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12/08/00
12:25 p.m. By NRs John J. Miller & Ramesh Ponnuru |
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There's a pretty good case for Kelly, though it's a little complicated. Bear with us for a second. A lot of conservatives, and members of the house leadership, want to keep liberal Republican Marge Roukema of New Jersey from chairing the banking committee. The current plan is to help Mike Oxley of Ohio win that post. Oxley is currently fighting Billy Tauzin of Louisiana to chair the commerce committee. But House leaders want to transfer jurisdiction over securities from commerce to banking, making the banking chairmanship more attractive to Oxley. So Oxley and Tauzin both win, and Roukema loses. Sue Kelly see, we haven't forgotten her gets small business as a consolation prize for party liberals. But what about the other two? The international relations committee has gotten embroiled with moral issues over the years. Pro-lifers want to keep American taxpayers from subsidizing abortion abroad, directly or indirectly. A left-right coalition of human-rights activists wants to eliminate subsidies for regimes that persecute Christians or traffic in women. Bereuter is an enemy of both groups. (If Hyde manages to stay at the judiciary committee, as he wants to do, the other candidate is Chris Smith of New Jersey, a leading pro-lifer in the House.) Crane sought treatment for alcoholism last year, and some of his colleagues are still nervous about his ability to lead ways and means. But Thomas is quite abrasive, and he's responsible for what may be the worst political mistake the Republicans have made since 1994: including a Medicare premium increase in the balanced-budget bill of 1995. Members of the left wing of the House Republican caucus say that it's important to have chairmen who can reach compromises with the Democrats. In many cases, that's true. But why should Republicans compromise with themselves before even reaching the bargaining table?
Inhofe vs. Ridge
Elsewhere
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