Archive for Friday, May 27, 2005
The Frist Problem
The best thing a Senate majority leader with presidential aspirations can do is quit. That was Bob Dole’s strategy in 1996, when he resigned to run against President Clinton. And it may be part of Bill Frist’s decision not to seek reelection in 2006. If so, Frist could hardly make a smarter move.
Of course, abandoning the Senate didn’t exactly help Dole in the presidential election, but his campaign was beyond rescue anyway. Dole quit in part because his evident mastery of its rules left the impression that he cared more about recondite parliamentary tactics than he did about the presidency. Frist, who many speculate plans a bid in 2008, has the opposite problem. The longer he tries to run the Senate, the more he looks like a bungler whose only principle is personal advancement.
It has been a particularly bad week for Frist. It started when he was outmaneuvered by Senate moderates in his effort to ram through the “nuclear option” and ban judicial filibusters. As this page has noted, Frist was right to try to get rid of the filibuster. But the defection of seven members of his own party, who joined with seven Democrats to reach a compromise on judicial nominations and leave the filibuster intact, didn’t reflect well on his leadership skills.
That battle lost, Frist moved on to another defeat, on a bill that would ease restrictions on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research. The bill passed in the House on Tuesday and seems to have a veto-proof majority in the Senate. But Frist is not part of it; he seems to have put his medical knowledge into something like a cryogenic chamber as he ponders whether he’s presidential material. And then on Thursday, Frist stood by as Democrats forced a delay in the confirmation of John Bolton, the president’s combative nominee for U.N. ambassador.
Frist may be bringing trouble on himself by trying to satisfy the exorbitant demands of his party’s far-right wing, which, like the old Soviet Union, views one concession simply as an occasion to ask for another. Before Frist truckles any further to the conservative base, he would do well to remember that the Hippocratic oath should apply to the Senate as well: First do no harm.
- 5.4 quake rocks Los Angeles area
- Ted Stevens scandal puts Republican Senate seat in play
- Mervyns, a California retail fixture, files for bankruptcy
- High-tech study reveals early Van Gogh work beneath another painting
- The putsch that imperiled America
- Buzzzzzzzz kill
- Carcinogen worries stick to food packaging
- Off-duty LAPD officer shot by Long Beach police
- Quake
- There ought to be a law against quakes during bar exam
- Will Chino Hills earthquake shake L.A. out of complacency?
- Kobe Bryant mum on Ron Artest trade as U.S. prepares for Turkey
- Astronomical calculator kept track of ancient Olympics, study finds
- Pioneer spirit pays off in Telegraph fire west of Yosemite National Park
- Jake Brown's 4 1/2-story fall lives on in X Games lore
- Ancient T. rex tissue, or just old slime?
- You've got too much e-mail
- Dodgers may be trying to get Greg Maddux again
- Obama emerges as major campaign issue -- for both candidates
- 3 Yorba Linda homes more than shaken by quake
