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"Bush taps Friedman" (he better use some lube)

UberDave

Platinum Member
😀 Sorry I had to post it.


Ex-Goldman co-chairman to be named chief economic adviser later Thursday, officials say.




WASHINGTON (CNN) - Wall Street veteran Stephen Friedman is President Bush's choice to replace Larry Lindsey as the administration's top economic adviser on the White House staff and an announcement is planned Thursday afternoon, senior administration officials told CNN.

Some conservatives tried to derail the nomination, but Friedman has been offered the job as chief of the National Economic Council, these officials say.


Stephen Friedman
Friedman is a former top Goldman Sachs (GS: Research, Estimates) co-chairman who is close to former Clinton administration Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin. He also is active in the Concord Coalition, a public policy group that focuses on spending restraints and balanced budgets.

Some so-called "pro-growth" conservatives have suggested Friedman might not be as enthusiastic about the administration's goals of more tax cuts, and activists such as Steve Moore of the Washington group called Club for Growth have publicly campaigned against giving Friedman the White House job.

"Steve Moore is about to have a bad day," one senior White House official told CNN Thursday. Another official said Bush would make the announcement Thursday afternoon at the White House after returning from an event in Philadelphia.

Bush settled on Friedman more than a week ago but a formal announcement was delayed while White House lawyers reviewed Friedman's complicated financial portfolio. Sources also said Friedman consulted doctors to make certain a long-standing heart condition would not be adversely affected by serving on the senior White House staff.

The appointment would round out a reshuffling of the Bush economic team. In the past week, the president has announced his intention to nominate CSX Corp. CEO John Snow to replace Paul O'Neill as treasury secretary and veteran Wall Street hand William Donaldson to replace Harvey Pitt as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The job Friedman is in line to take is analogous to that of the national security adviser or the homeland security adviser -- serving as the coordinating point for information from a variety of government agencies and the sounding board for the president and other senior White House officials trying to sift through any conflicting information or advice.

White House officials reject the notion that Friedman has any major differences with the president on economic policy. They also portray him as someone with stature and credibility on Wall Street, something officials concede the administration was perceived to be lacking with O'Neill and Lindsey in top positions.

Democrats have seized on the shakeup as evidence, to them, that the Bush economic policy is a failure.

In a letter to the president Thursday, Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle said, "merely replacing Secretary O'Neill and Lindsey is not a solution. With our economy stalling, unemployment rising and confidence suffering, it is clear that we need more than new faces. We need a new plan to stimulate our economy now."

Daschle's letter said Democrats wanted any new economic stimulus package to "focus on middle class families rather than the wealthy," include tax incentives that encourage immediate investment in new equipment and production, and not significantly grow the federal budget deficit.

The administration is putting the finishing touches on a stimulus plan of its own. Items said to be included are an acceleration of some of the rate cuts included in the 10-year Bush tax cut enacted last year, and new provisions to encourage business investment.
 
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