Pubdate: Wed, 09 May 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Section: Politics Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: James Risen IMPEACHMENT FIGURE IN LINE FOR DRUG ENFORCEMENT POST WASHINGTON -- President Bush is expected to name Representative Asa Hutchinson, an Arkansas Republican with a long interest in drug issues, as the new head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, officials said. Mr. Hutchinson, 50, who was one of the House managers in the impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton, is a former United States attorney in Arkansas who once prosecuted Mr. Clinton's brother, Roger, on drug charges. Mr. Hutchinson's appointment has not been announced by the White House, but officials said it was expected soon. If confirmed by the Senate, Mr. Hutchinson would succeed the acting agency head, Donnie R. Marshall. Mr. Hutchinson, who had been rumored to be in the running for other senior positions in the Justice Department as well, would be leaving what appears to be a relatively safe Republican Congressional seat for the new post. The appointment of Mr. Hutchinson, whose brother, Tim, represents Arkansas in the Senate, would create a vacancy in the House that would be filled by special election. Republicans say they are not worried that the contest in the state's Third Congressional District would shrink their five-seat majority in the House. "This is a district that Bill Clinton lost in Arkansas in '96, and Bush carried it comfortably," said Representative Thomas M. Davis, the Virginia Republican who heads the National Republican Congressional Committee. "This is a pretty good mountain Republican seat. I think we are going to be fine. It has been a Republican seat for 36 years without interruption." Mr. Hutchinson would be joining the Drug Enforcement Administration in the middle of a renewed national debate over the future of the nation's drug policy and how best to balance efforts to block drug trafficking with efforts to prevent drug use. Critics argue that the United States has spent far too much on efforts to block drugs in Latin America and on law enforcement efforts in this country, while failing to provide sufficient money to help treat drug abusers. The mistaken downing of a small plane carrying a missionary family in Peru last month has intensified the debate over whether the United States has over-emphasized interdiction and investigation rather than prevention. The plane was shot down by a Peruvian fighter plane involved in an antidrug program supported by the United States. The expected appointment of Mr. Hutchinson follows President Bush's decision to name John P. Walters, a conservative who was critical of the Clinton administration's counternarcotics efforts, to be the nation's drug czar. Mr. Hutchinson declined to confirm today that he had been selected to run the agency. "There has been much speculation about my leaving Congress to accept a position in the administration," Mr. Hutchinson said in a statement. "While I have been in discussions with the White House about the position of D.E.A. administrator, an announcement of the intent to nominate can be made only by the president." In Congress, Mr. Hutchinson, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, has shown an interest in drug issues, an aide to Mr. Hutchinson said. Last year, he sponsored legislation to provide federal money to help reimburse local police forces for their efforts against methamphetamine laboratories, the aide said. Advocates of treating the narcotics problem as more of a public health issue now see the new team that Mr. Bush is putting together as representing a fairly traditional law- and-order perspective on the drug war. "It generally looks like more of the same," said Kevin Zeese, president of Common Sense for Drug Policy. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth