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January 31, 2007

Editors take note

   Pat Roberts in the Senate cloakroom a few minutes ago as he was about to vote on a bill to raise the minimum wage:

    Star Reporter: "How do you plan to vote on the minimum wage senator?"

    Roberts: "I think you need it."

Posted by David Goldstein   

January 29, 2007

Roberts announces campaign co-chairs

   Two-term Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts spent the Kansas Day weekend sending a message loud and clear:

   He's running for a third term in 2008.

   To that end, he released a list of campaign co-chairs. The lineup:

  • Gene Bicknell of Pittsburg.
  • John Bush of Lawrence.
  • Phil Howe of Manhattan.
  • Stu Lang of Overland Park.
  • Brenda McCants of Goodland.
  • Fred Merrill of Mission Hills.
  • Bob Regnier of Leawood.
  • Dave Rebein of Dodge City.
  • Karen Seaberg of Atchison.
  • Don Slawson of Wichita.
  • Michelle Voth of Topeka.
  • Charles Walker of Salina.
  • Nestor Weigand of Wichita.

Posted by Steve Kraske

January 23, 2007

Perserverance pays off

    Sen. Pat Roberts won a victory today in a fight that goes back to his first Senate campaign in 1996. He thought child care ought to be more affordable. One of the first bills he introduced in 1997 was a program to keep workers from having to quit their jobs because they had no place to put their children.

    But the idea has languished ever since - until today when the Kansas Republican's measure became an amendment to the Democrats' minimum wage bill. The Senate added Roberts' measure by unanimous consent. Leading Democratic child care advocates Sens. Ted Kennedy and Chris Dodd spoke in support of it.

    Roberts wants to create a five-year, $50 million short-term grant program to encourage small businesses to either work together or with local child care agencies to offer child care services for employees. Businesses could receive grants worth up to $500,000 for start-up costs and other activities. In return, they would have to match any federal funds.    

    The minimum wage bill, a Democratic priority, is expected to pass, so Roberts' idea seems like a lock. Did he find it curious that his bill never saw the light of day while his party was in power, but the Democrats have wielded the Senate gavel for less than a month and it's headed for approval?

    "There's a lesson there and I'm not sure what it is," Roberts said. "It does show you that if you work in a bipartisan fashion you can get things done. This is a much preferred way of doing legislation as far as I'm concerned."

Posted by David Goldstein    

December 13, 2006

Bond slated to become vice chair of Intel

   AP is reporting that Missouri Sen. Kit Bond will become vice chair of the Intelligence Committee, replacing Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts.

Posted by Keith Chrostowski

It's official: Pat Roberts leaves the Intel panel

   Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts, who chaired the Senate Intelligence Committee since 2002, will no longer serve on the panel, his office announced today.

   Of course, readers of the KC Buzz Blog - and its dead-tree affiliate - knew that two weeks ago.

   Roberts is also term-limited off the Armed Services Committee. He'll join the prestigious Finance Committee, on which only one seat was available. The committee has authority over tax, trade and entitlements like Social Security and Medicare.

   “It has been my honor to work for the nation on efforts to improve our intelligence gathering capabilities, better enabling us to prevent terrorism at home and abroad,” Roberts said in a press release. “But with the opportunity to bring a Kansas voice to the Finance Committee, I believe the time is right to make this move...to work on the issues that are important to the daily lives and pocketbooks of all Kansans.”

   Roberts also will serve on the Agriculture; Ethics; and Health, Education, Labor and Pension (known as HELP) committees.

  We're awaiting word on who will be his replacement on Intel.

Posted by Matt Stearns

December 05, 2006

Notes from a confirmation hearing: Claire and Pat

   Who was that woman in red sitting in the spectator section during the comfirmation hearing of Robert Gates as defense secretary?

   Missouri's own Democratic senator-elect, Claire McCaskill.

   McCaskill, who will join the Armed Services Committee next month, said she thought it was important to listen to what Gates had to say: "I hope I don't ever have to remind him any of his answers, but I wanted to be in a position to."

   And what did she think of those answers? "I was very pleased that he did talk about change at the very opening of his remarks, that he repeatedly said all options are on the table."

   Among McCaskill's future colleagues on the committee will be Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas. Roberts asked pointed questions about the potential of a regional war in the Middle East if the U.S. withdraws from Iraq and urged help from the Pentagon for National Guard units dealing with major equipment maintenance problems upon their return from Iraq: "We're in a world of hurt."

   He also brought up a matter dear to Kansans when he suggested to Gates, now the president of Texas A&M University, that "Texas A&M go a little easy on Kansas and K-State."

Posted by Matt Stearns

November 29, 2006

Roberts off Intell?

Roberts_1     Well-informed scuttlebutt on Capitol Hill has it that Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts may be looking for an exit from the Senate Intelligence Committee, which he has chaired since 2002 and which Democrat West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller will chair in the 110th Congress.

    Those in the know say this editorial from the Lawrence Journal-World is worth a close read on Roberts' intentions, especially the "he has told some" sentence.

   With the soon-to-be-minority Senate GOP determining committee assignments for the next Congress right now, things could shake out as early as next week.

   Roberts has drawn partisan barbs for years for his stewardship of the committee. Critics say he did all he could to protect the Bush Administration from oversight; Rockefeller once memorably accused him of taking "all his talking points from the White House."

   But Roberts points to his committee's investigations - some completed, some ongoing - of the uses of pre-war intelligence as evidence of his commitment to effective oversight.

   The Roberts move also means Missouri Sen. Kit Bond could become the committee's top Republican, depending on where and how various chips fall.

Stay tuned...

Posted by Matt Stearns

October 09, 2006

More talk on North Korea

  Sen. Pat Roberts: "It is clear the North Korean government continues to pursue its provocative and defiant policies. The international community must quickly and firmly respond to this action."

    Sen. Jim Talent:  "I fully support U.S. and Japanese diplomatic efforts through the United Nations Security Council to impose economic and commercial sanctions that would persuade North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons program."

Posted by David Goldstein

September 25, 2006

Pat Roberts: Declassify it. Don't criticize it.

   Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts, the Kansas Republican, weighed in on the controversy over the latest National Intelligence Estimate.

    The New York Times reported Sunday that the NIE said the Iraq war had helped fuel Islamic radicalism and jihad. The White House said the report was an incomplete assessment of the NIE.

  Folks from left and right have subsequently called for the report to be declassified so it can be read and analyzed in its entirety.

  Roberts agreed: "The administration should declassify this document so the American people can see the material for themselves and come to their own conclusions."

   Roberts said his committee has had the NIE since April and said "There is a false impression that the NIE focuses solely on Iraq and terrorism. That is not true. The NIE examines global terrorism in its totality. In this regard , I also agree with (National Intelligence) Director (John) Negroponte that we have had notable successes against the terrorists but that there is much that remains to be done."

Posted by Matt Stearns

September 05, 2006

Pat Roberts: Still Funny

   Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts was named "Funniest Senator" by Washingtonian Magazine in its latest annual poll of Capitol Hill staffers.

   Roberts has won the title four years in a row. In fact, Roberts isn't even satisfied with that award anymore: "I was lobbying for the 'hottie of the year' vote but I can't even get to lukewarm."

   See? Funny.

   Coming in second: South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham.

   For the record, the "hottest" male senators were: John Thune of South Dakota, Barack Obama of Illinois and Evan Bayh of Indiana.

   Just keep perfecting those punchlines, Pat. A lot of folks think funny is sexy!

Posted by Matt Stearns

August 17, 2006

Roberts does some plumbing

  Sen. Pat Roberts has been on a tear over intelligence leaks in the press for months. The Kansas Republican and chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee believes they make the country "less safe."

    He continued his campaign Wednesday. The Hutchinson News reported that he told a home state crowd that "there's nothing classified in D.C. today" and that "80 percent" of the stories exposing certain controversial programs are filled with errors.

   Then there was his coup de grace: "If we had the same kind of mood in our country and the same kind of press coverage, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower probably would have been court-martialed for all the casualties on D-Day."

Posted by David Goldstein

August 10, 2006

Roberts on the terrorist plot

    Senate Intel Chairman Pat Roberts said this morning that he had a heads-up earlier this week about the joint U.S-U.K move to break up today's alleged terrorist plot to blow up several airliners.

    "This is the kind of success that our intelligence and law enforcement personnel work hard to achieve...despite damaging leaks and unjustified criticism of the methods they use to detect and prevent terrorists attacks," the Kansas Republican said in a statement.

Posted by David Goldstein

August 07, 2006

Home, home on the Web

   U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas has a spankin' new web site at http://roberts.senate.gov.

    Its elegant design is a vast improvement over Roberts' old site. Highlights of the new one include useful links to sites of national and regional interest, plus "Roberts' Journal," where the contemplative Kansan, a former newspaperman, ruminates on issues of the day and life in the Senate. The site also includes standard-fare Senate web site stuff, like press releases, gauzy photos of the Senator looking Senatorial, and audio and video clips.

   Also: A series of wonderfully iconic photos of Kansas dot the site, featuring wheat fields, sunflowers, and farm scenes.

   Plus, in the "Famous Kansans" section, we learn that Dennis Hopper, famed Hollywood crazy man, and Roberts are both from Dodge City. And THEY'RE THE SAME AGE!

   We're awaiting word from Roberts' people on whether Dennis and Pat were boyhood chums.

Posted by Matt Stearns

June 29, 2006

More Gitmo reaction

   "If the president had come to Congress with a reasonable proposal, I think he would have found that Congress was willing to work with him to craft a statute that would allow detainees to be tried in accordance with the Constitution and the Geneva Conventions. I hope he will do that now." - Democratic Rep. Dennis Moore of Kansas

  "I am surprised and disappointed by the court's decision...In times of war - such as today - the Constitution grants significant authority to the commander-in-chief. Our Founding Fathers envisioned that judges would give the commander-in-chief's wartime decisions great deference." -  Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas

Posted by David Goldstein

June 27, 2006

"Listen / Do you want to know a secret / Do you promise not to tell / woooo"

Beatles   Sen. Pat Roberts has written the Intelligence czar -- John Negroponte --  calling for prosecution of government officials who leaked the story of the CIA program that keeps an eye on financial transactions that might involve terrorists or their networks.

   Several newspapers broke the story within the last week.

  As Pat has done before, he also took a shot at reporters.

  "..The New York Times has the right to print what it sees fit to print.  But, just because you can, doesn't mean you should," Roberts said in a release.

   Here's the full statement.

Posted by Dave Helling

June 07, 2006

Pat and Hill: Singin' the Bird Flu Blues

   Must-see TV hits C-SPAN 2 Thursday morning. That's when Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts and New York Sen. Hillary Clinton are scheduled to "colloquy" on the Senate floor. The subject: Avian flu.

   The pair have co-sponsored a bill to increase preparedness to face the threat. Tune in to watch their act at 11:15 am Thursday.

Posted by Matt Stearns 4:30 p.m.

May 18, 2006

Mr. Roberts: "You have no civil liberties if you're dead."

Roberts   Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts has opened the confirmation hearings for Gen. Michael Hayden to run the CIA.

   Here's what Roberts had to say.

   The condensed version:  The Intelligence Committee knows the nation's safety secrets; the public (and reporters) don't need to.

   Note: He also said it at USA Today op/ed.

   More to come.

Posted by Dave Helling 9:15 AM

    UPDATE:  Nice post by Thoughts From Kansas on Sen. Roberts' shifting views about committee oversight of intelligence gathering.

Posted by Dave Helling 10:45 AM

May 16, 2006

They've got the power - sort of

   This just in: Republican Pat Roberts of Kansas is the 24th most powerful senator and Kit Bond of Missouri is No 30. At the other end of the scale, Democrat Emanuel Cleaver turned up fourth from the bottom in the House. But he's a freshman in the minority party, after all.

    To find the rankings of every senator and House member, go to http://congress.org, site of a new report by Knowlegis, a Virgina company that tracks Congress. It measured lawmakers' clout by committee assignments, leadership roles, bills passed, media time and more.

     Check The Star tomorrow for a detailed report on the rankings.

Posted by David Goldstein 12:40 p.m.