LUNCHEON FOR SENATOR MOYNIHAN

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CIA-RDP88G01117R001003910001-6
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RIPPUB
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K
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8
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December 22, 2016
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March 4, 2011
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1
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Publication Date: 
September 9, 1986
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MEMO
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET SUBJECT: (O ' DCI Host =eon to Present ASM to Daniel Moynihan Thursday, 11 September 1986, 12:00 p.m., DCI Dining Room FROM: G i id D D EXTENSION NO. es r . av Director, of Congressional Affairs DATE 10 September 1986 TO: (01111eor desipnefion, room number, and buildin ) DATE OFFICER'S COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom g EECNVED FORWAIDED INITIALS to whom. Draw a line across column o$.r each common(.) 1. DCI D cc: ADDO z, DDI Comptroller DDS$T 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 1S. 610 ORM Mx F1.79 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88G01117R001003910001-6 9 September 1986 MEMORANDUM FOR: DCI FROM: Dave Gries SUBJECT: Luncheon for Senator Moynihan You are scheduled to host lunch for Senator Moynihan (D., NY) on Thursday, 11 September at 12:00. The purpose of the lunch is to present Senator Moynihan with the Agency Seal Medallion in honor of his prior service as Vice Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. Also to be presented are the citation, photo album and an Agency seal (the seals are being given to former chairmen and vice chairmen only). STAT STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88G01117R001003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1117RO01003910001-6 STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1117RO01003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D of l indars Corners - Elected 1976 horn: March 16, 1927, Tulsa, Okla. t,ducation: Tufts U., B.N.S. 1946, B.A. 1948; Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, M.A. 1949. Ph.D. 19til. )lilitary Career. Navy, 1944-47. occupation: Government professor; writer. Family: Wife, Elizabeth Brennan; three children. Religion: Roman Catholic. political Career. Sought Democratic nomination, N.Y. City Council president, 1965. Capitol Office: 464 Russell Bldg. 20510; 224-4451. In Washington: Moynihan's career in the ornate has been marked by a slow but steady shift toward conventional Democratic liberal- ism and away from the neo-conservative doc- trine for which he was once a leading spokes- man. Movnihan retains his well-known rhetori- cal skill, and his penchant for flashy displays of intellectual virtuosity. But the tenor and direc- tion of his legislative efforts have been far different from what one might have expected when he arrived in the Senate. Movnihan's changing perspective has been r.pecially visible in recent years on issues of (,reign policy. Known when he was ambassador t,, the United Nations as a militant anti-com- munist and the scourge of radical Third World regimes. Moynihan has figured prominently in recent dears as a supporter of arms control and critic of the Reagan administration's campaign against the leftist government of Nicaragua. Movnihan's much-publicized change of mind on Nicaragua reflected his flair for the dramatic gesture as well as his new political stance. As vice-chairman of the Senate Intelli- gence Committee, Moynihan initially sup- i,orted the administration's program of covert Aid to anti-government "contra" guerrillas in Nicaragua. Gradually, however, he began to have doubts, pressing President Reagan for assurances that the aid was directed at halting alleged Nicaraguan arms shipments to leftists in H Salvador, rather than at overthrowing the Nicaraguan regime. Itut the disclosure in early 1984 that the VIA had been involved in the mining of Nicara- guan harbors was too much for Moynihan. Ititterl . attacking the CIA for failing to inform the Intelligence Committee about the opera- I'(- minounced his resignation as panel vice h"'r'ran. Eventually, after CIA Director William J. Casey apologized, Moynihan with- drew his resignation. But he continued to op- pose aid to the Nicaraguan contras. On the domestic side, Moynihan has shed his reputation as a dispassionate critic of gov- ernment social service programs and lined up emotionally with liberal Democrats in support of preserving the New Deal and Great Society. He is one of the Reagan administration's most militant foes, a relentless opponent of its ef- forts to reduce social spending and environ- mental regulations. Along with defending existing social pro- grams. Moynihan has had some modest success in recent years in setting up new ones. He has been a leading sponsor of legislation to estab- lish a New Deal-style American Conservation Corps of unemployed young people to work on federal lands. The proposal cleared easily in 1984, but was pocket-vetoed by Reagan after the end of the 98th Congress. The same year Moynihan also pushed through a new program helping school districts desegregate. replacing an earlier program abolished in 1981. Moynihan's ringing declarations of support for traditional Democratic Party ideas strike some colleagues as cynical political rhetoric, since they remember when he was identified as a critic of those ideas. But Moynihan has made the transition with great success in New York and wit hoot terrible cost in the Senate. At times, colleagues clearly find his erudi- tion fascinating -- lie is apt to interrupt routine debate with a scholarly discourse on the role of the London School of Economics, say, or the decline of private charity in Europe. In the course of his maiden speech in the Senate, he spoke one grammatically flawless sentence that took up half a column ill the Congressional Re'cnrd. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y- There may be a few other members of Congress who could introduce an amendment establishing an algebraic formula for determin- ing national income and know in detail what it meant. But surely no other living senator has ever used "fisc" - a rare word meaning royal or state treasury - in the title of a report to his constituents. Still, it is not Moynihan the scholar that has made the greatest impression on colleagues over eight years in the Senate. It has been Moynihan the New York politician, maneuver- ing to bring an extra slice of the federal budget pie to the state he represents. If there is a criticism of him that goes beyond ideology, it is that he has spent much of his effort in behalf of routine political tasks a less gifted man could perform just as well. In his choice of a committee assignment at the very start, Moynihan made clear his inten- tion to bring home the goods to New York. Eschewing the Foreign Relations Committee, a natural post given his service as United Na- tions ambassador, he picked the Finance Com- mittee, on which no New Yorker had sat for half a century. He was the chief Senate spokesman for attempts in 1978 to include private elementary and secondary school students in a bill provid- ing tax credits for college tuition. New York had some half a million students in private, mostly Catholic, schools - far more than any other state. Moynihan later attributed the de- feat of the proposal in part to anti-Catholic bias among American opinion leaders. Moynihan also has sought additional fed- eral help for New York's crushing welfare bur- den. While the Finance panel never got a chance to act on President Carter's two major welfare bills, Moynihan did persuade the ad- ministration to include an increase in the fed- eral share of state welfare costs among its proposals. But Moynihan's most prominent Finance Committee issue in recent years has been Social Security. He was the most outspoken Demo- cratic opponent of the Reagan administration's proposals to cut back Social Security in 1981, and was instrumental in working out the com- promise that led to the Social Security reform legislation of 1983. In leading the 1981 fight against Social Security changes, Moynihan argued that the system was basically solvent and could meet any short-term problems through relatively mi- nor adjustments. By the next year, however, he had changed his mind. Working with Finance Committee Chairman Robert Dole, he devel- oped the last-minute agreement that allowed saving the system with a combination of Moynihan has been active in other Fin by clamping down on real estate tax shel involved in as member and former chairm," sources Subcommittee. proportionately concentrated in Southerq billions of dollars for repairs. In 1982, Ivfo,' han sponsored a $6 billion public workn yond Central America. tion, unanimously adopted by the S threatening to pull the United States out embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Je - a controversial move opposed by the edgeable about the subject, but hard In 1979 Moynihan published a. vantage of in arms negotiations with the vote as a bargaining point to change whi treaty allowed both countries to add nea Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 te.gic weapons, rather than forcing reductions. ,fovihan prepared an amendment that would ha%e voided the treaty if U.S. and Soviet nego- tiator, did not agree on real reductions in arms ,,.,,.Is by the end of 1981. Later, Moynihan announced that he fa- ,,,red adoption of the SALT 11 treaty as an nterim executive agreement. Under his plan, ^r.g?tiaturs could work out mutual reductions while the treaty was in effect; SALT II would ,spire if the subsequent treaty did not reduce grins levels. In the 98th Congress, Moynihan focused much of his arms-control energy on the MX missile. One of the most vigorous critics of the Ileargan-hacked weapon, he offered an amend- ment in 1983 to bar the MX in favor of develoinnent of a new small, mobile missile. His amendment was rejected 57-42, although a re- lated proposal he offered the next year along with Florida Democrat Lawton Chiles came within one vote of victory. At Home: Moynihan has gradually accom- modated himself to the liberal New York Dem- ocrats who could not accept his neo-conserva- tive outlook when he first ran in 1976. For the first few years of his Senate career, it seemed likely that he would be challenged from the left when he ran for renomination in 19$2. But by the time of the primary, his lelligerent and unexpected defense of tradi- tional Democratic policies had had their effect. New York's Democratic left was pacified, and the National Conservative Political Action l'onunittee helped Moynihan out by airing television ads calling him "the most liberal foiled States senator." Even the Liberal ('arty, which had been upset by his support of tuition tax credits for non-public schools, hacked Moynihan in 1982 for his second term. It was a far different campaign from the one in 1976, which was dominated by discus- .1m of Movnihan's hard-line foreign policy. llunning for the Democratic Senate nomi- nation in 1976 on his neo-conservative creden- tial., Moynihan probably could not have com- manded if majority of the primary vote in any field. But with three major candidates to the left of him, his 36 percent share was enough for g first-place finish, 10,000 votes ahead of Rep. fella Abzug. Once nominated, he clung to the tart-%'s working-class tradition and managed enough unity to unseat Republican James L. Nuckley in the fall -Nonee of it would have been possible, how- ever, without Moynihan's controversial year as American ambassador to the United Nations, there the New York media covered him in detail His feisty defense of Israel was crucial in giving him enough Jewish support to survive the primary, but beyond that his televised militance at the United Nations in 1975 al- lowed him to begin the campaign as a celebrity, rather than just an articulate Harvard profes- sor. "He spoke up for America," one campaign advertisement said, "He'd speak up for New York." Moynihan's new-found reputation also en- abled hitn to survive his weaknesses among blacks and Hispanics. As a policy adviser in the Nixon administration, he had caused himself considerable trouble when he counseled a pol- icy of "benign neglect" toward minorities. Moy- nihan insisted he had been misunderstood, but the dispute only revived an issue that first surfaced in 1965, when his book Beyond the Melting Pot attributed social problems among blacks to unstable family structure. Moynihan's own father, a hard-drinking journalist, walked out on the family when the senator was six, and the senator's mother ran a saloon near Times Square. Moynihan walked into the entrance examination for City College with a longshoreman's loading hook sticking out of his back pocket. A life in academia followed, interspersed with periods of government service. He worked in the Labor Department in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, as an urban affairs expert for Richard M. Nixon, and as ambassa- dor to India under Nixon and Gerald R. Ford. He was the architect of the ill-fated Nixon "family assistance" welfare proposal, whose history he detailed in a book. In between, he taught his personal combination of economics, sociology and urban studies at Harvard and at the Joint Center for Urban Studies. In the last year of his ambassadorship in New Delhi, Moynihan began to attract increas- ing attention for his articles criticizing a lack of firmness in U.S. foreign policy, especially to- ward the Third World. His reputation made him a logical choice in 1975 for the U.N. post, whose most recent appointees had been rela- tively inconspicuous. His service at the United Nations clearly helped his political prospects in New York, although he denied any connection. When he left the United Nations to run for the Senate, he found himself challenged not only by the equally flamboyant Abzug, but also by two other well-known figures of the Demo- cratic left: former U.S. Attorney General Ram- sey Clark and New York City Council Presi- dent Paul O'Dwyer. Moynihan's chief political sponsor was Jo- seph Crangle, the influential Erie County (Buf- falo) party chairman. Crangle pushed the state Democratic convention to guarantee ballot Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 spots for all three liberals. Abzug depicted Moynihan as a Buckley in Democratic clothing and quickly emerged as his main rival. But Clark and O'Dwyer took a combined 19 percent, just enough to sink her. Moynihan split most of the New York suburbs with Abzug, won the upstate counties and captured every city borough except Manhattan. Buckley had won the seat six years earlier as the Conservative Party candidate, taking advantage of a three-way contest involving lib- eral Republican incumbent Charles Goodell and liberal Democratic challenger Richard L. Ottinger. He had no such advantage in 1976. Moynihan started with a strong lead over Buckley in the polls, and he neither said nor did anything in the fall to fracture his tenuous party harmony. He spent much of his time in Massachusetts, teaching at Harvard to protect his tenure. When he did speak out, he called Buckley a right-wing extremist out of step with the state's politics - citing Buckley's initial Moynihan won all the suburban coup large margins in the city to defeat Buckleyby, Former U.S. Rep. Bruce Caputo wen the Republican nomination in 1982, and might have made an attractive GOP candidal But he was forced to withdraw early in the primary vote and allowed state Asseui win the nomination. Moynihan defeated Committees 1983 46 51 74 21 1982 28 71 86 11 Budget (8th of 10 Democrats) 1981 41 47 71 14 1980 74 16 79 14 Environment and Public Works (4th of 7 Democrats) Water Resources (ranking); Environmental Pollution; Nuclear Regulation. Finance (4th of 9 Democrats) S - Support 0 - Opposition Social Security and Income Maintenance Programs (ranking); International Trade; Taxation and Debt Management. Elections 1982 General Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D) 3,232,146 (65%) Florence Sullivan (R) 1,696,766 (34%) 1982 Primary Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D) 922.059 (85'!.) ) Melvin Klenelsky )D) 161,012 (15% Previous Winning Percentage: 1976 (54%) Campaign Finance Receipts Expend- Receipts from PACs itures 1982 Moynihan (0) $2,479,867 $366,221 (15%) $2,708,660 Sullivan (R) $121,893 $25,200 (21i) $117,875 Voting Studies Presidential Party Conservative Support Unity Coalition Year S 0 S 0 S 0 1984 36 53 68 25 21 66 Key Votes 16 14 8 12 Allow chemical weapons production (1983) Create Martin Luther King Jr. holiday (1983) Bar funding for MX missile (1983) Permit school prayer (1984) Cut military aid to El Salvador (1984) Keep tax indexing (1984) Retain funds for "Star Wars" defense research (1984) Authorize procurement of 21 MX missiles (1985) Interest Group Ratings Year ADA ACA AFL-CIO CCUS-1 1984 85 32 80 39 1983 80 0 82 26 1982 95 25 96 22 1981 75 28 94 33 1980 72 8 100 33 1979 47 15 100 0 1978 60 4 89 35 1977 70 17 84 11 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6 DINING ROCM EVENTS TIME/DAY/DATE: 1200-Thursday, 11 September 1986 BREAKFAST LLUCHEON }IX DINNER HOST: DCI XX DDCI EXDIR PLACE: DCI D. R. XX EDR aliiER GUEST LIST: Mr. William J. Casey, host Senator Daniel P. Moynihan, guest of honor Mr. R. E. Hineman, DDS&T Mr. Richard Kerr, DDI Mr. Daniel Childs, CONPT ADDO DCI Mr. -Ba 4 Grie , OGALDC'f- TarAL: 7 *AGENCY SEAL MEDALLION TO BE PRES NI'ED TO SENATOR MO NIHAN* MENU: Sauteed Foie Gras with Arugala and Walnut Salad Salad Rack of Lamb with Mustard and Breadcrumbs Vegetables Red Wine with Meal Barquettes with White Chocolate Coffee/Tea SEATING ARRANGEMENT: (ATTACHED) Senator'Maynihan Mr: Casey (host) STAT STAT CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/04: CIA-RDP88GO1 1 17RO01 003910001-6