Posted on 01/19/2003 8:36:42 PM PST by Uncle Bill
SPINNING RACE
NEWSWEEK
MSNBC.com
By Howard Fineman and Tamara Lipper
January 27, 2003
Jan. 27 issue
He speechified to the right. He briefed to the middle. And he sought cover by trying to bring in Condi Rice. The color of racial politics
No one in Washington can be as ominously sympathetic as Dick Cheney. He was that way last week, when he placed a call to Theodore Olson, solicitor general. President George W. Bush was preparing to take a politically explosive step, filing friend of the court briefs opposing the University of Michigans use of racial preferences in admissions.
IT WAS IMPORTANT that the rollout of the briefs be as carefulas Escher-like in its eye-of-the-beholder balanceas the briefs themselves. And Olson was a problem.
Here was a conservative purist, to whom preferences of any kind were abhorrent and who wanted to advise the Supreme Court to reverse the landmark Bakke case of 1978, which held that race can be a factor in college admissions. But Bush had decided to move surgically, making only a relatively narrow (though still potentially far-reaching) attack on the U of M procedures. Olsons shop could draft the briefs, but final decisions would rest with the White House counsel, Alberto Gonzales. Olson was furious: it was a slap at the powers of the SG (who would normally run the show) and, in his view, a cave-in. If you want to be SG, thats fine! he barked at Gonzales. Indeed, NEWSWEEK learned, Olson even considered quitting.
Olson on a rampage could hurt the administrationbig timewith its conservative base. So Cheney made his call. He told Olson that he was sympathetic to his position, but that wasnt what The Boss wanted to say. Time to get onboard. Cheney didnt have to addbut Olson apparently understoodthe rest of the message: shut up. The SG did so, signing the brief but otherwise staying out of sight while other hard-core conservatives were in full cry. (A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment.)
MSNBC/Newsweek articles must be excerpted.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/861383.asp?0cl=c1
Bush to Propose Funds for Black, Hispanic Education
Condoleezza Rice Partly at Odds with Bush on Race Case
Powell Says He Disagrees With Bush on University of Michigan Affirmative Action Case
Rush Limbaugh says the affirmative action brief still keeps promoting race preference and its bad
White House Brief Stops Short of Bush Speech (Folks, I really don't relish the next words)RUSH
Affirmative Action Faces a New Wave of Anger
Bush Administration Defends Affirmative Action
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...
media bias at its best.
"Government ought to have a policy that helps people with a downpayment." - George W. Bush
Bush to Propose $500M AIDS Funding
Bush pushes minority homeownership
A Home Of Your Own: Expanding Opportunities for All Americans
Bush Touts Low - Income Homes Plan
U.S. Prepares 'Big-Time' Response To Famine - Impact of African crisis could be felt at White House
Bush to Propose Another $100 Million Over Five Years for Education in Africa
President Highlights Compassionate Conservative Agenda for Inner Cities
James Madison, the Father of the Constitution, elaborated upon this limitation in a letter to James Robertson:
In 1794, when Congress appropriated $15,000 for relief of French refugees who fled from insurrection in San Domingo to Baltimore and Philadelphia, James Madison stood on the floor of the House to object saying, "I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents."
James Madison, 4 Annals of congress 179 (1794)
"Congress has not unlimited powers to provide for the general welfare, but only those specifically enumerated."
Thomas Jefferson
"If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the general welfare, the government is no longer a limited one possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one subject to particular exceptions."
James Madison, "Letter to Edmund Pendleton," -- James Madison, January 21, 1792, in The Papers of James Madison, vol. 14, Robert A Rutland et. al., ed (Charlottesvile: University Press of Virginia,1984).
You do such good work.
Calif. Republican Leaders Still Bickering About Race - January 19, 2003
LOL! Insanity rules! Think of the poor person who waits all that time, finally makes it to the front counter, and they tell him, sorry, you must have a number stub, you'll have to get one and go to the end of the line.
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