Sunday, September 7, 2008

Politics

USN Current Issue

Washington Whispers

By Paul Bedard
Posted 10/22/06

No Pigeonholing Treasury's Paulson

Calling President Bush's third and best treasury secretary, Hank Paulson, a different kind of bird than Washington is used to doesn't ruffle the feathers of the former Goldman Sachs chairman. How could it? A nature buff who got his start in birding at 26 by banding falcons on Maryland's Assateague Island and rising to become chairman of the Peregrine Fund and the Nature Conservancy, Paulson proves that you can be a high-powered administration bigwig and have a life. "This is not," says a pal, "your traditional Republican treasury secretary."

Just consider how he's decorated his Treasury office. Besides the standard sheets of dollar bills, he's hung eye-catching nature shots taken by his wife, Wendy. Arriving at 7:45 a.m. after a quick haircut, Paulson gives us a tour, starting at a wall of 12 colorful shots of flowers. Over at his desk, among three computer screens flickering with market news, he flips through a nature photo calendar made by his wife. Off to the corner is a photo of Paulson holding a trout and another of him hoisting a thick, 40-pound bluefish. Clearly, this is a man who knows his place: in front of, and not manning, the camera. Says a longtime aide, Paulson is more of a binoculars guy than the maker of Kodak moments. And he admits it. "Wendy is a committed naturalist and a talented photographer," he says. "I like showing her pictures to others."

Chatty Abramoff Gets an FBI Desk

Jack Abramoff, the lobbying scandal figure, has become such a chatty rat that probe insiders say he's been given a desk to work at in the FBI. We're told he spends up to four hours a day detailing his shady business to agents eager to nail more congressmen in the scandal. And when cooperative witnesses spend that much time inside, they get a desk. As a result of his help in the ever expanding investigation, we hear that the Feds hope to keep him in a nearby prison after he's sentenced on his conspiracy admission.

This Spectator Is Wild About GW

As publisher of the Wine Spectator, Marvin Shanken, we have to believe, has a very refined palette. So why would he fork out $100,000 for two bottles of very young rye whiskey? Because they were bottles No. 1 and No. 2 from the George Washington Distillery at Mount Vernon, a remake of GW's original still house. "It was really about what the money was for," says Shanken, whose first trip ever to Mount Vernon on the Potomac River was for last month's booze auction for Mount Vernon's educational initiative. He donated No. 1 to the distillery and is keeping No. 2 for display in his New York office. Will he crack the seal? "I don't really have any plan to drink it," he says, pausing, "but you never know."

Come On, Bush, It's All or Nothing Now

Congressional Republican leaders are urging President Bush to join in their pre-election bashing of Democratic leaders, but so far he's shied away. Pollster John Zogby says Bush should listen to his team because warning voters about the changes a Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid or House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would institute could save the GOP. "That could be a winning strategy," he says. But since only Bush has a national megaphone, "it's really going to have to be the president" who yells at the Democrats, says Zogby.

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Washington Whispers

Since 1933, Washington Whispers has been a lighthearted look at the scene inside Washington. Paul Bedard updates the Whispers blog throughout the week.

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