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THE MAN CLINTON COULD HAVE BEEN | PAGE 1, 2
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Despite the Democrats' sufficient numbers to block impeachment, nobody is predicting what will happen in the Senate, a notoriously unpredictable body. Some Republicans are resisting Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott's attempts to quickly conclude the process, but Daschle is a counterforce Lott must reckon with. And by some accounts on Tuesday, he was close to hammering out a compromise with Lott for a quick up-and-down vote that could avert a trial.

Nobody's putting money on that outcome, but nobody who has worked with Daschle would be surprised. He's been pulling rabbits out of hats for years. And leaving even his enemies respectful.

In the 1970s, for example, Daschle took on the entire corporate and government health establishment over Agent Orange, the Vietnam defoliant that was making veterans sick. Both the Veterans Administration and Rep. Sonny Montgomery, D-Miss., chairman of the House Veterans Committee, denied any connection between the chemicals and the illness. Daschle came up with a solution that had the National Academy of Sciences study the evidence and the V.A. accept its findings -- whatever they turned out to be. The NAS study, as Daschle anticipated, linked Agent Orange to various cancers and the V.A. was forced to start treating veterans.

"He was the guy who was responsible for the Agent Orange issue finally gaining credibility," said Mike Leavick, then legislative director for the Vietnam Veterans of America Inc. "If it wasn't for him, it never would've happened. He's the guy."

With his easy smile and low-key manner, Daschle was considered too soft to negotiate with the swaggering Republicans when he ran for the Senate leadership post in 1994.

One of his foremost critics was Sen. Robert Byrd, the silver-maned West Virginian and leader of the Democrats in the 1970s and early '80s. But he came around after he saw Daschle in action.

"I did not support Tom Daschle in 1994, in the main, because I did not think he was tough enough to deal with the likes of Bob Dole," he told a gathering of Democrats last year. "I am here today to tell you that I was totally wrong about this young man. He has steel in his spine, despite his reasonable and modest demeanor."

Many Senate Republicans had already learned that. In 1997 Republican Sen. John Warner of Virginia had the Senate Rules Committee expand an already discredited investigation into alleged voting irregularities in the Louisiana election that sent Democrat Mary Landrieu to Washington.

"I think everyone in this town knows what's going on," Daschle told reporters, suggesting Warner was playing to extreme Republicans. "John Warner wants to be the next chairman of the Armed Services Committee ... I think the Republicans are trying to steal this election." With Warner's toga effectively ripped off in the eyes of the press, the investigation never gained traction.

Unlike Clinton, who so often sets traps for his enemies but won't confront them outright, Daschle is not afraid to stand up and draw a line in the sand. When the Republicans moved to scuttle the Democrats' hike in the minimum wage, Daschle threatened a filibuster: "We are simply going to shut this place down." When Dole complained, Daschle merely said, "Welcome to the Senate, Sen. Dole."

The differences in style were never so apparent as when the impeachment trial began to loom in the Senate. Desperate Clinton attorneys, no doubt encouraged by lawyer Clinton, floated an idea of challenging the constitutionality of the House vote.

Senate Democrats (read: Daschle) gave the idea a cold shoulder. Their message: It's time to stand up and fight in the open -- on the issues.

No doubt Tom Daschle flashed his hole cards to Trent Lott when they began bargaining over the shape of the Senate proceedings last week.

Hole card No. 1: 45 Democrats, enough to block a guilty verdict. Hole card No. 2: Public disdain for a long trial.

But Lott has a few cards, too: a guess that a fickle public might turn on Clinton if any one of a number of rumored bombshells concerning the president's love life explode this week. Or that the public might be tiring of the drama and demand Clinton quit just to get it over with.

"This place is just one big finger to the wind," Jim Abourezk thundered on the Senate floor years ago during a debate on oil monopolies.

Indeed. The wind is blowing hard in Washington this week, and the man shielding President Clinton is the man he could have been.
SALON | Jan. 6, 1999

Jeff Stein is a Salon correspondent in Washington.

 

 

 

 

 

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