‘Put him in,’ Bush said at a news conference. ‘If they are interested in reforming the United Nations, they ought to approve John Bolton.’ Bush spoke hours before the Republican-run Senate was scheduled to vote for a second time on ending a Democratic filibuster that has blocked a final vote on Bolton’s nomination. The 100-member chamber seemed likely to fall short of the 60 votes needed to end the delays, as it did last month. Earlier Monday, White House press secretary Scott McClellan did not rule out that Bush would consider a so-called recess appointment during the upcoming July 4 break if the Senate does not approve Bolton’s nomination. Bush, asked at a news conference with European Union leaders whether he might use the recess mechanism to temporarily install Bolton, said, ‘I think it’s time for the Senate to give him an up-or-down vote. Now.’ A president can make an appointment during a Senate recess without the chamber’s approval of the nominee.
That appointment lasts only through the next one-year session of Congress – which in this case would mean until January 2007. McClellan blamed Democrats for ‘obstructing progress’ by stalling a vote on Bolton. Bush has said Bolton would push for overhauling the U.N. bureaucracy and making it more accountable, while critics say his confrontational style and history of criticizing the institution make him unsuitable for the job. On Sunday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also left the door open for a recess appointment of Bolton. Rice, on a trip to the Middle East and Europe, commented in a round of television interviews Sunday as Democrats defended their attempt to block a vote on Bolton’s nomination.
The Term Paper on Bush’s to s newly proposed tax cut
Bush’s tax cut plan comprised a number of intiatives which were based on the General Tax Cut Plan proposed by administration in 2001 and further comprised those amendments that have been submitted to redefine priorities. The integral part to the plan is ‘the smaller tax cut’ which was included in a $2. 2 trillion budget for fiscal 2004 that the Senate adopted with restrictions. In general terms, ...
They said the administration’s refusal to turn over information they seek is delaying an up-or-down decision. To determine whether Bolton improperly used intelligence to intimidate officials who didn’t agree with his views, Democrats say they want to check a list of 36 U.S. officials against names – initially blacked out – that Bolton requested and received from national security intercepts he reviewed. They rejected a list of seven names offered last week by Sen. Pat Roberts (news, bio, voting record), R-Kan., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Roberts and Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., the lead Democrat on the committee, previously were briefed on the intercept issue and said there was no indication Bolton acted improperly. Democrats also want documents related to the preparation of testimony that Bolton, as the State Department’s arms control chief, planned to give in the House in July 2003 about Syria’s weapons capability. They want to know if Bolton misled the Senate during his confirmation hearings when he said he was not involved in the preparation of that testimony.
Rice, in Jerusalem, said Roberts ‘has already spoken to the issue of the nature of those inquiries.’ Asked on ‘Fox News Sunday’ whether Bush would consider a recess appointment of Bolton – a temporary placement that does not require Senate approval – Rice said: ‘We’ll see what happens this week.’ It was unclear whether Rice’s statement was an indication that the administration would seriously consider a recess appointment for Bolton or whether it was meant to increase leverage for White House bargaining with Senate Democrats. Sen. Joseph Biden (news, bio, voting record), D-Del., predicted that Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., would fail in an effort late Monday to end the filibuster. He said Democrats are standing for principle by delaying the vote until the administration provides what they seek. Sen. Christopher Dodd (news, bio, voting record), D-Conn., told ABC that a recess appointment would send to the United Nations an ambassador ‘who lacks the confidence of the United States Senate.’ That, he said, would ‘cripple’ Bolton as he goes to the world body and damage his standing with the Senate..
The Term Paper on Democrat And Republican Parties
"The Democratic Party at its worst is better for the country than the Republican Party at its best." This was a statement made by Lyndon B. Johnson in 1955. Lyndon B. Johnson of course was a Democrat. Is this quote true today? That is a question that can only be answered after a careful analysis of the philosophy of the Republican and Democratic leaders that help to run this nation. "Neither of ...