[Mb-civic] Attempt to Pick Successor Is Foiled - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Sep 29 03:56:12 PDT 2005
Attempt to Pick Successor Is Foiled
Blunt Temporarily Takes Reins as Conservatives Reject Dreier
By Shailagh Murray and Jim VandeHei
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, September 29, 2005; Page A01
As the legal troubles mounted for House Majority Leader Tom DeLay in
recent weeks, he and House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert talked repeatedly
to craft a detailed strategy for the Republican leadership for the day
when a long-feared indictment arrived.
DeLay, according to several GOP sources, knew that House rules would
give him no choice but to step down immediately. But he made clear to
Hastert, his longtime friend and protege, that he was determined to
fight the charges and return to power as soon as possible.
What he and Hastert wanted was a timeserver, someone to hold the job but
with no ambitions to stay in it. And they had someone in mind. This
week, an aide to the speaker approached Rep. David Dreier about his role
in a post-DeLay caucus. Dreier, a congenial Californian who has loyally
served the GOP leadership as Rules Committee chairman, expressed
interest in helping Hastert.
There was one big problem: When DeLay's indictment was unsealed
yesterday, conservatives in the GOP caucus immediately erupted in anger
over rumors that the selection of Dreier, whom they regard as too
moderate, was being presented as a fait accompli .
As the conservatives met to vent frustrations and plot options, Hastert
was changing course in a separate meeting on the second floor of the
Capitol. Rep. Roy Blunt (Mo.), the majority whip, was making a personal
appeal for the promotion. Hastert agreed, forestalling a possible revolt
by conservatives, who regard Blunt as one of their own.
The wild day of maneuvering made clear that beneath the image of
lockstep discipline in the House -- which DeLay himself enforced for
years -- the GOP caucus is rife with ambitious personalities in
not-so-subtle competition. With DeLay sidelined, it will fall largely to
Hastert to move President Bush's agenda and to maintain order among an
increasingly restless crowd as the 2006 elections approach.
Hastert's challenge was vividly highlighted yesterday by the mood at a
private late-afternoon meeting of the House Republican Conference, with
nearly all members in attendance.
Some lawmakers, such as Zach Wamp (Tenn.) challenged Republican leaders
to set a date for formal leadership elections instead of allowing party
bosses to impose their choices. At the same time, conservatives such as
Steve Buyer (Ind.) rose to say Republicans should have allowed DeLay to
remain majority leader even with an indictment. Earlier this year, under
pressure from Democrats and a few in his own party, Hastert reversed a
rule designed expressly for DeLay that would have allowed indicted
leaders to retain their positions.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/28/AR2005092802550.html?nav=hcmodule
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