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ski has always personified a less-savory aspect of the Chicago political traditi on . His indictment , they said , resulted from `` the habits of a lifetime '' t hat began when he entered politics in the 1950s . `` He operated for much of his career as a Chicago ward heeler , '' said Don Rose , a veteran of the political -reform movement that has battled the regular Democratic organization for genera tions. ` ` .. . It 's almost like they don't know the difference between right a nd wrong . '' `` There is no question he is of another era in which politicians went out and tried to accomplish things and didn't spend countless hours poring over poll data to decide which tie to wear that day , '' Axelrod said . `` The p olitics he grew up with were much more focused on results rather than appearance s . '' Rostenkowski has never cared much about appearances . The quality he has always valued most and prided himself on is loyalty to his family , which he shi elded from the glare of publicity ; to his city , which he showered with federal largesse from his powerful congressional post ; and to his party , which expect ed his loyalty and rewarded him in return . It is how he learned the game of pol itics in his hometown . Rostenkowksi 's father , Joe , was for three decades the undisputed boss of Chicago 's 32nd Ward . There he was the alderman and Democra tic ward committeeman , which gave him control of the ward 's patronage . Known as Big Joe Rusty , the elder Rostenkowski in 1952 was accused by the Chicago Dai ly News of having three `` no-show '' employees on his payroll , a charge that m ore than 40 years later would be leveled against his son . Defeated in the 1955 Democratic primary , Big Joe Rusty was rewarded for his loyalty by the city 's n ewly elected mayor , Richard J. Daley , who named him superintendent of sewer re pairs . A few years later , a Daley critic on the City Council said he was `` un able to find any evidence that Rostenkowski does any work for the city . '' In t he 1950s , real political power in cities like Chicago was at the local level . That is where the jobs were , where friends could be rewarded and enemies punish ed . But with a foresight he later demonstrated as Congress 's consumate dealmak er , Rostenkowski , then a state senator , set his sights on Washington . Daley and the other party bosses considered Washington something of a political backwa ter , but Rostenkowski used the Southern example to help persuade them otherwise . Southern Democrats , he argued , dominated the congressional committee system because they were elected to Congress when they were young , rose through the s eniority system and in later years controlled the committees that dispensed mone y and power from the nation 's capital to the states and cities . Why shouldn't we do the same ? Rostenkowski asked . Daley agreed . And so in 1958 , running in an ethnic district that was as politically safe as the most entrenched Southern Democratic barony , Dan Rostenkowski was elected to Congress . For much of his congressional career , Rostenkowski struggled to overcome his `` Chicago ward he eler '' image , finally succeeding when he became House Ways and Means Committee chairman in 1980 . He became a national figure , someone with `` clout , '' a w ord that Chicago contributed to the political lexicon . Rostenkowski funneled mi llions of dollars in federal funds to his hometown , just as he had planned deca des earlier . And as his legal troubles deepened , the city 's political and bus iness establishments rallied to his side , helping him win 50 percent of the vot e in a three-candidate race in the Democratic primary in March . `` It was sell , but not a tough sell , '' Cook County Democratic Party Chairman Thomas G. Lyon s said of that campaign . `` All you had to do was remind voters of what this gu y has meant . '' Rostenkowski 's Republican opponent in November , Michael Flana gan , is a political unknown who is still given little chance of defeating the i ndicted incumbent in the overwhelmingly Democratic district . Even his severest critics recognize Rostenkowski 's legislative ability and his importance to this city . `` He 's one of those tragic figures , '' Rose said . `` This is a guy w ho has qualities . This is a man of value . It 's almost Aristotelian the tragic flaw . '' LONDON The British political scene was buzzing Tuesday with its latest scandal and its bewildering batch of elements . Alan Clark , the 66-year-old patrician w ho once was a favored member of Lady Thatcher 's government , was accused of hav ing overlapping affairs with the wife of a British judge and her two daughters . Clark the son of Lord Clark , who was ennobled in his role as the art historian who created the television series `` Civilization '' saw his own hopes of resum ing his political career in the House of Lords dashed Tuesday because of the dis closures . In his best-selling `` Diaries '' last year , the younger Clark produ ced fascinating insights into the workings of ministers in a Conservative govern ment , while at the same time admitting to a career of pursuing women outside hi s marriage . His book included allusions to a `` coven , '' an assembly of witch es , among his women friends . He gave the first names or nicknames of three : t he mother Valerie , and her two daughters , Alison and Josephine . It has now be en disclosed that Valerie was married for a second time to an English judge , Ja mes Harkess . After retirement , he moved to South Africa . One of her daughters , Josephine , now 34 , remains close to them in South Africa . The other daught er , Alison , 36 , is estranged and lives with former KGB agent Sergei Kausov . He is the former husband of Greek shipping heiress Christina Onassis , who died in 1988 . On Sunday , the top-selling tabloid , News of the World , owned by Rup ert Murdoch , published a story by the women admitting to the affairs with Clark ; the judge said he supported the allegations . The reason they spoke out , the y said , was to `` tell the truth , to set the record straight . '' `` I feel th at certain people in the present government and the recent government are rotten to the core , '' said Harkess , `` and I think this should be brought out . '' Harkess was reported to be politically opposed to Prime Minister John Major , a moderate Conservative by Harkess ' standards . Mrs. Harkess said she realized , after her 14-year-affair with Clark , including a period when she knew her lover had had sex with her daughters , that he was a `` pathetic , lecherous , dirty old man . '' ( Optional Add End ) After the Harkess family landed in London Tues day , bankrolled by the News of the World , Clark admitted : `` I deserved to be horse whipped . '' But he denied allegations by the Harkesses that he had offer ed the family $ 150,000 to keep them from taking their story to the newspapers . Meanwhile , Jane Clark , the millionaire 's wife , whom he married when she was just 17 , told reporters she knew of her husband 's peccadilloes , declaring : `` Quite frankly , if you bed people I call ` below-stairs class ' they go to th e papers , don't they ? '' Mrs. Clark , 52 , has admitted in the past to throwin g an ax at her husband after being informed of his latest escapade . Of her husb and 's girlfriends , she said : `` I think they are dreadful . They all have the ir ` sell-by ' date on them . They all get put away on the shelf in the end . '' WASHINGTON The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a public employer who wants to fire a worker because of alleged insubordinate remarks must first investigate th e episode . It marks the first time the court has given procedural rights under the First Amendment to public employees whose speech may be disruptive . At the same time , the justices reaffirmed the broad power of federal , state and local governments to restrict employees ' speech . The court said a boss can fire a p ublic employee for remarks as they had been overheard and reported by other work ers as long as the boss reasonably believes they constituted insubordinate speec h . It does not matter , Justice Sandra Day O' Connor wrote , if it later emerge s that the worker was commenting on matters of public concern and that the state ments were protected by the First Amendment , provided some investigation occurr ed . `` ( T ) he extra power the government has in this area comes from the natu re of the government 's mission as employer , '' O' Connor said . `` When someon e who is paid a salary so that she will contribute to an agency 's effective ope ration begins to do or say things that detract from the agency 's effective oper ation , the government employer must have some power to restrain her . '' That p art of the ruling was 7 to 2 . Justice John Paul Stevens , joined by Harry A . B lackmun , wrote in a dissent that the majority view `` underestimates the import ance of freedom of speech for the more than 18 million civilian employees of thi s country 's federal , state and local governments , and subordinates that freed om to an abstract interest in bureaucratic efficiency . '' Yet , O' Connor 's op inion does offer government workers more protection than they had before Tuesday 's ruling in Waters v. Churchill. She said a public employer who is presented w ith a report of disruptive remarks `` must tread with a certain amount of care . '' She was not specific about what kind of investigation was required . `` Many different courses of action will necessarily be reasonable , '' she said . That part of the decision was effectively 6 to 3 . Justice Antonin Scalia who otherw ise joined O' Connor 's judgment in the case arising from a nurse 's comments in a Macomb , Ill. , hosptial cafeteria lashed out at the unprecedented requiremen t of an investigation , saying it was ambigious and would burden employers and t he courts . He was joined by Justices Anthony M. Kennedy and Clarence Thomas . O ' Connor 's opinion was signed in full by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices David H. Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg . As the dust settled Tuesday , many legal experts said public workers had fared better than employers . The c ourt already had said public employers may fire workers whose speech is disrupti ve . Yet , this is the first time that the court has said the First Amendment im poses procedural requirements on the employer . Solicitor General Drew S . Days III had argued in a friend of the court brief that the government needs great di scretion over its personnel affairs and that adoption of procedures `` would con flict with the common-sense realization that government offices could not functi on if every employment decision became a constitutional matter . '' The ruling i s likely to especially benefit state and local public workers . Many federal wor kers , according to government lawyers , already are entitled to a disciplinary investigation under various statutes . Tuesday 's case arose from complaints by nurse Cheryl Churchill seven years ago at the McDonough District Hospital and he r subsequent firing . Administrators , who were told by other nurses that Church ill `` was knocking the ( obstetrics ) department , '' claimed Churchill was den igrating the hospital and her superiors . Churchill insisted she was voicing leg itimate concerns about patient care and staff shortages . A federal district cou rt held that neither version of the conversation rose to the level of a `` publi c concern '' and therefore was not protected by the First Amendment . But the U. S. . Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit reversed , ordered a jury trial to det ermine whether Churchill 's comments were merely disruptive griping or a matter of public concern , that is , nursing care . The appeals court ruled that a publ ic employer is liable when it fires an employee who engages in the latter type o f speech , even if the employer , after staff interviews , had believed otherwis e at the time of dismissal . In rejecting that standard , the Supreme Court said Tuesday it is enough that the public employer reasonably investigate the compla int and believe it to be true . While Stevens and Blackmun dissented from O' Con nor 's opinion , they effectively endorsed the principle of an investigation int o complaints about public-employee speech . Scalia , Kennedy and Thomas countere d that employers should be able to fire workers unless the action is in retaliat ion for some constitutionally protected speech . Scalia mocked O' Connor 's appr oach as `` strange jurisprudence indeed , '' conflicting with employers ' legiti mate prerogatives . `` In the present case , for example , if ( it were discover ed ) that nurse Churchill had not been demeaning her superiors , but had been co mplaining about the perennial end-of-season slump of the Chicago Cubs , her dism issal , erroneous as it was , would have been perfectly OK , '' Scalia said . Th e court sent Churchill 's case back to a lower court , saying it should resolve whether she was fired because of her statements in the cafeteria or because of s omething else . It noted that Churchill alleged that management was hostile to h er because of earlier criticism . Fox Inc. 's new general entertainment cable network , fX , will be launched Wed nesday morning at 6:30 with the debut of `` Breakfast Time , '' which , a spokes woman said , will be 2 hours of `` very fast-paced entertainment . '' fX apparen tly is not going to be one of those Fox efforts aimed at the big city young . Sp okeswoman Ellen Cooper said Tuesday that `` fX is definitely seeking adult audie nces , '' the solid 18-to-49 demographic groups . WASHINGTON Rep. Sam Gibbons , D-Fla. , took command Tuesday of a House Ways and Means Committee shaken by the multi-count indictment of its longtime chairman , Rep. Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , and immediately ordered the staff to continue working on a health care bill that would expand Medicare to cover millions of un insured Americans . In a phone call from Normandy , where he is attending ceremo nies marking the 50th anniversary of D-Day , Gibbons told committee aides to pre pare a `` chairman 's mark '' or first draft using the subcommittee-approved Med icare expansion bill that so far has failed to win enough Democratic votes to cl ear the full committee . Rostenkowski , who was forced because of his indictment to step aside , also was using that measure as his starting point , but even Wh ite House officials had been uncertain whether Gibbons might have an alternative approach in mind . In the past , Gibbons has supported a single-payer Canadian style system that has been rejected by the administration . Under House Democrat ic caucus rules , the 74-year-old Tampa legislator , who parachuted into France on D-Day , becomes acting chairman of Ways and Means unless 50 Democrats file a petition challenging him . No sign of such a revolt appeared Tuesday and senior Democrats said they expected Gibbons to go unchallenged . Rostenkowski , who rej ected plea bargaining , will remain a member of the committee , but its members said they were uncertain how much influence he will retain . Some spoke of a vir tual division of labor between Gibbons and Rostenkowski while others predicted t he Floridian , who even before Rostenkowski 's indictment publicly expressed his eagerness to take over , will reject any notion of power-sharing . Senior White House aides said Tuesday night they had not talked to Gibbons and were uncertai n of his plans . But in the telephone interview Tuesday , Gibbons said his start ing point for committee deliberations when Congress returns next week will be th e bill drafted by Rep. Fortney `` Pete '' Stark , D-Fla. , and reported from Sta rk 's Ways and Means health subcommittee on a shaky 6-5 vote last month . Commit tee sources and White House aides said Rostenkowski had found himself at least o ne vote short of the necessary 20 votes to move some variant of the Stark bill t o the floor , because at least five of the 24 committee Democrats were refusing to support the big expansion in Medicare rolls . Gibbons said Tuesday that he fa vors requiring employers to help pay for their workers ' health insurance becaus e it would make the system `` fairer . '' These employer mandates have been one of the most controversial parts of President Clinton 's plan . Gibbons said he d id not know how much taxes he might have to raise and what kind of taxes to use because the committee is still waiting for financial projections from the Congre ssional Budget Office . Rostenkowski had said he was facing a $ 50 billion gap , but the White House has balked at imposing any broad taxes . Gibbons , rejectin g the administration argument that an employer mandate differs from a tax , said , `` Ultimately , all those costs come out of the cash pay of the employees . ' ' Gibbons said he does not think the federal government needs to mandate partici pation in alliances , the health care purchasing cooperatives that are central t o Clinton 's health plan . States should be allowed to decide the role of the al liances , as the subcommittee 's version of the bill proposes , he said . In the past , Gibbons has expressed strong skepticism about the cost-saving potential of managed competition , which seeks to control costs through competition among private insurers . The direct cost controls included in the subcommittee bill ma ke him more confident that managed competition would reduce spending on health c are , Gibbons said Tuesday . Gibbons said he favors including coverage of aborti ons `` in all cases '' in the standard package of health benefits that insurers would be required to provide . On that issue , he appears to have changed his th inking since an interview with The Washington Post last September , when he said , `` I do not want to pick up the abortion bills in health care . '' Unlike Ros tenkowski , Gibbons has not had a long or close relationship with Clinton . `` H e calls me Sam , but so do a lot of other people . He recognizes me and calls me Sam , '' Gibbons said last September . `` I don't have any qualms about me bein g able to lead , '' Gibbon said . `` I 've been a leader all my life in the Boy Scouts and ROTC and the army . And I 've been successfully elected for e had so many opponents I can't even name them all or count them all . '' Democrats and R epublicans on Ways and Means expressed confidence in Gibbons ' leadership while acknowledging that the loss of Rostenkowski 's chairmanship makes a difficult le gislative task even tougher . `` The hill got a lot steeper , '' said Rep. Mike Kopetski , D-Ore . In private comments , several Ways and Means Democrats said t hat Gibbons ' brusqueness , what one called his `` eruptions '' of anger , contr asted unfavorably with Rostenkowski 's discipline and doggedness . Some also sai d they had been offended by Gibbons ' blunt dismissal of Rostenkowski , with com ments like `` the graveyard is full of `` indispensable ' people . '' `` Directn ess is a part of my character , '' Gibbons said Tuesday . `` If it is abrasive t o anyone , I would certainly seriously consider modifying it . '' Rep. Mike Andr ews , D-Tex. , said , `` No personality is bigger than an issue , and this is th e largest issue most of us on the committee have ever faced . '' Rep. Barbara B . Kennelly , D-Conn. , said , `` After all these years , Mr. Gibbons is finally in the chairmanship , and he will want to demonstrate he can get a bill out . '' Like others , Kennelly said she was uncertain about the new relationship betwee n Rostenkowski and Gibbons in his new role as acting chairman . But she noted th at Rostenkowski was more sympathetic than Gibbons to the managed competition app roach suggested by Clinton , which relies in part on market forces to control co sts and aid health care consumers . CAIRO , Egypt A group of Saudi dissidents seeking to transform what they call a tyrannical Saudi government into a `` true '' Islamic state have set up shop in London , charging they were forced into exile by repression at home . The Commi ttee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights represents the first time in recent me mory that dissidents from within Saudi Arabia 's Sunni Muslim majority have star ted activities abroad . Although there is no evidence they have broad support wi thin the kingdom , their activities could prove embarrassing to the secretive Sa udi monarchy , which tries to keep its rifts behind closed doors and prides itse lf on religious orthodoxy and its role as custodian of Islam 's holiest shrines at Mecca and Medina . Only six months ago , King Fahd reached a deal with exiled leaders of the country 's 15 percent Shiite Muslim minority under which they ha lted anti-government activities from London and Washington in exchange for incre ased civil liberties at home and promises to address Shiite complaints of discri mination . Since opening its London office in April , the Sunni dissident group has kept up a steady stream of faxes to news agencies that have accused the gove rnment , among other things , of following `` confused and irrational '' foreign policies and of `` lavish spending .. . in support of oppression and tyranny . '' `` This is a fake Islamic government , '' said committee spokesman Muhammad M asaari , a former physics professor . The group was banned by Saudi authorities shortly after its establishment in Riyadh last year , and most observers say its chances of attracting wide support at home are blunted by the pervasiveness of the Saudi welfare state and a web of business partnerships that link the royal f amily to the country 's elite . `` I don't think this group has done enough conc eptual work to offer ideas and make themselves acceptable to outsiders , '' said a Saudi analyst . Although they are demanding more accountability from Saudi ru lers , `` their ideas on some social issues , such as women , are more orthodox Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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