Dodd Considers Panel Openings
Roll Call Staff
Following a disappointing 2008 presidential run that left him with diminished stature in the Senate Democratic Conference, Sen. Chris Dodd (Conn.) is likely to find himself in the enviable position of having his choice of powerful committee chairmanships under a newly emboldened and enlarged majority.
Dodd has long harbored ambitions for the White House and for becoming the next Majority Leader, but those dreams may have faded. Dodd failed to register even 1 percent in the Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses in January, and his decision to seek the presidency in the first place soured some Democratic colleagues who felt he abandoned his Senate duties for more than a year.
But the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs chairmans stock is poised to shoot up after Nov. 4 if Sens. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Joseph Biden (D-Del.) become president and vice president, respectively. A Democratic White House victory would create a vacancy for the chairmanship of the Foreign Relations Committee, which Dodd is in line to take over if he so chooses.
Hes in a pleasant position, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) said. Hes got a lot of good choices.
Schumer said hed like Dodd to remain at the helm of Banking but noted hed be a good fit for Foreign Relations if that gavel becomes available. I think hed be great at either one, Schumer said.
Dodd also is the second-ranking Democrat on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, chaired by Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.). Kennedy has been stricken with a brain tumor, yet he returned to Washington this week to resume work.
Democratic aides said Dodds choices are not clear-cut, as the Banking and Foreign Relations committees in a new Democratic administration would oversee significant new policy initiatives. Although the HELP chairmanship is not available, Democratic aides said Kennedys health could force him to give up the committee before the end of the 111th Congress, potentially putting Dodd in a position to switch gavels midsession.
Dodd spokeswoman Kate Szostak was vague about the chairmans plans, but she emphasized Dodds work on the Banking panel.
Senator Dodd is focused on a substantial agenda in each of his committees, both for the remainder of this Congress and next year, Szostak said. As Chairman of the Banking Committee, he will be conducting vigilant oversight of the Treasury Departments implementation of the recently enacted financial rescue law, as well as examining additional steps to strengthen the U.S. economy.
Dodd told Roll Call a month ago that he would likely remain atop Banking to deal with the sagging economy and an overhaul of banking regulations that both parties have put a high priority on since the financial services industry began to melt down earlier this fall. Yet he has long eyed the Foreign Relations gavel, and he considers authoring the Family and Medical Leave Act as a HELP member one of his highest legislative achievements.
On Banking, Dodd has an opportunity with the fiscal crisis to really make his mark as chairman, one Senate Democratic aide said. However, in the negotiations on the bailout, he wasnt really the one who distinguished himself, it was House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.). The question is whether Dodd still sees [Banking] as a legacy builder.
Plus, Dodd provoked many Senate Democrats in 2007 when he relentlessly pursued his long-shot presidential bid as the housing markets slumped. He further aggravated his colleagues by negotiating a housing bill this past summer that many Democrats felt gave in to too many GOP demands. He negotiated that deal amid a distracting ethics scandal over whether he received preferential treatment on his mortgage from a key lender in the subprime mortgage crisis, Countrywide Financial.
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