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Ridge senate

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   http://www.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/03/25/ridge.congress/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/03/25/ridge.congress/index.html

Ridge makes offer to Congress, Senate aide says

WASHINGTON (CNN) --Homeland
Security Director Tom Ridge has offered to make an informal public
appearance before members of Congress within the next month to talk about
President Bush's counterterrorism budget, a spokesman for Sen. Robert Byrd
said Monday.

But Byrd spokesman Tom Gavin suggested the offer would not be enough to satisfy
lawmakers who have wanted Ridge to testify before congressional committees
about the administration's plans to spend $38 billion on homeland security programs.

The notice from Ridge was delivered by hand Monday to Byrd's office in the
Capitol, said Gavin. The West Virginia Democrat is the chairman of the Senate
Appropriations Committee.

Ridge has been in a dispute with members of both parties in Congress for more than
a month over Byrd's request that the homeland security director testify about the
money the president wants in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

Bush has said that Ridge is simply an adviser to the president and is not obliged to
testify before Congress because he was not confirmed by Congress. Ridge has
refused to testify on those same grounds.

"I don't think you can compromise the principle of separation of powers. I do think
that we should continue our discussions to determine whether or not there's a
forum that both Congress and the White House can agree is appropriate," Ridge said
Sunday on ABC's This Week. "I'm going to work real hard to see if I can find
something that's acceptable."

Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-South Dakota, supported Byrd and said
senators might consider issuing a subpoena to get Ridge to testify.

Daschle and other members of Congress have criticized the White House's position,
saying Ridge's sweeping homeland security portfolio makes him more like a
Cabinet-level administrator rather than merely an adviser to Bush.

Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, the committee's ranking Republican, also has urged
Ridge to testify, as have other Republicans.

Last Wednesday, Ridge showed up unannounced in Byrd's office and they talked
for about 15 minutes but reached no resolution.

On March 15, Byrd and Stevens wrote a letter to Bush asking to discuss the issue
with the president, but have received no response, Gavin said Monday.

"Senator Byrd remains hopeful the president will respond favorably and directly to
our letter," he said.

On Sunday, Ridge said that while he coordinates homeland security efforts among
various federal agencies, the $38 billion budget proposal would go to the Justice
Department, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, among others. The heads of those agencies can
be called to testify.

"I do not have control of those dollars. I will not oversee the expenditure of those
dollars," he said.

The fight over Ridge's testimony is the latest round in a long-running debate over
how to organize the homeland security office, which was created by Bush in the
aftermath of September 11. Ridge, then governor of Pennsylvania, was appointed
by Bush to head the new office.

Bush has resisted calls to make the homeland security office a separate Cabinet-level
department, with its own budget and a director confirmed by the Senate. Instead, he
made the office part of the White House staff by executive order.




Congress whitehouse { March 14 2002 }
Ridge congress ap { March 26 2002 }
Ridge senate

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