Posted on 10/28/2004 8:13:55 PM PDT by icecold
Kerry to opt for the senator who copied Kinnock By Gerard Baker in Washington THE man whose presidential ambitions were destroyed when he plagiarised Neil Kinnock is set to become Americas chief foreign policymaker if John Kerry is elected President next Tuesday.
(Excerpt) Read more at timesonline.co.uk ...
Senator Joseph Biden of Delaware has been asked by Mr Kerry to become Secretary of State in a Democratic administration, according to Kerry campaign aides. Mr Biden, the leading Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for the past four years, ran for President in 1988. His campaign ended abruptly when it was revealed that a key element of his stump speech had been lifted directly from Mr Kinnocks general election speeches in 1987.
But Mr Biden has since emerged as a leading foreign policy figure in the Democratic party and is expected to take the job offered by Mr Kerry unless political factors intervene. Were the Democrats to retake control of the Senate, he might prefer to remain as a lawmaker, but those who know him think that unlikely.
Mr Bidens possible elevation is one of the thousands of permutations circulating in Washington in the final days before the presidential election. If Mr Biden does go to the State Department it will be a disappointment for Richard Holbrooke, the UN Ambassador during the Clinton Administration and the architect of the Dayton peace accords that ended the Bosnian war in 1995. Mr Holbrooke has lobbied hard for the Secretary of State s job. But in what will be seen as both an effort to conciliate the famously self-confident Mr Holbrooke, and as a signal change from Bush administration policy, Mr Kerry is likely to offer him the job of special Middle East peace co-ordinator, senior Democrats say.
Mr Kerry plans to announce both appointments soon after the election as a sign of the urgency he assigns to mending diplomatic fences.
President Bush has declined to appoint a senior level emissary to the Middle East and the Kerry move would delight European leaders, including Tony Blair, who have been urging a renewed US engagement in the region.
Other senior foreign policy positions in a Kerry administration are likely to go to three former senior officials who have been advising the senators campaign.
Rand Beers, who resigned from the Bush Administrations National Security Council over the Iraq war, is likely to be National Security Adviser, although Wesley Clark, the former Nato commander, may also be considered.
James Rubin, President Clintons State Department spokesman and husband of the CNN star reporter Christiane Amanpour, is in line for a front line policy role, as is Susan Rice, another Clinton appointee, meaning that whoever wins next week, an African American female called Dr Rice will be a senior foreign policy figure.
One puzzle for the Democratic team is the Pentagon. Mr Kerry is understood to want his friend John McCain, the Arizona senator, to be Defence Secretary. But Mr McCain is believed to be reluctant. The confirmed maverick might fit uncomfortably even in his close friends administration. If the Republicans keep control of the Senate, the Arizona senator will take the powerful job of chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Another possibility is Chuck Hagel, the Nebraska senator, also a Republican. Mr Kerry is said to be intent on removing Porter Goss, who was confirmed as the head of the CIA only this month. A candidate to replace him is Bob Graham, the retiring Florida senator.
One problem with this lineup, however, for the Kerry team, is that it looks a little Senate-heavy.
Given the reputation of senators as windbags with large egos and an argumentative manner, Mr Kerry, a senator himself, may be reluctant to have former senators at President, Vice-President (John Edwards, his running mate), Secretary of State, Secretary of Defence and Director of Central Intelligence.
There is less clarity about what the foreign policy team will look like if President Bush wins, which seems odd, given that the Republicans are already in charge.
Though nothing is fixed, officials say, Colin Powell is likely to leave the State Department, as is his deputy, Richard Armitage. Both have been bloodied in the Administrations infighting in the past four years and are not inclined to stay. But Donald Rumsfeld is eager to remain at the Pentagon and a newly re-elected Mr Bush may feel vindicated enough to keep him in place.
Possible replacements for General Powell include Condoleezza Rice, the current National Security Adviser, if she decides to stay in Washington at all, or Robert Blackwill, currently a senior director on the NSC and the man who has been in charge of Iraq policy in the past six months. Mr Blackwill is regarded as a pragmatist and problem-solver rather than an ideologue. John Danforth, the recently appointed ambassador to the UN, and former senator, is another name under consideration. There is much jockeying for the National Security Adviser post job if Dr Rice does leave. Stephen Hadley, her deputy, seems to be favourite. But other possibilities include Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defence, and leading light among the neoconservatives in the Administration, Mr Blackwill if he does not get the State job, and Lewis Scooter Libby, Dick Cheneys chief of staff, and a key figure in administration policy in the past four years, who is also sympathetic to the neoconservative approach to foreign policy ends.
Let's see . . . so long as he plagiarizes someone GOOD this time.
lol
"Peace in our time!" -Secretary of state Joe Biden's first speech (he wrote it himself).
Can't bring his name to mind at the moment, but the Gov of New Mexico will be angry. I hear he wanted the job as Sec. of State. Do we hear cracks in the kerry camp already?
Maybe the Senator better concentrate on Hawaii, Michigan, New Jersey before he starts offering jobs??
Followed by Ted Kennedy as the new Secretary of Transportation.
I'm not worried. I look forward to voting against him for a long time right here in Delaware. (Wish so much of the rest of the state didn't love him so much...)
so will Dicky Holbrooke
"We have nothing to fear, but fear it self" -- John Biden
"To be, or not to be" -- John Biden
Bill Richardson (Gov of NM) has his sights set higher than SecState. The dude wants to be POTUS.
France doesn't have a SECSTATE, they have Ministers.
Can't remember where I heard that, but I believe that that was labelled as the last act of a desperate candidate.
Why not. Mr Biden is already meeting with socialist from across the globe.
gotta luv the hair plugs though
Well, Biden should be able to handle all the countries where the people all have doll hair....
That would be Bill Richardson.
You can have him.
Agree. I keep hearing Dems say what a sharp guy Biden is, that he should running for president. The last time I heard him on Imus I thought he sounded like a total idiot.
Some of the DUmmies are calling for Gore for Sec of State, or bring back maddie.
Maybe this is why Biden has been the only one willing to associate himself with Kerry and show up on Sunday morning shows.
He's been promised a prize!
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