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Longing for the Land of Beer and Chocolate

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By Al Kamen
Friday, January 11, 2008

One of President Bush's most high-profile recess appointees, Ambassador to the European Union C. Boyden Gray-- is back in Washington and, for the moment, out of a job.

Gray was given a recess appointment to the Brussels job two years ago after then-minority Senate Democrats blocked his confirmation. Gray, White House counsel under Bush I, had infuriated Democrats by leading a campaign for confirmation of several conservative Bush judicial nominations.

That appointment expired last week, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has effectively eliminated the presidential power to make recess appointments.

But Gray still may be returning to Brussels.

There is buzz that the White House wants to name Gray as Bush's "special envoy" to the European Union, a position that doesn't require Senate confirmation and apparently would not give him supervisory authority over mission officials.

Wait a minute. Didn't Bush's first National Security Presidential Directive (NSPD1) abolish all these special envoys? That may mean Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has to give special permission for Gray's new appointment.

Gray probably is allowed to have an office at the mission -- hey, the ambassador's office is empty! -- but it's unclear whether he'll live in the ambassador's residence. A section in the State Department's manual appears to say he can't. (Of course Gray, heir to a tobacco fortune, can afford to rent a decent condo, or a palace, for the next year.) Reid, through a spokesman, said yesterday that he "strongly opposes giving Gray all the perks of a position he no longer holds, that such a move would violate the spirit of" a recent Senate-White House agreement on recess appointments and that it "may have reverberations in terms of the White House's ability to actually confirm ambassadors." As the election nears, of course, that ability is minimal at best.

There remains the question of why Gray, a high-powered Washington lawyer and policy wonk, wants to go back to the oft-somnolent E.U. job. Maybe he likes Brussels? Maybe it's near Paris?

Ship Guaranteed to List to Starboard

Pollsters and pundits, embarrassed though they may be this week, insist that Democrats are much more energized than Republicans about their presidential prospects next November. The war's a drag. The economy looks increasingly shaky, etc.

There's a ready pick-me-up for the downcast. Yes, it's the Weekly Standard's annual week-long cruise, this year heading March 24 from Florida to St. Thomas and back. The voyage is billed as "a week's worth of the best conversation about the 2008 elections anywhere (land or sea)."

The magazine's usual suspects -- publisher Terry Eastland, editor and new New York Times columnist William Kristol, executive editor Fred Barnes-- will join some 200 well-heeled conservatives on the party-till-you-drop jaunt.

But the real draws for political junkies will be folks such as GOP political consultant Mike Murphy-- neutral now because he's tight with both John McCain and Mitt Romney. (Didn't we see him in New Hampshire the other day hanging with McCain?) Make sure you have a few with Murphy.


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