Feb. 1, 2009

McConnell: "Wait-And-See" On Daschle

Face The Nation: Leading Republican Will Not Predict How Tax Problems Will Affect Former Senator's Cabinet Confirmation

  • Play CBS Video Video Face The Nation, 02.01.09

    Sen. McConnell and Sen. Schumer comment on Tom Daschle's cabinet nomination; David Brooks on how both parties can back the stimulus bill; And, Bob Schieffer on Michael Steele as RNC chairman.

  • Video The Progress of Change

    Bob Schieffer takes a moment to look at the historical significance of Michael Steele, an African American, becoming the first chairman of the Republican National Committee.

  • Video The Wait-And-See Approach

    Bob Schieffer spoke with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) about Health Secretary Nominee Tom Daschle's failure to pay his taxes on time.

  • Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on

    Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on "Face The Nation," Feb. 1, 2009.  (CBS)

  • In-Depth Obama's Cabinet

    The latest names and status of posts within Obama's new administration.

  • In-Depth Q&A: Stimulating Ideas

    What's the best way to distribute funds of next economic stimulus package?

(CBS)  The Senate's leading Republican said he is taking a wait-and-see attitude toward the revelation that former Senator Tom Daschle - named to a cabinet post by President Obama - recently filed an amended tax return and paid $140,000 in back taxes and interest.

Appearing on CBS' Face The Nation, Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., refused to say whether he thinks Daschle's nomination as Secretary of Health and Human Services is in trouble, but admitted news of Daschle tax troubles was "a surprise."

“The Senate Finance Committee is meeting tomorrow to go over this and to come up with recommendations for the rest of us," he told host Bob Schieffer. "And I think I'm going to just wait until they give me their opinion."

Regardless of the embarrassment over the news (and what it says for the Cabinet vetting process, given the recent withdrawal of New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson after being named for Commerce), the opinion seems to be that Daschle - who is popular in Washington - would not fail to be confirmed.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the vice chairman of the Democratic Conference, said Daschle's tax problem is less important than his serving in the Obama administration. "This was clearly an oversight," Schumer told Schieffer. "He's made recompense. He's admitted it.

"Daschle is one of the most respected people, and particularly in health care. He knows the health care issue. He knows the senators. He knows the politics. At a time when we have to really dramatically overhaul health care because people are hurting, I think we need Daschle as secretary of HHS. … And I believe that he will be approved by both the Finance Committee and the whole Senate.”

New York Times columnist David Brooks said that Daschle, being a popular member of "the club," will survive the revelation and be confirmed.

"People like him, people respect him, in general," Brooks said.

Schieffer admitted that some in the Senate have told him, "If he were not in the club, had he not been a member of the Senate, he probably would be dead meat right now."

However, Brooks noted a potential problem for Daschle's fellow Democrats:

"He gave money to 14 senators. It's going to be hard for those senators - I assume they're all Democrats - to vote for him because it will look like, 'Oh, he gave them money, so of course they voted for him.'

"Barack Obama apparently joked last night that he was slow to pick his Labradoodle for his daughters because the dog he picked owed some back taxes."

Tongue-in-cheek, Brooks suggested the president was onto a winning formula for closing the nation's budget deficit: "He names someone. We get some money from the IRS in back taxes. We're making a lot of money off this!"


Stimulus Battle

The senators differed on their appraisal of the economic stimulus bill's chances for passage in the Senate, at least in its present form. However, Schumer was more optimistic that a bill will pass %#0151; and warned against watering down the package (for example, with additional tax cuts) just to win votes, that it will lose its effectiveness.

(CBS)
"This will pass with Republican votes, because it's a good package, and because we will make some changes around the edges," said Schumer (left). "I think we will get enough Republicans to pass this - the more the better. But I will say this: I'd rather have a really good bill that helps our economy get out of this mess, with 65 votes, than dilute the bill and get 80 votes.”

Schumer expects there will be an increase in infrastructure spending, particularly in transportation. He also thinks the bill can do more in terms of housing, such as raising the tax credit for new home buyers or lowering mortgage interest rates to spur refinancing, in order to help lower consumers' monthly mortgage bills. However, he felt it would be more appropriate to distribute money for housing from the TARP funds.

Following last week's House passage of the stimulus bill, in which not a single Republican voted for it, McConnell said there is a great deal of unease within the Senate about the bill which will spur changes now that it is in their lap.

"The president said he didn't think it ought to have earmarks in it," McConnell said. "And you know, earmarks are arguably fine in a normal appropriations process, but what does that have to do with stimulating the economy? We ought to go right at the housing problem and right at tax relief to put money in the hands of consumers who can spend it now.

"I think we need to exercise some discipline here," he said. "And I think it may be time, Bob, for the president to kind of get a hold of these Democrats in the Senate and the House, who have rather significant majorities, and shake them a little bit and say, 'Look, let's do this the right way.'

"I can't believe that the president isn't embarrassed about the products that have been produced so far," McConnell said, mentioning provisions of $600 million for purchases of new cars for federal employees and $150 million for honeybee insurance. "This is nonsense," McConnell said.

"Well, I mean, the auto industry sure needs some help," Schieffer said.

"I doubt if the government buying $600 million worth of automobiles would provide the kind of stimulus that we're talking about here," McConnell said. "And we certainly don't need honeybee insurance. Look, this thing needs to be targeted right at the problem, if we're going to spend this enormous amount of money.

"Someone said the other day that, if you started the day Jesus Christ was born and spent $1 million every day since then, you still wouldn't have spent $1 trillion."

McConnell would not say whether Republicans would filibuster the bill if it were not to their liking. But, Schieffer asked, if the bill fails to pass, "wouldn't Republicans be blamed when the economy is going down the tubes? I mean, that kind of thing didn't work very well for Herbert Hoover. He didn't want to do anything, either."

"He did a lot - he did a lot of the wrong things. But this is not about blame. This is about getting the economy moving. We don't have an election for two years.

"Virtually everybody agrees we ought to do something," McConnell said. "This is not a question of doing nothing versus doing this."

Schumer warned, however, that fights over where funds are allocated could be a diversion for critics, and could actually stall help, leading to a deflationary spiral. "You know when the last one we had was? It was called the Great Depression. So this is serious, serious stuff."

"Most of the Republicans say, we just want more tax cuts," Schumer said. "Even Martin Feldstein, the leading Reagan Republican economist, says, no, the tax cuts are not the way to go. And we did tax cuts with George Bush a year ago. We went along completely because Bush was president. There was no spending in there, not even unemployment insurance. And it was regarded as a flop.

"So let's not repeat history. Let's do something new. President Obama has put together a very strong package. Can we make it better? Of course we can make better the bill that came over from the House, and we will. But we must do something. And it's no time for partisan games."

(CBS)
Agreement on the need for a stimulus package - some kind of stimulus package - does seem bipartisan, said Brooks (left), who suspects it will pass despite "the sprawlingness of it." But he questioned the additions to the package that represented permanent funding, not temporary or time-limited appropriations just to kick-start the economy.

"Either in the Obama White House or in the House … they added on a whole bunch of permanent things, to entitlements, to Head Start programs, to health care. There's a lot of opposition, both in the Republican Party and, frankly, I've spoken to a lot of moderate Democrats who are anguished about this. Why did we stick Head Start in here? Why did we stick all this health care stuff in here?

"I mean, I understand why they want to do it. You've got this train leaving the station, you can fund it all with deficits, so they threw it in there."

"It almost makes you wonder if there's, kind of, a fix in here," Schieffer said, "that you put a bunch of stuff in the House bill, so you'd have some things you could take out when it got to the Senate. And then everybody could say they made their point, and in the end, you pass this bill."

"Well, you think they're smarter than I do," Brooks said.

Brooks said that the Democrats and the Obama administration should get behind the Republican idea of lowering mortgage rates to 4.5 percent. "I don't know if that's a good or bad idea, but if they're thinking about big things in the housing front and on the banking front, then that's going to really create a bipartisan spirit that we actually don't see, right now, on the stimulus bill.

"I think we heard bipartisan agreement on the general outlines of the focus: more infrastructure but especially more tax cuts for the lower and middle class. Senator McConnell talked about it. The Democrats are certainly open to that, and maybe a payroll tax cut. And so the tax cuts which have come down to about 22 percent of the whole package, way down, really are immediate. They may not be as effective as, maybe, some other things, but they're immediate. And the speed is really what's important."


Read the full "Face the Nation" transcript here.

By CBSNews.com producer David Morgan.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Add a Comment See all 86 Comments
by lightnin001 February 3, 2009 2:35 AM EST
Su-weet! Daschle dodges $140,000 in income taxes and penalties, doesn''t pay his Medicare taxes, claims more charitable deductions than he made, looks really dirty for some of his "advisor fees" and payments from health ins. companies, but the "democrats" don''t see any problems with any of that, nothing to disqualify him for the Health and Human Services job. Oops, I forgot, they''re democrats, no ethics, morality, honesty, or honor to get in their way! Daschle probably doesn''t have a clue why there is any uproar about it! Don''t expect Sharpton or Geithner think he did anything wrong! The Messiah doesn''t see any problem! There''s your "Change", allright! The jackals are breaking into the henhouse! (Ya think maybe Geithner will go after him for tax evasion?)
Reply to this comment
by maxa976 February 3, 2009 2:29 AM EST
Hey, the sofa for the Merrill Lynch CEO who got the bailout cost more than the tax the nominee for Treasury overlooked paying--and at least he ultimately has paid all his taxes. Maybe this should all just be round filed in the $1500 garbage can purchsed by that same Merrill Lynch CEO?
Reply to this comment
by starleo146 February 2, 2009 9:08 PM EST
Why wait??? He''''s a shoe in because he''''s a crook!!! Obama says: we will not tolerate honesty, integrity, ethics, transparency, responsibilty, and accountability during my administration. MARK MY WORD!!!!

Posted by dongo1955 at 04:37 PM : Feb 02, 2009
+ report

Why doesn''t Obama just grant him immunity like Bush did to all his administration crooks, and snuck it in just before he left.Did he tell us anything about his 8 yrs. of God knows What!!!
Reply to this comment
by antoniof123 February 2, 2009 7:45 PM EST
Sen. Mitch McConnell you are proving that you can''t teach a conservative anything.

Most people have some tax problems in their life they under pay or forget to file or some other nonsense. It happens he paid his back taxes with interest as the artical says.

So why do we care now the GOP is in the minority for 14 years they didn''t have a problem with their party hacks now all of the sudden they want to go back to their roots.

Please Mitch you will have to do a lot more than just talk to us prove it and you are out of power so it will be difficult this time around.

No more retoric for the ultra right reactionary wing.
Reply to this comment
by erasmus606 February 2, 2009 6:23 PM EST
If you''''re looking for something to blame GUESS WHAT ALL OF THESE HAVE IN COMMON?????

Posted by txgrouch2009 at 09:47 AM : Feb 02, 2009

So you are saying that there isn''t anyone that is corrupt, that isn''t a Baby Boomer?

So that means that everyone that is a Baby Boomer is corrupt. Even you.

Reply to this comment
by tibu987 February 2, 2009 2:57 PM EST

NO" to Daschle appointment.

Obama has already surrounded himself with questionable members, products of the Chicago machine.

Now, he will have two tax evaders, an attorney general who tried to get clemency for terrorists, and a vice president who is just one of the "good ole boys", who has accomplished nothing in his 36 years in Washington.

Not very impressive, is it?

I had high hopes for Obama but I am beginning to see that it will be just more business as usual in Washington, the infamous "Den of thieves".
Reply to this comment
by skeezix06 February 2, 2009 9:55 AM EST
McConnell on Face the Nation proving that the republicans still haven''t learned anything.
Reply to this comment
by fahren451 February 2, 2009 3:48 AM EST
Grouch2009, you still up here trying to spin Reagan into a deregulation hero?

____

"Yet once he reaches the Reagan years, Critchlow presents as rosy a picture as possible. He either ignores the damaging effects of Reaganomics, such as astronomical deficits and deepening economic inequality, or treats them as illusions ginned up by Democratic partisans and the liberal media. Critchlow either overlooks the cronyism and looting of the 1980s--most spectacularly at the Pentagon, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development--or ascribes them to "mismanagement" that gave the career civil servants of the so-called liberal administrative state a pretext to thwart Reagan''s reforms. He describes the savings-and-loan crisis as an unintended consequence of Reagan''s deregulation, without mentioning how the administration repeatedly ignored warnings about the looming disaster and obstructed oversight--the costliest government malfeasance of its kind in history."
Reply to this comment
by fahren451 February 2, 2009 3:43 AM EST


But as you pointed out, it was CLINTON who "adopted" the deregulation that was working, and he botched it into the 1999 deregulation that brought us to DISASTER.

Now watch the lieberal shift tactics and blame the FAILURE on the Republican Gramm....LOL SO PREDICTABLE...



Posted by txgrouch2009 at 09:56 PM : Feb 01, 2009

I should just stop talking with you. You love your ideology more that the success of this nation.

Deregulation under Reagan and what followed? The Savings and Loans scandals? Was that "too much" deregulation? Maybe we should put an economic genius such as you in charge of how much deregulation is too much.
Reply to this comment
by riverratt5 February 2, 2009 2:47 AM EST
What does that mean?
Reply to this comment
by nearl4511 February 2, 2009 2:44 AM EST
Mitch the cowardly KY obstructionist.

Reply to this comment
by erasmus606 February 2, 2009 2:20 AM EST
You certainly are.

Posted by FLSunJnky at 11:18 PM : Feb 01, 2009

Hahaha, and what is that supposed to mean?

Are you being nasty?:)
Reply to this comment
by flsunjnky February 2, 2009 2:18 AM EST
I''''m one of a kind.:)

Posted by erasmus606

You certainly are.
Reply to this comment
by flsunjnky February 2, 2009 2:17 AM EST
When the MAN is "dependable," women take that as their cue to use him for a doormat.

Posted by txgrouch2009

If that is what you think, you deserve to be a doormat!
Reply to this comment
by erasmus606 February 2, 2009 2:16 AM EST
Wonderful. So, you are better than women?

Posted by FLSunJnky at 11:12 PM : Feb 01, 2009

What do you mean? Am I a better woman that most other women? Hmmmm, from what I have been hearing men say about the women they have come across, I think I am.

I''m one of a kind.:)
Reply to this comment
by flsunjnky February 2, 2009 2:12 AM EST
Well then that is when the man is supposed to kick her *** to the curb. Men shouldn''''t ALLOW women to get away with it.

Posted by erasmus606

Wonderful. So, you are better than women?
Reply to this comment
by erasmus606 February 2, 2009 2:08 AM EST
You think I''''''''''''''''m mysterious and unpredictable?
Posted by erasmus606 at 10:40 PM : Feb 01, 2009

BIG TIME!!!

Like, nobody can figure you out.

Posted by erasmus606 at 10:49 PM : Feb 01, 2009

No, no, no. I am not hard to figure out. I am normally a straight forward, tell it like it is, person. I can be very BLUNT.

Reply to this comment
by erasmus606 February 2, 2009 2:06 AM EST
And trying to reason with you about guns - forget it.

Posted by txgrouch2009 at 10:57 PM : Feb 01, 2009

:)

Reply to this comment
by erasmus606 February 2, 2009 2:04 AM EST
When the MAN is "dependable," women take that as their cue to use him for a doormat.

Posted by txgrouch2009 at 10:59 PM : Feb 01, 2009

Well then that is when the man is supposed to kick her *** to the curb. Men shouldn''t ALLOW women to get away with it.
Reply to this comment
by dythehunter February 2, 2009 1:58 AM EST
The idea that blood type can or might have any reliable correlation to identifying personality types is very much like a superstition or pseudoscience.

This is an old idea originating from Japan, I think somewhere in the ''30''s and was used to also determine some sort of Ethnic differences, as I reacall.
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