Making friends with the GOP, Round 2:
Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) yesterday lashed out at the White House for undermining his campaign to remain Senate Republican leader, as pressure mounted on him to step down.
. . .
Lott’s friends say he is upset at the White House not only for refusing to support him as leader, but also for what they regard as behind-the-scenes efforts to push him out. Lott, on several occasions in the past two years, has risen to President Bush’s defense, most recently in the debate over authorizing the use of force to depose Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer yesterday denied that Bush or his aides are trying to undermine Lott’s bid to remain leader. But numerous White House officials and top presidential advisers have told The Washington Post in recent days that the Mississippian has become a hindrance to the Republican Party’s goals, and should be replaced.
If Lott survives, Bush might have a harder time moving his agenda through the Senate, Republicans say, because Lott is unlikely to forget the president’s sharp rebuke on Dec. 12 and the White House’s subsequent signals of its displeasure. While the president himself remained silent on the issue for yet another day, his brother and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell spoke out. Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R) told reporters that the Lott controversy is “damaging the party,” especially its efforts to reach out to minorities.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A9276-2002Dec18.html
Powell, Jeb Bush slam Lott
Rhode Island’s Chafee first Republican senator to call for resignation