Frist Gains Committee Appointment
PowerBy Mark Preston ROLL CALL
STAFF
Even as it appeared Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.)
had overcome conservative pressure to prevent him
from becoming the next Judiciary chairman,
Republicans approved a new rule that GOP centrists
charge is intended to suppress dissenting voices in
the Conference.
By a one-vote margin, Republican Senators agreed
to grant Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) the
ability to make appointments to influential
committees - a power centrists fear will be used to
punish them by denying a Senator a seat on a
desirable panel if that person opposes the
leadership on policy matters.
"There is only one reason for that change and it
is to punish people," griped Sen. Olympia Snowe
(R-Maine), who has been outspoken in her opposition
to efforts to rewrite the GOP's rules.
Tradition had dictated that seniority was the
sole determining factor in a Republican Senator's
climb up the committee ladder, which can eventually
lead to a chairmanship, larger staff, control over
sizable budgets and considerable influence in
crafting legislation.
Frist and future Republican leaders will now have
direct input into who will gain seats on panels such
as Appropriations, Armed Services, Finance and
Foreign Relations. The new rule allows the
Republican leader to name at least half the members
of "A" committees.
"It is an opportunity for the leader to have the
ability to pull people forward who may not be in
line for seniority, to have the opportunity to serve
on a committee that they [would] not otherwise
because they can either add to the Conference - and
the Conference needs," said Senate Republican
Conference Chairman Rick Santorum (Pa.).
Santorum made reference to the fact that
Democratic leaders can reward their colleagues by
giving them plum assignments for agreeing to
shoulder more responsibility. Just this week,
incoming Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)
announced that Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) would
join Finance in the 109th Congress, after he agreed
to serve as the next chairman of the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee.
"It could be, as we see with Senator Schumer, an
incentive to give him a Finance slot in order for
him to take the DSCC chairman," Santorum said.
"Those are the kinds of things that the [GOP] leader
has no flexibility to do."
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who is known to buck
his party leadership, described the rules change in
one word: "Bad." McCain was not the only Republican
who had reservations about rewriting the rule. It
passed by one vote, 27-26, on a secret ballot. It is
unclear which two Senators did not vote.
Rules and Administration Chairman Trent Lott
(R-Miss.), who helped draft the rules change, said
they were able to win by cobbling together a diverse
group of Senators from every corner of the
Conference.
"It was not pure," said Lott, describing a vote
that did not fall along the lines of traditional
alliances. "It wasn't purely Old Bulls and moderates
against everybody else."
The rule will not hurt Snowe personally, because
it does not allow the Republican leader to reassign
Senators to other committees. But the Maine
Republican said it presents the image that the GOP
is not a party of inclusion.
"It is not a sign of strength, it is a sign of
weakness," she said. "It is a punitive instrument to
suppress diverse views."
At least one moderate, though, shrugged off the
rules change. Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-R.I), who until
recently toyed with the idea of leaving the
Republican Party, said it was "not going to affect"
his decision to remain and noted that Frist and
Majority Whip Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) both contacted
him to tell him they would help him get re-elected
in 2006.
"That makes a big difference," Chafee said. "I
have big differences with the president, but I also
have an election in 2006 and sometimes those things
come in conflict. But I have got to look out for my
state and I am in the majority and that is
important."
During their organizational meeting, Republicans
also agreed to allow GOP Senators to retain only one
"B" committee assignment in the 109th Congress. A
proposal that would have allowed current members of
the Intelligence Committee to remain on the panel
was never presented for a vote.
The rules changes were the result of
recommendations made by a task force of Republican
Senators who began meeting in June to review the
Conference's rules.
"I think only time will tell," said Sen. Larry
Craig (R-Idaho), a supporter of the changes, on the
effect the changes will have on the Conference. "I
think the leadership will use it very judicially for
the positive effect of the Conference."