Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Democrats Show Unity on Lewinsky

>           WASHINGTON (AP) -- Rallying around their embattled
>           leader, Democratic activists from across the country
>           said Thursday that President Clinton's executive
>           privilege claim is necessary protection against
>           ``maniacal'' opponents -- and a smart delaying tactic
>           politically.
> 
>           With the party's Washington elite stressing party unity
>           at the White House, rank-and-file members of the
>           Democratic National Committee arrived in town to open
>           three days of meetings. They said Clinton's assertion
>           of executive privilege is not stirring interest outside
>           the Beltway, news sure to ease the jitters of some
>           presidential political advisers.
> 
>           ``I honestly can't say I recall any one person mention
>           the executive privilege issue to me,'' said Ed Marcus,
>           chairman of the Connecticut Democratic Party.
> 
>           ``Nobody cares,'' said Gary LaPaille of Illinois,
>           president of the party chairmen's association.
> 
>           Though no decision has been announced, sources close to
>           the matter say a federal judge has rejected Clinton's
>           attempt to invoke executive privilege to shield White
>           House aides from grand jury testimony. An appeal is
>           expected.
> 
>           A few Democratic activists suggested a possible Clinton
>           motive in claiming executive privilege: It delays
>           Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr's investigation
>           into his relationship with Monica Lewinsky.
> 
>           ``It's probably good strategy if you can get beyond the
>           election,'' said Rosalind Wyman of Los Angeles.
> 
>           Besides, she said, ``I just think they are so tired of
>           Ken Starr and his friends pushing them around that they
>           want to make his life as miserable as theirs.''
> 
>           ``He's got to use whatever tool he can. He's up against
>           some maniacal people,'' said Yolanda Caraway, a
>           national committee member from Washington.
> 
>           While committee members gathered at a downtown hotel,
>           Clinton met with House and Senate Democratic leaders at
>           the White House to iron out a campaign fund-raising
>           strategy. Officials who attended the meeting said the
>           president agreed to be host for six events outside
>           Washington and three to six events inside Washington
>           between August and November, raising about $18 million.
> 
>           The money would be split evenly between the DNC and the
>           party's House and Senate campaign committees. Some
>           Democrats, especially Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska,
>           wanted less money for the DNC, but they fell in line
>           Thursday.
> 
>           ``I want to do what I need to do to raise $18 (million)
>           to $20 million,'' the president told the leaders,
>           according to two Democrats at the meeting.
> 
>           Afterward, the leaders told reporters outside the White
>           House that Republican bungling is helping Clinton
>           survive the Monica Lewinsky investigation. ``Newt
>           Gingrich has become hysterical on the issue,'' said
>           Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J.
> 
>           According to a Democratic poll due to be unveiled at a
>           DNC news conference Friday, 75 percent of people
>           surveyed May 5 said they viewed the House speaker's
>           recent criticism of Clinton unfavorably. Nearly 400
>           people were contacted in the survey conducted by Mark
>           Penn.
> 
>           Republicans questioned the Democrats' show of support.
>           ``If there is any unity, it is born of desperation
>           because they don't know when the next shoe will drop on
>           any of a dozen presidential scandals,'' said GOP
>           spokesman Mike Collins.
> 
>           Despite confident talk from the White House, some of
>           Clinton's political advisers are concerned that voters
>           will come to link his executive privilege fight to
>           Richard Nixon's effort to keep White House recordings
>           secret in 1974.
> 
>           In fact, several advisers don't want to delay Starr's
>           investigation; they want it to end while Clinton is
>           still high in the polls. One adviser outside the White
>           House is even discussing pulling together a few
>           like-minded supporters and making a personal pitch to
>           get Clinton to stop trying to shield his staff from
>           grand jury testimony.
> 
>           There is a split -- described as respectful and not
>           contentious -- between the president's legal and
>           political teams over whether Clinton should allow top
>           aides such as Bruce Lindsey and Sidney Blumenthal to
>           answer certain questions.
> 
>           His top government lawyer, White House counsel Charles
>           F.C. Ruff, wants Clinton to fight tooth-and-nail to
>           preserve the confidentiality of internal discussions
>           for future presidents. His top personal lawyer, David
>           Kendall, is leery about giving any ground to Starr.
> 
>           The lawyers don't usually share their arguments or
>           decisions with anybody outside their circle because of
>           a court gag order on the executive privilege case and
>           fear that Starr would subpoena any discussions not
>           covered by attorney-client privilege. That has left the
>           political advisers in the dark, though most aides
>           understand why they can't be told more.

-- 
Two rules in life:

1.  Don't tell people everything you know.
2.

Subscribe/Unsubscribe, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the body of the message enter: subscribe/unsubscribe law-issues

Reply via email to