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- <text id=93TT2051>
- <title>
- Aug. 02, 1993: The Trouble With Rosty
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 02, 1993 Big Shots:America's Kids and Their Guns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CONGRESS, Page 28
- The Trouble With Rosty
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>His involvement in the post-office scandal could disrupt Clinton's
- legislative ambitions
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by Margaret Carlson, Michael Duffy and Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Molecules still shift whenever Dan Rostenkowski walks into
- a room. Everyone looks up and shrinks a little to make space
- for one of the most powerful lawmakers in Congress. But while
- the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee should be
- in his glory as he oversees the passage of President Clinton's
- tax bill, he is stuck beneath the darkest cloud of his career.
- The prospect that Rostenkowski may soon be indicted and stripped
- of his chairmanship has placed his ability to help Clinton in
- serious doubt. And the potential loss of Rostenkowski's deft
- political skills makes some Democrats fear that the rest of
- the President's legislative agenda could be in trouble. "We're
- worried about what happens down the road with health care, the
- North American Free Trade Agreement and all the other things
- we have to get through Ways and Means," a senior Administration
- official concedes.
- </p>
- <p> The threat of prosecution grew more ominous for Rostenkowski
- last week, when a former House postmaster Robert Rota pleaded
- guilty to embezzlement and indicated that the 18-term Chicago
- Democrat had been involved. Rota said he had helped lawmakers
- illegally swap stamp vouchers for cash for nearly 20 years.
- While he named the most prominent offenders only as Congressman
- A and Congressman B, sources close to the prosecution identified
- Congressman A as Rostenkowski and Congressman B as former Pennsylvania
- Representative Joe Kolter, who was defeated last year. Rota
- indicated that Rostenkowski had used vouchers to embezzle $21,300
- over a six-year period, but it remained unclear whether the
- money was used for office or personal use. Separately, federal
- investigators are still probing charges that Rostenkowski converted
- hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign funds to his personal
- use, partly by cashing the checks at the post-office window.
- Asserted Rostenkowski at a Saturday press conference: "I have
- engaged in no illegal or unethical conduct. I'm frustrated and
- angry at these allegations."
- </p>
- <p> The disclosures rattled Rostenkowski's colleagues and constituents.
- While the Ways and Means chairman often comes off as gruff and
- arrogant on camera, he is a Washington institution. "By golly,
- I've known the guy for more than 25 years," said House minority
- leader Robert Michel. "I can't believe he'd do any such thing--it's just not like our Danny."
- </p>
- <p> The lengthy probe has dampened Rostenkowski's spirits and raised
- the possibility that even if he is cleared, the 65-year-old
- Congressman will quit next year. "This has all been very difficult
- for him and his family," says Raymond McGrath, a close friend
- and former Congressman."They've subpoenaed his daughters, many
- of his friends and his secretaries in Chicago." When people
- ask Rostenkowski how he's doing these days, he's likely to shoot
- back, "How the hell do you think I'm doing?"
- </p>
- <p> The disclosures last week set up a race between a possible indictment
- of Rostenkowski and completion of the budget bill now before
- a 14-member House-Senate conference subcommittee. Sources close
- to the U.S. Attorney's office said an indictment could come
- in late August, after Congress adjourns for its summer recess.
- </p>
- <p> The widening scandal only seemed to strengthen Rostenkowski's
- resolve to help push through the budget measure. "He will be
- around to finish up his chores," says Bill Frenzel, a former
- Republican member of the Ways and Means Committee who is now
- with the Brookings Institution. "He sees this conference as
- one of the most important jobs of his life, and that's the way
- he'll handle it."
- </p>
- <p> That could help explain why the conferees seemed to be moving
- more swiftly toward a deal last week than the White House had
- anticipated. Braced by a speech in which Clinton declared, "We
- were elected to end gridlock," the lawmakers agreed to raise
- the tax rate on corporations from 34% to 35% and to put the
- lion's share of new personal taxes on households making more
- than $140,000 a year. But many issues remain unresolved. Among
- them: decisions on how much to boost the gasoline tax and how
- much to cut Medicare and other entitlement programs.
- </p>
- <p> The real test for Clinton's legislative agenda will come if
- Rostenkowski is indicted and steps down. His chairmanship would
- then go to Sam Gibbons, a 73-year-old Florida Democrat who is
- lightly regarded by other members of the pivotal and fractious
- committee. If Gibbons does become chairman, true leadership
- of the committee could quietly pass to House majority leader
- Dick Gephardt and Speaker Tom Foley, who would work behind the
- scenes to crack heads and push the Clinton agenda. But neither
- Foley nor Gephardt nor Gibbons could be nearly as influential
- with Ways and Means members as the burly, steak-chomping chairman
- who has ruled the committee for 13 years.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-