Black Caucus Leader Recasts Bush Meeting;
Friday, October 15, 2004 at 12:49PM
TheSpook
- Originally published in the Los Angeles Times on October 14, 2004
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
By: Richard Simon, Times Staff Writer
Rep. Cummings says the president saw them only because they refused to leave until he did.
When President Bush, responding to a question about affirmative action,
said during Wednesday's debate that he had met with the Congressional
Black Caucus, it wasn't exactly the kind of meeting you would expect.
The
caucus members got to see Bush only after showing up at the White House
gate and refusing to leave until the president agreed to meet with
them, according to the group's leader.
The
session came about after the White House declined the group's repeated
requests for meetings, Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (D-Md.), chairman of the
39-member caucus, said after the debate Wednesday.
Last
February, he said, the group wanted to meet with Bush to discuss the
crisis in Haiti and called White House chief of staff Andrew H. Card
Jr. to tell him, "We're coming to the White House." About 20 members of
the caucus then boarded a bus at the Capitol and traveled up
Pennsylvania Avenue.
"We were not necessarily welcomed guests," Cummings said, suggesting
that hard feelings may have lingered after a number of black lawmakers
challenged Bush's election when the Electoral College votes were being
certified in January 2001.
Caucus
members were greeted by Secretary of State Colin L. Powell and national
security advisor Condoleezza Rice. But they were told flatly, "The
president is not on the premises," recalled Candice Tolliver, the
group's communications director.
Caucus members then said they wouldn't leave until they could meet with Bush. Fifteen minutes later, the president showed up.
After the meeting, the White House issued a statement saying Bush "welcomed the opportunity" to visit with the caucus.
"This
president has basically not given the Congressional Black Caucus any
respect. None," Cummings said after Wednesday's debate.
The
caucus did meet with Bush 11 days after he was inaugurated -- at which
time the president told them, "I hope you come back, and I'll certainly
be inviting," according to the White House transcript.
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