When the president of the United States asked Christine Todd Whitman to head up the Environmental Protection Agency, she says she didnโt hesitate very long.
โBecause we have a president who truly believes in serving people, who has a core set of values that guide everything he does,โ Whitman says. โYou read a lot in the papers, though, and I donโt know where it comes from.โ
The Republicans, gathered in Reno for a wine and cheese-tasting fund-raiser, laugh at this dig on what most attendees agree is a left-leaning media. Whitman objects to the coverage of issues like the arsenic standard in drinking water.
โArsenic? Weโre not recommending it,โ she says, though her grandmother used to carry around a bottle of arsenic to use as a beauty aid. โNobody is saying itโs good. But if [lowering the allowable standards] means an extra $3,000 or $4,000 on your water billโcan you afford it?
โWe may not come up with an answer that will make everybody happy, but the answer will be based on science.โ
Republicans realize, she says, that the environment can be protected without sacrificing growth, by taking a โcommon senseโ approach and paying attention to the interests of individuals and industries.
โWhen environmentalists hear the word โbalance,โ they start to go nuts on you,โ Whitman says.
Laughter. Cheers. โI love it,โ says a nearby drinker of wine.
Whitman, along with Gov. Kenny Guinn, Sen. John Ensign, Rep. Jim Gibbons and several other prominent state Republicans, were the main attraction at the recent poolside event at the home of Earlene Forsythe, Washoe County Republican Central Committee chairwoman. The evening started with a round-table discussion that VIPs paid $1,000 to attend. Folks with a bit less disposable income paid $40 to chat, snack, drinkโthe signature wine of the new Siena Hotel & Spa proved popularโand listen to short, funny speeches from the politicians.
Guinn introduces Whitman as his idol.
โShe and I have a meaningful bond between us,โ he says. โItโs something not even my wife knows about.โ Giggles, chuckles. โAs governor of New Jersey, she cut taxes 42 times.โ Loud whoops. โAnd even though I havenโt cut your taxes yet, my football number in college was 42!โ
Another highlight was the auctioning off of โdinner for 10 at the governorโs mansion,โ led by โauctioneerโ Pete Ernaut.
โI know Wells Fargo is here,โ Ernaut jokes. โAnd you know, guys, thereโs a banking tax in the works. You can pay now or pay later. โฆ And Newmont is here with a large, large expense account. And Randolph [Townsend], for Godโs sake, you could sell your tie and pay the ticket here.โ
The final bid, $8,100, goes to Newmont Mining Corp. The company also came to the event with a $5,000 check. That $13,100, Guinn says, made the Denver-based business the biggest recent Nevada donor to the party that Whitman describes as the one that โbelieves in and respects the individual.โ
“[The individualโs] wisdom is better than what goes on in the confines of any bureaucracy,” Whitman says. “And [the Bush] administration realizes that all wisdom does not reside in Washington.”
