|
Profiles
Rep.
Henry Waxman Takes to His New Role as Gadfly
The Los Angeles congressman says he´s simply keeping tabs on the White House
August 17, 2001
The Los Angeles Times
By Mark Z. Barabak
When Republicans laid siege to the Clinton administration, piling
one investigation atop another, few defenders of the president were as staunch
as Rep. Henry A. Waxman. He decried the pursuit as blind partisanship, a way for
the GOP "to get even for Watergate."
But now that the proverbial shoe has switched feet, the Democrat
from the west side of Los Angeles has assumed a new role, rather like that of
his old nemeses. On issues from ethics to the environment, Waxman has emerged
as one of the leading antagonists of President Bush and his underlings.
It is not all that different, Waxman says, from the oversight
he performed back when he took on the tobacco industry or tangled with Detroit
auto makers over air pollution. And he insists it is not payback for the torment
the GOP inflicted on Bush's predecessor. "I don't see it as partisan to try
to find out how any administration makes certain decisions or whether they exercise
their power in a certain manner," Waxman said this week as he plied the Santa
Monica Freeway, leaving a CNN interview for a rendezvous with three grandchildren.
"The Congress is supposed to have the ability to know what the executive
branch is doing."
From his perch on the House Government Reform Committee, Waxman
has urged the Justice Department to investigate Karl Rove, the chief White House
political strategist, for alleged conflicts of interest over his stock holdings;
picked a fight with the administration over the secret drafting of its national
energy plan; and most recently battled NBC over the network's conduct on election
night.
(Waxman suggests that Jack Welchchairman of NBC's parent company,
General Electric, and a GOP booster may have intervened in the network's decision
to prematurely call the race for Bush. NBC President Andrew Lack called the allegation
"untrue and rather foolish.")
Waxman Playing Role of 'Partisan Warrior'
From the White House perspective, it is all part of the Beltway
ratatat that started well before Bush arrived from Texas.
"We understand there is a long history," said Dan
Bartlett, a White House spokesman, who described Waxman as playing the role of
"partisan warrior, as opposed to conducting the genuine investigative business
of the Congress."
Of course, Democrats applied that description to Rep. Dan Burton,
the Inspector Javertlike Indiana Republican who tortured the Clinton administration
with serial subpoenas. Waxman, however, recoils from any comparison.
For one thing, he pointed out, as a member of the House minority,
he lacks the subpoena power that Burton has enjoyed as chairman of the Government
Reform Committee. Moreover, Waxman asserted, "we haven't made any accusations.
. . . We've simply sent routine requests for information."
There is no personal pleasure, he insisted, in watching the
Bush administration under the same congressional white glare that shined on President
Clinton. But there are partisan points to be gained, which Waxman no doubt knows.
He is, after all, the lawmaker who summoned the heads of the
nation's tobacco companies before Congress, where they swore an oath and posed
like the world's most wellheeled police lineup.
Waxman, 61, represents a reliably solid Democratic district.
The map reads like a roll call of affluence and liberal chic: Beverly Hills, Westwood,
Bel Air, Santa Monica. The last tough election he faced was more than 30 years
ago, when he ran as a 29 year old upstart for a seat in the state Assembly.
As Schoolboy, Wore Adlai Stevenson Button
Waxman, the grandson of Russian immigrants who fled czarist
persecution at the turn of the century, grew up over his family's grocery store
near Watts. His parents were loyal Democrats, his mother sending Waxman to school
wearing an Adlai Stevenson button, which teachers made him remove.
After six years in the Assembly, Waxman was elected to Congress
in 1974, part of the huge postWatergate class of reformminded Democrats. The irony
is that for years Waxman and his old UCLA classmate, fellow Rep. Howard L. Berman
(D-Mission Hills), ran the California equivalent of a political machine, marshaling
vast sums to elect a cadre of likeminded Democrats, among them then Assemblyman
Gray Davis.
Once in Congress, Waxman used his fundraising skills and political
savvy to bypass the seniority system and become, in just his third term, chairman
of a major health care and environmental subcommittee. At the time, critics said
he bought the job through generous campaign contributions to his fellow Democrats.
But today, even foes acknowledge Waxman's legislative cunning
and mastery of the congressional process. His accomplishments, good or bad, depending
on how one views the notion of a large, activist federal governmentare undeniable.
During two decades in the Democratic majority in Congress, he
helped expand Medicaid coverage for the poor and elderly, pushed for tougher clean
air and water standards, more federal funding to fight AIDS, stiffer pesticide
controls and tougher nursing home regulations. Many of his achievements came during
the conservative eras of presidents Reagan and the elder Bush, and sometimes over
strong opposition even within his own party.
Waxman's tenacity is the stuff of Capitol Hill legend. Once
he blocked efforts to weaken clean air legislation by offering 600 amendments,
which he wheeled in via shopping cart.
"He made his name as a substantive legislator," said
professor Barbara Sinclair, a UCLA expert on Congress. "He masters a subject
and has been very skilled at putting together a lot of different deals, often
under very difficult circumstances."
With the GOP's 1994 takeover of Congress, Waxman was shorn of
his subcommittee chairmanship and the attendant power to call hearings, summon
witnesses and set the legislative agenda. On the Government Reform Committee,
he serves as the senior Democrat. The oversight panel reviews programs throughout
the federal government.
With a Republican in the White House, it is the difference between
playing defense and offense (a sports analogy one probably wouldn't hear from
Waxman, who is known to have few hobbies or interests outside of work).
"Rather than legislate, he is inquiring," said Rep.
Sam Farr, a Carmel Democrat and compatriot since their days in the state Legislature.
"Because that's all we can do."
And so the demands spring forth: to NBC, to cough up any videotapes
showing the newsroom on election night; to Rove, to spell out his financial interests;
to the White House, to detail the closeddoor deliberations that shaped Bush's
energy policy.
Does that make the 5 foot 5 Waxman a conscientious watchdog
or a vengeful partisan?
"Part of the job of Congress is to keep an eye on the administration,"
said UCLA's Sinclair. "On the other hand, finding that fine line is not easy.
Where the administration is going to see it and where the other party is going
to see it is obviously going to be quite different."
|