White House advisers stopped even pretending to be busy.
White House advisers scoffed at suggestions that politics played a role in the assault.
"I need a call from the president," he told the White House adviser.
"I thought it was a mistake," said a White House adviser.
He also served as a White House adviser to the president from 1961 to 1963.
"These are nations that could go either way," one White House economic adviser noted the other day.
Top White House advisers "basically like the principle," he said.
"The timing is not ideal," a top White House economic adviser said.
White House advisers had less than 12 hours to review the bills before telling the President to go ahead and sign.
"The whole town is waiting for the other shoe to drop," said a White House adviser.
White House advisers stopped even pretending to be busy.
White House advisers scoffed at suggestions that politics played a role in the assault.
White House advisers said an independent commission, while posing some problems, had an appealing political logic that could help advance the idea.
He also served as a White House adviser to the president from 1961 to 1963.
White House advisers said they accepted his offer.
At least that was what the President's White House advisers were telling him would happen.
"These are nations that could go either way," one White House economic adviser noted the other day.
Top White House advisers "basically like the principle," he said.
White House advisers have vehemently denied any such effort.
White House advisers had less than 12 hours to review the bills before telling the President to go ahead and sign.
White House advisers stopped even pretending to be busy.
White House advisers scoffed at suggestions that politics played a role in the assault.
White House advisers said an independent commission, while posing some problems, had an appealing political logic that could help advance the idea.
He also served as a White House adviser to the president from 1961 to 1963.
White House advisers said they accepted his offer.
At least that was what the President's White House advisers were telling him would happen.
"These are nations that could go either way," one White House economic adviser noted the other day.
Top White House advisers "basically like the principle," he said.
White House advisers have vehemently denied any such effort.
White House advisers had less than 12 hours to review the bills before telling the President to go ahead and sign.