennedy’s wedding to Edwin A. Schlossberg

    Klein, a Bloomberg ally, recruited Kennedy in 2002 to head the education department’s Office of Strategic Partnerships and effort to secure private funding for public education initiatives.

    Kennedy worked in that position until 2004 at a salary of $1 a year. She’s now the vice chair of the Fund for Public Schools, another effort to secure funds for city schools.

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    • A stampede to ‘banks’ as companies seek a piece of the bailout

      December 26, 2008 at 9:08am

      The news that CIT Group Inc. and American Express were approved this week for $5.7 billion in bailout funds after becoming “bank holding companies” strikes us as a particular sort of American ingenuity.

    • Inaugural poet Elizabeth Alexander has many links to Washington & Obamas

      Poetry is making a presidential inauguration comeback, Barack Obama having asked Elizabeth Alexander to read an original poem at his Jan. 21 ceremonies.

      It will mark the first time since the second Clinton inauguration and only the fifth time in history that a made-for-the-occasion poem has been read at the swearing-in.

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      For Alexander, 46, a poet and professor of African-American history at Yale University, the occasion will be a return of sorts, as well.

      She grew up in Washington, attending Sidwell Friends School, where Barack and Michelle Obama are sending their daughters.

      Anderson’s father, Clifford L. Alexander Jr., was a staff member of the National Security Agency in the Kennedy administration and an adviser on civil rights to President Johnson.

      He later served as chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and he was the first African-American secretary of the Army.

      Elizabeth Alexander’s mother, Adele Logan Alexander, is an author and professor of African-American women’s history at George Washington University.

      After Sidwell Friends, Elizabeth Alexander went on to receive her undergraduate degree from Yale and her doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania.

      Previous to teaching at Yale, where she will become the chair of the African-American history department next year, Alexander taught at several schools.

      She met and became friends with Barack and Michelle Obama while she was on the faculty of the University of Chicago, where he was teaching law.

      Alexander is also connected to the Obamas through her brother, Mark C. Alexander, a professor at Seton Hall University’s law school.

      He served as the New Jersey director of the Obama presidential primary campaign and went on to be a policy director for Obama during the general election. He’s working now on the Obama-Biden presidential transition team.

      Elizabeth Alexander, the author of four books of poems, received the $50,000 Jackson Poetry Prize in 2007, the first year the prize was given.

      The award recognizes a poet who has published at least one book of poems but has not received “major national acclaim.”

      Other poets have applauded Obama’s selection of Alexander.

      “I can only say, “Yay!’ She’s wonderful poet,” Rita Dove, the former U.S. poet laureate, told The Washington Post. “This is going to be a wonderful match.”

      Alexander told the Times that she hoped that she would create an inaugural poem that “has integrity and life that goes beyond the moment.”

      She follows in the footsteps of Miller Williams, who recited his poem, “Of History and Hope” for Bill Clinton’s second inauguration in 1997.

      Previous to that, Maya Angelou read at the first Clinton inauguration, James Dickey at Jimmy Carter’s ceremony in 1977, and, most famously, Robert Frost for John F. Kennedy in 1961.

      Like Dove, Angelou said that Alexander was the right choice to bring poetry back to the inauguration.

      “She seems much like Walt Whitman,” Angelou told The New York Times. “She sings the American song.”

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      • NY maestro Lorin Maazel rents out VA estate for inaugural

        December 23, 2008 at 12:30pm

        Looking for a place to stay during Barack Obama’s inauguration? New York Philharmonic music director Lorin Maazel and his wife are offering their Virginia estate for $50,000 a night.

      • Illinois businessman tied to ‘pay to play’ scheme to sell Obama seat

        An Indian businessman with ties to both Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich and Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr. is caught up in the probe of the governor’s alleged efforts to sell the Senate seat vacated by Barack Obama.

        Investigators are looking at whether Raghuveer Nayak, a political and community leader in Chicago’s Indian community, offered to raise more than a $1 million for Blagojevich in exchange for the governor appointing Jackson to the Senate, the Chicago Tribune reported.

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        Nayak, who became wealthy running a pharmacy and then a series of surgical centers in Illinois and Indiana, has given generously to both the governor and to Jackson

        He and his wife, Anita, have also made donations to other politicians, including President-elect Barack Obama and Sen. John McCain of Arizona.

        Jackson has been identified as “Senate Candidate 5″ in the 76-page federal complaint filed against Blagojevich. The complaint outlines secretly taped conversations where the governor said an “emissary” from “Senate Candidate 5″ offered at least $500,000 in campaign contributions to secure the post.

        “We were approached ‘pay to play,’ that, you know, he’s raise me 500 grand,” Blagojevich said on Dec. 4, according to the affidavit. “An emissary came. Then the other guy would raise $1 million if I made [Candidate 5} a senator.”

        Jackson has denied authorizing anyone to act on his behalf to make a deal with the governor.

        “I did not initiate or authorize anyone at any time to promise anything to Governor Blagojevich on my behalf,” he said at a press conference two weeks ago. “I never sent a message or an emissary to the governor to make an offer, to please my case or to propose a deal about a U.S. Senate seat, period.”

        But the Tribune reported that Nayak discussed raising at least $1 million for Blagojevich at an Oct. 31 meeting that Blagojevich attended.

        “Two businessman who attended the meeting and spoke to the Tribune on the condition of anonymity said that Nayak and Blagojevich aide Rajinder Bedi privately told many of the more than two dozen attendees the fund-raising effort was aimed at supporting Jackson’s bid for the Senate,” according to the Dec. 12 story.

        That meeting led to another fund-raiser just three days before Blagojevich was arrested on public corruption charges, which was co-sponsored by Nayak. The second fund-raiser was also attended by Jonathan Jackson, Jesse’s younger brother.

        Jackson’s spokesman Rick Bryant told the Tribune that Nayak is a “family friend and supporter” of the congressman, as well as of his father, the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

        “He has talked to [Nayak] about the Senate seat and he has mentioned his interest,” Bryant said. “But he never asked him to do anything.”

        Jackson’s attorney, James Montgomery, said that he could not rule out the possibility that someone not authorized by Jackson discussed a pay to play scenario with Blagojevich.

        Nayak, 54, has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for Blagojevich; he and his wife have also donated more than $22,000 for Jackson.

        Besides his surgery centers, he also founded and until recently, had an ownership interest in a drug testing laboratory with millions of dollars in public contracts.

        In a press conference Friday, Blagojevich denied doing anything improper and said he would fight to clear his name.

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        • Illinois businessman tied to ‘pay to play’ scheme to sell Obama seat

          December 21, 2008 at 3:23pm

          An Indian businessman with ties to both Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich and Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr. is caught up in the probe of the governor’s alleged efforts to sell the Senate seat vacated by Barack Obama.

        • Betty Currie, Bill Clinton’s secretary, volunteers for Obama

          Another fixture of the Clinton administration is helping Barack Obama make his move from senator to president.

          The New York Times reports that Betty Currie, Bill Clinton’s secretary for his eight years in office, is volunteering at the offices of the Obama-Biden transition team.

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          She’s there at the invitation of John D. Podesta, the transition co-chairman, who also served in the Clinton White House, finishing up as chief of staff.

          “Of course I asked her because in the 30 years we have worked together, I have never known anyone with more grace, dedication and public spirit than Betty,” Podesta told the Times. “And she has one mean Rolodex.”

          The paper did not report whether Monica S. Lewinsky’s name remains in that Rolodex.

          In 1998, Currie had to appear five times before the grand jury investigating the relationship between Clinton and Lewinsky.

          After her testimony became public, some people faulted her for possibly enabling the relationship between the president and the young intern, adopting a “don’t ask, don’t tell” stance.

          Others, though, saw her as yet another victim of Clinton’s recklessness.

          “She didn’t deserve this – at all,” a co-worker told The Washington Post at the time. “She’s not a villain by any stretch of the imagination.”

          Currie, 69, came to the White House after serving as the office manager of the “War Room” during the 1992 Clinton presidential campaign.

          The room was the place where James Carville, George Stephanopoulos and other Clinton advisers planned strategy.

          Currie also worked on the Clinton-Gore transition team.

          And she took part in the 1988 Michael Dukakis presidential campaign and the 1984 Walter Mondale campaign.

          Previous to this, Currie had been an executive assistant and personal secretary in several federal agencies, including the U.S. Peace Corps and ACTION, the umbrella agency over the Peace Corps.

          During this time, she was the executive secretary for three directors, Joseph Blatchford at the Peace Corps and ACTION and Michael Balzano and Sam W. Brown Jr. at ACTION.

          Currie retired from the federal government at the end of Clinton’s second term.

          In 2006, she became a member of the board of National Peace Corps Association. She recently became a member of the Alcohol Beverage Board of St. Mary’s County, MD.

          She and her husband, Bob, a retired Environmental Protection Agency planning director, took Socks, the Clinton’s White House cat, into their home at the end of Clinton presidency.

          The cat is now 19 and reportedly has cancer.

          Currie remains in contact with the Clintons, the Times reported, and contributed $750 to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

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          • Saudia Arabia, Norway, Kuwait donated millions to Clinton charity

            December 18, 2008 at 6:37pm

            Former President Bill Clinton has revealed tens of millions in donations to his foundation from foreign nations that Hillary Rodham Clinton may have to negotiate with as secretary of state.

          • Janet Napolitano’s unlikely political journey

            Janet Napolitano first came to Washington 17 years ago as part of the legal team that represented Anita Hill during Clarence Thomas’ confirmation hearings.

            Hill’s sordid testimony about sexual harassment may not have torpedoed Thomas’ career; still, Napolitano attracted notice as a smart, young Democrat who was going places. “Meet the PCTC, a post Clarence Thomas Candidate,” wrote syndicated columnist Ellen Goodman, who urged her to challenge John McCain for his Senate seat.

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            A short time later, Napolitano was tapped by Bill Clinton to be U.S. attorney for Arizona, enabling her to cultivate the law-and-order creds to launch her political career. Five years later, she ran for, and won, the state attorney general’s job, and, in 2002, was elected Arizona’s third female governor.

            Today, the popular Democratic governor in a Republican-leaning state is said to be the top candidate for Homeland Security secretary under President-elect Barack Obama, whom she endorsed early in the primaries despite her ties to the Clintons.

            Admirers describe the 50-year-old breast cancer survivor as a shrewd politician and problem solver, who is quick to size up people and issues. In 2005, Time Magazine called her one of America’s five best governors.

            “Positioning herself as a no-nonsense, pro-business centrist, she has worked outside party lines since coming to office in January 2003 to re-energize a state that, under her predecessors, was marked by recession and scandal.”

            By most accounts, Napolitano has navigated a centrist path on immigration issues in Arizona, which shares a 376-mile border with Mexico and where anti-immigrant fervor runs high.

            During her first term, she sent National Guardsmen to the border – and forwarded the bill to the federal government. The policy of enlisting the Guard was later adopted by the Bush administration.

            Last year, she signed into law the nation’s harshest penalty for employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants, a measure that would take away their business licenses for a second violation.

            But Napolitano has also vetoed more extreme measures, for instance, a bill that would have made it a crime for day laborers to look for work on public streets. Earlier this year, she also yanked $1.6 million in state funds that Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio had used to conduct roving immigration raids in the Latino community.

            For critics, though, that action was too little, too late.

            “My own conclusion is simple,” wrote Alfredo Gutierrez, a onetime Democratic rival sizing her up for homeland security secretary in La Frontera Times. “She’s a tough, smart, competent, ambitious law enforcement officer, a fundamentally moderate Democrat, who is willing to throw immigrants under the bus only when necessary.”

            But Doris Meissner, former director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service in the Clinton administration who is now at the Migration Policy Institute, a Washington think tank, said Napolitano “would be an excellent choice” for Homeland Security.

            “She has impeccable law-enforcement and leadership credentials,” Meissner told the Washington Independent. “And as a border-state governor, she has direct knowledge and experience of how our broken immigration system is affecting her state and the nation.”

            Born in New York City in 1957, Napolitano grew up in Albuquerque, where her father was dean of the University of New Mexico Medical School. In high school, she was voted most likely to succeed.

            After majoring in political science at her father’s alma mater, Santa Clara University in California, and attending the University of Virginia School of Law, she clerked for an appellate court judge in Arizona, and then landed a job at Lewis & Roca, a well-regarded Phoenix law firm with strong Democratic ties.

            The firm got a call from Sen. Dennis DeConcini, an Arizona Democrat, in October, 1991, asking if it would represent Anita Hill, and Napolitano was put in charge of preparing the testimonies of Hill’s supporting witnesses.

            Asked in an interview recently whether she considered herself a feminist, writer Dana Goldstein described how Napolitano looked down at her hands and said, “I just consider myself Janet.”

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            • Small donors played comparable roles in Obama and Bush campaigns

              November 30, 2008 at 7:28am

              A new study by the Campaign Finance Institute shows that Barack Obama received about the same percentage from small donors in 2008 as George W. Bush did in 2004.

            • In final days, Bush likely to pardon more than turkeys

              The headline in The Onion may have nailed it: “In Thanksgiving Tradition, Bush Pardons Scooter Libby In Giant Turkey Costume.”

              Skip the turkey costume, and the reality may not be far off: Many are betting that Vice President Dick Cheney’s former chief of staff will be among those granted clemency before the president steps down.

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              Bush had already commuted Libby’s prison sentence after his conviction for perjury and obstruction of justice in the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame. But wiping Libby’s record clean would enable him to practice law again.

              Libby is unlikely to be the only last-minute pardon. Other top prospects, listed by ProPublica, are said to include:

              • Michael Milken, the 1980s junk bond king whose pardon application is being handled by former U.S. Solicitor General Theodore B. Olson – a close friend of the president’s, and the lawyer who successfully argued Bush v. Gore before the U.S. Supreme Court.

              • James Tobin, Bush’s 2004 New England campaign chairman who raised more than $200,000 for the president’s re-election bid. Tobin was indicted in October for making false statements to the FBI in connection with the bureau’s investigation of the plot to jam Democratic Party phones in New Hampshire in 2002;
              • Brent Wilkes, the defense contractor who was sentenced to 12 years in prison in February for furnishing former California Congressman Randy Cunningham with yachts, vacations and other luxury items in exchange for lucrative contracts, because of his cooperation with federal investigators;
              • J. Steven Griles, a deputy Interior secretary during Bush’s first term who pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice charge sin connection with his 2005 Senate testimony regarding the Jack Abramoff political corruption scandal.

              Presidential pardons are a long political tradition, embraced by both parties. In his final days, for instance, George H.W. Bush pardoned former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, along with 10 others who had been convicted in the Iran-Contra scandal, an arms for hostage program during the Reagan administration (when Bush was vice president).

              That raised eyebrows, but nothing like the reaction to Bill Clinton’s pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich, whose ex-wife Denise Rich had been a major contributor to his presidential library and to the Democratic Party.

              The Rich decision, which became the subject of Congressional and criminal investigations, is likely to come up again in the confirmation hearings for Eric H. Holder Jr, Barack Obama’s choice for attorney general, given Holder’s involvement in the decision.

              (One interesting historic footnote: Rich’s attorney from 1985 until the spring of 2000 was Scooter Libby.)

              By comparison with his predecessors, the younger Bush has been downright niggardly in his use of pardons, granting clemency to only 171 people over eight years.

              Most of those have been for penny-ante crimes. For instance, Leslie O. Collier – one of 14 people he pardoned last week – was pardoned for his conviction for the unauthorized use of a pesticide in killing bald eagles.

              Bush’s most significant clemency to date was commuting Libby’s prison sentence. But of course, he still has almost two months to make up for lost time.

              Among those who have submitted applications are disgraced Olympic gold medalist Marion Jones, suspended National Football League quarterback Michael Vick, home living doyenne Martha Stewart, former Enron executives Jeffrey Skilling and Andrew Fastow, jailed lobbyist Jack Abramoff and convicted former California Congressman Randy Cunningham.

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              • Small donors played comparable roles in Obama and Bush campaigns

                November 30, 2008 at 7:28am

                A new study by the Campaign Finance Institute shows that Barack Obama received about the same percentage from small donors in 2008 as George W. Bush did in 2004.

              • High-powered group, most from Chicago, plans Obama inaugural

                The group overseeing Barack Obama’s Jan. 20 inaugural boasts a bipartisan roster of go-getters, most with deep Chicago roots.

                In addition to Democrats William Daley, Penny Pritzker, John W. Rogers Jr. and Julianna Smoot, Republican Patrick G. Ryan, the businessman who heads Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics, is a co-chair.

                By drawing big names from both parties, Obama is clearly hoping to emphasize his commitment to a bipartisan governing style.

                Ryan’s participation particularly helps boost the image of collegiality. The chairman of Chicago-based Aon Corporation has been a major donor to George W. Bush and the Illinois Republican Party. On the other hand, he is spearheading Chicago’s Olympic bid, and it can’t have hurt that Obama made a video last week extolling the Windy City to the International Olympic Committee.

                The other co-chairs of the inaugural committee are longtime Obama pals, as well as fund-raisers.

                Pritzker, the hotel heiress, and Smoot, a professional Democratic fund-raiser, are credited with Obama’s record-setting campaign war chest.

                Daley, a former Commerce secretary and the brother of Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, is a Chicago bank executive. Rogers, a longtime friend, is the founder of Ariel Capital Management. (His ex-wife, Desirée Rogers, is set to become White House social secretary.)

                The committee will go to some lengths to honor another Obama pledge – to reduce the influence of money on government – by limiting donations to $50,000. George W. Bush’s inaugural committees accepted contributions as high as $250,000, according to the New York Times.

                It will also bar any contributions from corporations, political action committees, lobbyists who are currently registered with the federal government, people who are not citizens of the United States and from registered foreign agents.

                No pricetag has been put on this inaugural, which is expected to draw a record number of people to the Capitol, perhaps in the millions. To get some perspective, Bush spent around $40 million on his inaugural events in 2005, much of which was raised from corporations and lobbyists.

                Committee spokeswoman Linda Douglass said higher costs than usual are expected as a result of the president-elect’s intention to open as many events as possible to the public.

                “This inauguration is more than just a celebration of an election,” she said. “This is an event that can be used to inspire and galvanize the public to act. That is what we’re aiming for.”

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